You did no favors for
free speech today ladies and gentlemen.
Not exact matches
Today's misguided FCC action represents a radical departure that risks erosion of the biggest
free speech platform the world has ever known.
This will not resolve
today's complex questions of
free speech, community standards, and government subsidies.
Americans will be to scared to exercise there right to
free speech because
today is the day we lost it america sleep well.
We also agree
today on many basic features of a democratic society: the right to vote, the right to due process of law, the right to
free speech.
Today our concern to maintain freedom of the press and
free speech must take into account new ways that the right of people to form their opinions can be limited.
«So, I didn't stand locked in arms, I knelt
today, because I wanted to make it clear that our rights to
free speech and protest in America can not be muted by the president.»
In response to calls from Humanists UK and others, the Joint Committee on Human Rights has
today published comprehensive guidance on the law protecting and limiting
free speech for students and universities.
Twitter users showed their support for
free speech in their thousands
today, as they backed a man fined for making a terrorist - related joke.
People being treated for cancer in England can apply for
free prescriptions from
today, as Gordon Brown fulfils one of the promises he made during his conference
speech.
So was Theresa May's subsequent appearance on the
Today programme, in which she was again unable or unwilling to say exactly which kinds of
free speech would be outlawed.
Before
today's
speech, it was rumoured that, because of the distractions of the Scottish referendum and «The English Question», Miliband would this year be relying on flash cards, rather than delivering his usual note -
free tour de force.
Commenting on
today's
speech by the Prime Minister, Christine Blower, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, the largest teachers» union said: «Yet again we see the myth being peddled that the academies and
Free Schools programmes are the answer to a good education in this country.
The Daily Telegraph
today publishes key extracts from a
speech that Sir Malcolm Rifkind has given on his hope for a «Global Zero»; a nuclear
free world.
EFF is the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an organization dedicated to confronting cutting - edge issues defending
free speech, privacy, innovation, and consumer rights in
today's digital world.
Naturally the conversation turned to issues of
free speech, corporate influences on the media, and the relevance of events that happend a half - century ago
today.
«For example,» Wallace told Education World, «without impinging on anybody's
free speech, one could simply require Web addresses to include a content code, embedded in the URL If the content rating was «Violence,» «Nudity,» «Adult theme» the URL would change from
today's http://www.sleazy.com to http://www.sleazy.com/VNA."
Higher education
today gives analysts, policymakers, and critics so much to fret about — cost,
free speech, leftward lurching faculty, politically trendy majors — that we haven't been paying nearly enough heed to the quality and value of the product itself.
The Supreme Court announced
today that it will hear a case brought by ten teachers who say that California's requirement that they pay the equivalent of union dues violates their
free speech rights.
They do so
today for countless purposes, typically to claim a right to
free and edgy
speech on T - shirts or banners under the First Amendment, to assert rights to education of the handicapped under the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, and to ask for more school spending under state constitutional provisions that are said to guarantee an equitable or an adequate education.
Nick Clegg
today gave a
speech setting out new Liberal Democrat policies on
Free Schools.
It will take an informed readership and entrepreneurial leadership in the field to make sure that digital books preserve the rich heritage of intellectual freedom
free speech and privacy that we have with physical books
today.
And in regards to the efforts of Rudy Giuliani, Cotick wants, ``... to thank Mayor Giuliani, who has dedicated his life to the protection of citizens against terrorists like Manuel Noriega and
today for defending
free speech.»
Today, in an ever - polarising climate of assault on the press and
free speech, words are increasingly used to break those who utter them.
But, as Laura Rosen Cohen says
today, «I'm so bored of «defending»
free speech.»
The principled crusaders for
free speech at the Heartland Institute
today took the pragmatic step of banning credentialed journalists from its event fearing negative publicity.
The Phoenix is out
today with media critic Dan Kennedy's 13th Annual Muzzle Awards, honoring New England's enemies of
free speech and personal liberty.
«Court allows suit over e-mails»: The Atlanta Journal - Constitution
today contains an article that begins, «In a legal decision that troubles some
free -
speech advocates, the Georgia Supreme Court has ruled against a woman who complained in e-mails about the care her mentally disabled son was receiving through a nonprofit organization that provides resources to families with disabled members.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
today announced that it has asked a federal court to protect the
free speech rights of MoveOn.org and Brave New Films after YouTube removed their video, «Stop the Falsiness,» a satire poking fun at Stephen Colbert's Comedy Central show, «The Colbert Report.»
«Clackamas man exercises
free speech rights by giving cops the finger»: This article appears
today in The Oregonian.
George Washington Law Prof Jeffrey Rosen has a fantastic piece in the New York Times
today on Google's Gatekeepers, chronicling the central role the company is playing, voluntarily or not, in setting a kind of global
free speech policy.
Today the Fully Informed Jury Association (FIJA) mailed the following letter to Chief Judge Belvin Perry, Jr., who recently issued an administrative order unlawfully prohibiting the
free exercise of
speech in Florida.
Instead, moderator and CNN senior reporter Dylan Byers steered Apple's senior vice president of internet software and services through a wide range of topics, from
today's acquisition of magazine platform Texture through Apple Music (it now has 38 million subscribers),
free speech, live TV, health care and the company's recent foray into video content.
I supported Milo Yiannopoulos in the hope and expectation that his expression of views contrary to the social mainstream and his spotlighting of the hypocrisy of those who would close down
free speech in the name of political correctness would promote the type of open debate and freedom of thought that is being throttled on many American college campuses
today.
Of Yiannopoulos, he said: «I supported Milo Yiannopoulos in the hope and expectation that his expression of views contrary to the social mainstream and his spotlighting of the hypocrisy of those who would close down
free speech in the name of political correctness would promote the type of open debate and freedom of thought that is being throttled on many American college campuses
today.
«I supported Milo Yiannopoulos in the hope and expectation that his expression of views contrary to the social mainstream and his spotlighting of the hypocrisy of those who would close down
free speech in the name of political correctness would promote the type of open debate and freedom of thought that is being throttled on many American college campuses
today,» Mercer wrote.
Roger Ver, a long - time crypto entrepreneur and major proponent of Bitcoin Cash, tweeted
today that the suspension of the BCH account is the death of
free speech:
The Illinois antisolicitation law applies a restriction on
free speech for a business practice that cropped up in the 1960s and early 1970s but that rarely, if ever, occurs
today, the court said.