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So I agree with you about the whole "arresting people after they yell fire and not before" thing, but we're talking about people who attempted a coup here, these aren't hypothetical pre-crimes.
To your earlier point about going after the people who actually did the coup:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-64299892
According to this BBC article, 39 people were indicted within about a week of the attack
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Brazilian_Congress_attack
According to Wikipedia, 86 people have been convicted and sentenced to jail time.
I'm sure there are better numbers but I don't speak Portuguese so I'm not going to find them.
Also, while this conflict did begin with Brazil wanting them to ban accounts who helped organize the coup attempt, x was banned because they refuse to appoint a Brazilian legal representative.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crkmpe53l6jo
We’re talking about the entire country of Brazil — 200 million people — being cut off from using X.
Yes, because the company refused to appoint a Brazilian legal representative.
Companies that don't follow the laws of a country don't get to operate in that country. The entire country of the United States - 300 million people - are cut off from enjoying Kinder Surprise. Are you equally outraged about that?
When a company says "Lol, we're not going to have a way for you to hold us accountable" then a country is obviously going to shut them down. They're not going to let a company ignore their sovereignty like that.
I'm not the person you're responding to and I don't care about twitter but
YES! If I want to choke on a toy hidden inside a chocolate egg then THAT SHOULD BE MY RIGHT!!!
Thankfully.
Yeah, it's too bad it's only 200 million, and only "X". All the billionaire-controlled, black-box content algorithm social media sites are a cancer on humanity. Nobody's freedom is being impinged upon by banning them; they're the private fiefdoms of oligarchs, who blatantly wield them in service of their own agendas. Banning them is the sensible thing to do, and I can only hope that other governments follow suit.
Actually yes, the freedom to use those applications is infringed by banning them
Like if exactly 200 million people could afford eletronics (saying from experience) or caring about Twitter at all.