daver
Registered User
- Apr 4, 2003
- 26,883
- 6,647
So you just get to say things like "the default position is to not limit people [sic] freedom" without any sort of justification? Cool. Then I get to say you're wrong and the default position is to set limitations to freedom when there is a benefit to society, and I get to say it without any justification.
So everything we do has to be seen through a lens of potential societal benefit before being allowed to do it? Who gets to decide what is and what isn't a "benefit to society"? A panel? A government agency?
It may not be pretty or fair (life isn't meant to be pretty or fair) but not limiting freedom is the default position. This does not mean freedom from consequences.
One of those consequences can be society determining that the state does need to intervene. In this particular case, this may be the curtailing of gambling site ads on publicly broadcasts.