Americans seem to think that as long as you support LGBT+ issues, it's leftist to have hospitals, roads, schools, and the rest of society run by corporations for profit.
Watching content without paying is one thing. Actually paying the wrong person is actually quite malicious. You deserve to have all your favourite shows cancelled.
Have you considered accepting that you're wrong on this? It's not a personal disaster to realize that just because you didn't personally see the impact, there was none. Instead of sticking to what you thought, you might learn insights. Perhaps they can be valuable when analyzing the current bubbles.
I am very well aware of what has been happening lately. However, a lot of the arguments by reddit mods and regular users uses "the official app is literally cancer" as an axiom, rather than something that might be worth discussing. This is what I am questioning, not that reddit management has (yet again) proven themselves to be absolute pieces of shit.
Have you considered that maybe it's not that bad? In the last month, I have tried to find out what it is that people hate about it so strongly. But all they say is immature things like "it's cancer", "it's literally cancer", "it's shit".
It might not have the features that people who joined reddit in 2017 care about, but most people dgaf.
What a backwards question. The world is light. Text is normally black or blue on white. There are no good reasons to turn your online experience into a dive into a well of darkness where you have to squint and strain your eyes to see the text.
Americans seem to think that as long as you support LGBT+ issues, it's leftist to have hospitals, roads, schools, and the rest of society run by corporations for profit.