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Notes -
The concept of the unsafe{} block reminds me of the debate around content warnings, ironically.
If you have a system level language, you want the ability to take shortcuts even if the compiler can not verify that they are safe.
C++ has some of these which are explicit (static_cast, reinterpret_cast) and plenty which are implicit (C-style casts, pointer arithmetic, etc).
I suppose that they are kind of similar to content warnings. If you clone a Rust project, you could do a git grep unsafe and will see the ugly underbelly of the project laid bare (or at least the unsafe part of it).
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Content warnings are unironically a good thing. They're no different to allergy warnings on food you get from a supermarket.
They often hamstring a good sucker punch twist by foreshadowing what's going to happen before you start the story. If they come packaged with a tagging system like on Archive of Our Own though, where you can search by the most granular of details to find the story you want, I can get behind that.
Or if they're inside a spoiler block, so you can look at them if you want and ignore them otherwise.
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