Thailand Censors 'Inappropriate' Websites
In addition to putting a curfew on an online game (Ragnarok) and Internet cafes, Thailand also starts to censor 'inappropriate' sites. More details can be found here and here. Since the rise of the current administration two years ago, freedom of the press in Thailand has been more and more restricted. Big media, newspapers, telecom companies are now owned by the administration's cronies. It makes me wonder when the government will censor any opposition on the web using this 'inappropriate contents' pretext.
"I believe in freedom of speech as long as I am not offended by what you say" - direct quote of my old literature professor (Univ. AZ 1993).
Censorship is a hard word to throw around. What is the difference between child porn and regular porn? Age is just a arbitrary number, 18 by no means implies rational intelligent thought (nor does 21 for that matter).
NYC is now completely non-smoking in all public places. Why? Public health is bull sh*&. Go somewhere else if you think it is unhealthy. You swim in a clean pool / river / lake instead of a polluted one for the same reason.
18 to vote. 18 to join the military. 21 to buy or consume alcohol legally in the USA. Old analogy, I know. But it still works.
Wal-Mart won't sell DVD's or CD's that it deems inappropriate. Walk into any store, and it is obvious that their policy is rather inconsistent.
How are the governments (regardless of USA or Thailand or China etc etc) choices going to be any different. Will it be something that is under public oversight. Whose jurisdiction is it exactly?
Public health is bullsh*&? (btw, "bullsh*&"? please tell me that was an intended censorship joke) Best I can tell, most of the public is pretty concerned with their health. By your logic we shouldn't have laws banning spaying machine gun fire in public - Go somewhere else if you think the bullets are dangerous
18 to vote. 18 to join the military. 21 to buy or consume alcohol legally in the USA. Old analogy, I know. But it still works.
Actually, that's up to the states, but a drinking age < 21 means no federal highway money. When the drinking age was 18, the 18 year old HS seniors would pass alcohol on to the 15 year old freshmen. Now the 21 year old college students pass alcohol on to the 18 year old college freshmen. It's not like it's hard to get beer when you're 18. But yes, the law is stupid. One answer would be to raise the age for voting, military, legal contracts, etc to 21... but I have better idea:
Make the drinking age 21 or High School graduation. Helps the problem of younger kids drinking, and gives the dropouts a reason to reconsider.
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Please have your ID or Highschool Equivalency Certificate ready before purchasing!
My plan entails the kids going to the dmv and getting an endorsement on their DL saying they are legal for alcohol consumption
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