| ▲ | lII1lIlI11ll 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> This is not "offloading parenting of your child to the government" it is acknowledging that a certain action can be far easier to take (getting a child off social media) if the government puts in laws to support those actions. Compromising my privacy in order to allow you to omit having some tough but needed conversations with your child (i.e. _parenting_) regarding harms of social media is not a sacrifice I'm willing to make. Homer Simpson was supposed to be a parody on a bad father, not a role model with his "You're the government's problem now!". > Are laws against violence a way of off-loading physical protection to the government? Of course they are! I support government protecting me from violence in some capacity, although I don't support "chat control"-like laws since the cost/benefit doesn't seem to be favorable. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | 5upplied_demand 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> to allow you to omit having some tough but needed conversations with your child regarding harms of social media As any parent knows, if you tell your kids that something is harmful, they will stop immediately. No questions asked. I've never met a child who did something their parents told them not to do, have you? > I support government protecting me from violence in some capacity So, you do like big government telling people what they can and can't do, as long as you feel it directly helps you. That said, laws against violence don't protect you from violence, the laws kick in after the fact. > I don't support "chat control"-like laws since the cost/benefit doesn't seem to be favorable. Possibly because you don't have kids and thus maybe not a full understanding of the cost/benefit? Perhaps, instead of lecturing actual parents about what parenting is like, you could ask questions about the cost/benefit you claim to be interested in. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||