Because that's the way the organization makes the information available. Is Google docs on topic?
> In any case, when was the last time a book printer faced criminal charges for printing a book? A book reader for reading a book? A shop for selling a book?
You forgot: "A book owner for owning a book."
School librarians in the US face prison time for owning books in parts of the US. Has anyone actually been prosecuted for those laws? Not yet, they are new laws.
Has anyone decided to stop owning books because those laws exist? Yes, absolutely.
The government telling you what books you can own, and if you do not comply, threatening you with prison is absolutely a thing that's factual in the US.
I'm sorry you don't believe me, but librarians are facing jail time in Tennessee, Indiana, Missouri, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. Librarians (typically school librarians, but in at least one state also public librarians). The books their collection owns is a book they own. The states are telling them they could go to jail for owning a book in their collection.
In Arkansas, a librarian can now face 6 years in prison for 'Obscene material' but provide no guidance on what 'Obscene' means. Laws that are selectively enforced and provide no clear guidance are laws that are designed to limit speech and limit freedom.
Simply saying "no." and accusing me of lying does not change the fundamental truth of the matter.
I'm disappointed in the low quality of your arguments here. They border on bad faith, but, in truth, are probably simply lazy.
I googled "new law prison time for school librarians banned books" and the following was the top result: "School librarians face prison time for distributing banned books" (actual title slightly different)
In keeping with the ethos and guidelines of Hacker News, please apply the principle of charity and do a bit of research before doing a low-effort takedown of someone you disagree with.
If you had read my previous posts you would know that this is irrelevant.
By that standard the state has banned pretty much anything. Alcohol is banned in the US because giving alcohol to minors is a crime, see how absurd this argument sound if you apply it to literally anything else?
Because that's the way the organization makes the information available. Is Google docs on topic?
> In any case, when was the last time a book printer faced criminal charges for printing a book? A book reader for reading a book? A shop for selling a book?
You forgot: "A book owner for owning a book."
School librarians in the US face prison time for owning books in parts of the US. Has anyone actually been prosecuted for those laws? Not yet, they are new laws.
Has anyone decided to stop owning books because those laws exist? Yes, absolutely.
The government telling you what books you can own, and if you do not comply, threatening you with prison is absolutely a thing that's factual in the US.