It's the old "freedom to" versus "freedom from" debate.

Laeserin

npub1m4ny6hjqzepn4rxknuq94c2gpqzr29ufkkw7ttcxyak7v43n6vvsajc2jl

hex

7a713c001b1eea2b000a890a1d4e9ddee08a27e80ca4aff362ad25c323a933d9

nevent

nevent1qqs85ufuqqd3a63tqq9gjzsaf6waacy2yl5qef907d326fwryw5n8kgprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuem4d36kwatvw5hx6mm9qgsd6ejdteqpvse63ntf7qz6u9yqspp4z7ymt8094urzwm0x2ceaxxg97gfc5

Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-06-27T09:57:59Z

↳ 回复 事件不存在

35143db579c9507d59a2659ef32653e893813e92298e703dae10bcce096b5bb4...

It's the old "freedom to" versus "freedom from" debate.

It's also hard to evaluate because Europeans compare their national laws with US federal laws, but US states are actually where many laws are written. Some states mandate paid sick leave and some don't, for example. Some states require KYC for social media or digital assets, but some don't.

Once California, Texas, Florida, and NY have a state law, it's basically a de facto federal law because they house so much of the US population. The Internet is then full of people in North Dakota or Maine claiming there's no law, but it's an irrelevant data point as nobody really lives in those places and nobody wants to.

That's like saying Andorra or Liechtenstein doesn't have a law. It might be true, but who cares?

Anyone working in the automobile industry knows that environmental standards for EU cars are set in California. It's such a big export market that you have to build to match it.

原始 JSON

{
  "kind": 1,
  "id": "7a713c001b1eea2b000a890a1d4e9ddee08a27e80ca4aff362ad25c323a933d9",
  "pubkey": "dd664d5e4016433a8cd69f005ae1480804351789b59de5af06276de65633d319",
  "created_at": 1782554279,
  "tags": [
    [
      "alt",
      "A short note: It's the old \"freedom to\" versus \"freedom from\" de..."
    ],
    [
      "e",
      "15bfe6e0d73348360356d2f3ae120d7777f1499dd551cf45356fd1227f27e887",
      "wss://relay.primal.net/",
      "root",
      "ec2b04a7d6fdeada31a645338a4bb2706b119dda1de6956aaba29f823c37f144"
    ],
    [
      "e",
      "35143db579c9507d59a2659ef32653e893813e92298e703dae10bcce096b5bb4",
      "wss://relay.primal.net/",
      "reply",
      "15af9e028db92e50d5462ff5837ed952d41a9bc52149fbdea45bfc0dccd7c6d9"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "ec2b04a7d6fdeada31a645338a4bb2706b119dda1de6956aaba29f823c37f144",
      "wss://purplepag.es/"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "15af9e028db92e50d5462ff5837ed952d41a9bc52149fbdea45bfc0dccd7c6d9",
      "wss://nostr.mom/"
    ],
    [
      "client",
      "Amethyst"
    ]
  ],
  "content": "It's the old \"freedom to\" versus \"freedom from\" debate.\n\nIt's also hard to evaluate because Europeans compare their national laws with US federal laws, but US states are actually where many laws are written. Some states mandate paid sick leave and some don't, for example. Some states require KYC for social media or digital assets, but some don't.\n\nOnce California, Texas, Florida, and NY have a state law, it's basically a de facto federal law because they house so much of the US population. The Internet is then full of people in North Dakota or Maine claiming there's no law, but it's an irrelevant data point as nobody really lives in those places and nobody wants to.\n\nThat's like saying Andorra or Liechtenstein doesn't have a law. It might be true, but who cares?\n\nAnyone working in the automobile industry knows that environmental standards for EU cars are set in California. It's such a big export market that you _have_ to build to match it.",
  "sig": "532179030f228aa1d570217d86572994d4ad18298c246a8f9f2b1b6710a1cb630f5f4dca2cd6e8262f2471a64a6351bc0d882e303acd0d8da07fe5ea2853b9f4"
}