| > This is a cliche "think of the children" argument. Stripping away anonymity is a gargantuan problem, and enables authoritarian regimes to punish dissent. So we agree: authoritarian regimes are a gargantuan problem, not stripping away anonymity. > Trolls are a very minor problem comparatively. Online predator almost killed my child - this is not a "very minor problem". At least not for me. > This is essentially saying "freedom needs to come with punishments and restrictions when you do things I don't like". It's an oxymoron. It is not bout things _I_ don't like but things that _we (society)_ don't like. In my country nazi symbols are forbidden in public space and I think it is a good thing.
So yes - "freedom needs to come with punishments and restrictions". > The responsibilities a free populace have are moral and civil, they aren't about giving away anonymity to governments. Why not? There are countries which governments are elected by citizens and are _trusted_ by citizens. Why would I want to be anonymous if I _trust_ people I elected? |
At some point the disingenous concerned parents need to start dealing with their own parenting instead of pretending we need to live in 1984 just because your bad parenting requires it.
Your way has many more deaths of government dissenters. Stop using "death" as a scare tactic. Much like the "war on terror" supporters, it's a fraud.