I suppose I have nothing to add to that now as [@Dark Wind] did all my duty for me in that regard. Legitimately I would prefer the "old internet", as it were, of lacking nebulous social rules and progressiveness but unstifled free speech - barring obvious exceptions as were noted above - to a landscape of discerning what is or is not "hate speech". No surprise to be said, but I do not believe in a concept of hate speech as it were or that it even needs to be policed; people can and will, under their own volition, quickly weed out opinions and persons who are not amicable to their perspective. By this I mean that there is no point in censoring offensive speech unless it becomes action. If you come out fully and unabashedly, or even in trolling "jest", that you hate Jews and that they are some great conspiracy, I am going to detest you to the same extent as I do the social justice zealot who believes everything is sexist or racist because of whatever buzzword and newspeak tickles their fancy. Both are disagreeable people, even if only feigned. I note this because even if you were to later tell me that you did it "As only a joke." I am, at least only for myself, still inclined to not only hold a lacking of trust in you but a want to not interact with you beyond anything short of common courtesy. It is imperative beyond a doubt that platforms of social media uphold an environment of freedom. This is because now more than ever the entire world is watching and people must, like it or not, be willing to open their eyes and ears to perceive all information, both good and bad. To do anything less than this is to be ignorant, willingly; it removes the option and duty to judge under one's own morals and motives - it removes the opportunity. If the entire internet culture, at least the dominant one as with say Twitter, became politically correct and "friendly", it removes that element of reality that no amount of virtualization can hide. People need to be confronted by opposition and more importantly, have the inner strength of self and maturity to deal with it, be it returning fire or just ignoring the attack, perceived or legitimate. It is this philosophy that inherently makes me opposed to the censorship and infantile feel-good nonsense that has consumed an entire generation more or less.