▲ | throwawayq3423 6 hours ago | |||||||
> No one's talking about availability in Russia except you. That's the other side of the coin. Why do you expect one country to be totally open and allow the other to be totally closed? How is that a standard that makes any sense? > "The reason you can is that very few people actually do." I don't see what consumption habits have to do with anything. This is also contradicting what you just said, that people in the US don't have access to this content. > As the Tik Tok affair shows, the moment the US suspects it might have some real competitor in controlling the narrative, it shuts them down. Who is the "US" here? The U.S. government? A specific company? Without specifics you aren't really saying anything at all, just implying some greater unfalsifiable conspiracy. | ||||||||
▲ | fidotron 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> This is also contradicting what you just said, that people in the US don't have access to this content. The point is that their other media so promotes a lack of curiosity by providing a false impression of being comprehensive. If you risk bursting that bubble suddenly you are first mocked, then they try to buy you, then they block you, and tell you it is your fault. The US is held to higher standards because that is how it promotes itself. Many of us outside the US are actually saddened by a betrayal of these values, because we are all too aware of how lacking many places are, and we need the US to be better than this. | ||||||||
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