Comment by henearkr

Comment by henearkr 14 hours ago

6 replies

Why is there a city doing this?

Isn't it the job of a public health agency? Like, at a national or even international level?

Or of a scientific body?

What legitimacy has an administrative, and often political, structure, to make a non-binding health recommandation (thus, an advice), with a scope limited to the city, even though the matter has nothing to nor specific to this city?

It looks like a political stunt, not something initiated by health specialists.

mrexroad 14 hours ago

> "We want the ordinance to provide an opportunity for people to think about how they use smartphones," an official said.

  • henearkr 13 hours ago

    Why aren't they issuing ordinances for people to switch to electric cars?

    To learn foreign languages?

    To study sciences?

    I really don't know what to think.

    Like, if they think that the bottleneck, the motivation source, to get people to improve their lifestyle, is to have an ordinance issued, then they really need to study the basics of psychology and sociology. And of public communication.

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  • Aerroon 13 hours ago

    I really hope that any city I live in will not try to use city ordinances for feel good things.

numpad0 12 hours ago

It is a political stunt. The city of Toyoake in question has a land area of 23sqkm(~9 sqmi) with population of 68k(density 3k/sqkm or 7.6k/sqmi).

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