39 actually. When I was 10-15 years younger and life was more precarious (just due to having less work history/experience), I never had mental issues about getting fired nor do I recall any friends having panic attacks besides really just one that had/has mental issues. Another guy at work that now left for another job would have his heart rate or blood pressure or both get high when he couldn't figure out some IT issue. He's also on medicine for ADD. It's all about being in the wrong mental state, just step back and work through the problem. Same thing with the guy that had a panic attack over getting fired, just step back and think it out how this other guy did this way worse thing than you and he totally didn't get fired so why'd you get panicked over it if you just logically think things through.Yes, their lives are much more precarious than ours so they probably will have more mental health issues. The example you gave (young guy worried about losing his job) kind of supports that.
I'm going to take a stab and say you're early/mid 30s (based on you working with people ten years younger)? I'm 41 and my life is so much more stable and secure than that of a 25 year old (and it was at 25 too, because I'd already been able to buy a house because you could do that then and I wasn't living one grumpy landlord away from homelessness).
I'm just for the banning of TikTok because it's just really bad for people. I don't really care what excuse the bill is making to do that, though I don't really disagree with the Chinese reasoning to ban it either.OK, but the content issue is not related to this bill.
I do tend to try to avoid apps/programs with shady data-harvesting red flags. I refused to get the UK government's promoted "contact tracing" app, for instance, because they handed the contract to an unqualified mate of theirs, and the Tory party had very recently been shown to be involved with shady data harvesters during the EU Referendum.
Why is it a violation of the 1st Amendment?Which is precisely why I am not bothering to be up in arms about this despite it being a clear violation of First Amendment rights. It's not going to go anywhere and that's obvious, so why get upset about it?
The government telling what is allowed and not allowed on stuff like Facebook and Twitter are 1st Amendment violations.
TikTok causes tons of mental health problems.I honestly don't get the point to tictoc when youtube exists. Is it liked because it's easier to record a video on it with your phone or what? I can only see it being liked if you are someone who is new at having access to the internet and just never used any website before, and also doesn't have a pc but just a phone, and in that sense I guess I can see why some would gravitate towards it. All it is is a more limited and less feature-rich version of youtube. In china where a lot of people are super poor and only have phones but no computer or internet lines it can flourish but here I don't see why you wouldn't just go to youtube.
But yeah all that aside you obviously wouldn't wanna ban it, that's idiotic.
The problem with China is that the government has so much control so it doesn't matter who (if it's a "private" Chinese company) owns/runs the software, the government can go to the company and the company is forced to give over or do whatever the government wants. If your data goes through a Chinese server, the government has access to it if they want it.I can say that the US is better than China. Does not mean they are good here
I don't want the CCP to be in control of Tiktok. I think it's a terrible idea. I dont want it to go to the US either so the GOP or DNC can get their hands on it. They fail their own country regularly and have their finger on the invasion trigger all the time. They will literally make up evidence to invade/assassinate presidents