If everyone hates censorship so much, why do those “censorship-free” alternative social media sites always fail?
Last Updated: 01.07.2025 08:57

If I let you borrow my bike for free, I have the right to tell you you can’t do certain things with it, and I have the right to take it back. Why? Because it’s my property, not yours.
Who is the #1 user of completely free digital communications networks that let you say absolutely anything? Who most wants that?
Child pornographers.
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We don’t have to guess. We know.
So.
That has nothing to do with social media.
The #1 problem people who make and consume child pornography have is connecting the producers with the buyers. Any “censorship-free” network quickly gets overrun with child porn. Classic example: 8kun.
If i let you use my computer network for free, I have the right to tell you you can’t do certain things with it, and I have the right to kick you off. Why? Because it’s my property, not yours.
Because you’re confusing two different things.
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Nazis.
The #3 user? Terrorists. 8kun was used to plan 3 different school shootings in a 6-month period.
“Censorship-free” social media sites quickly become Nazi bars where people exchange child porn. Normal human beings don’t hang out in Nazi bars with pedophiles.
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Why do “censorship-free” social media networks always fail? Well, let’s see. Sit down and think. Think really, really hard.
You have the right to say what you want. You do not have the right to use other people’s stuff for free.
Are you going to stay on a social media site that’s all photos of babies being raped, Nazis posting graphic descriptions of finishing what Hitler started, and plans for school shootings?
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Who is the #2 user of completely free digital communications networks that let you say absolutely anything? Who else wants that?
Now, say you’re an ordinary person. You don’t like child porn. You’re not a Nazi. You don’t want to shoot up a school or blow up the White House.
I hate censorship. That is, I think the government has no place controlling what people say, read, express, or create, except insofar as is necessary to prevent things like terroristic threats, dissemination of classified information, fraud, false advertising, and so on.
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