Sentences with phrase «little free speech»

If we censored everyone who makes vehement, tendentious and grossly unfair criticism of religious belief systems, we'd have little free speech left.

Not exact matches

Earlier, he had attracted great numbers to a speech in his own constituency of Birmingham and a little later at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester.
In her acceptance speech, Nixon, 52, voiced the view of her nearly 200 backers who gathered in the ballroom at the basement of the Albany Hilton: Cuomo's move to the left on free college tuition, minimum wage and other policies was too little, too late.
2) Tthis might be a little far fetched because anonymity is important to free speech but — I'd love to know a little bit about my compatriots here.
On that score, it seems to me (not a lawyer, mind you) that it's not a hard call: if she was parking her car on school grounds, then there's little question: she had no broad right to free speech.
The problem being that logic and objectivity have little to say about the right way to navigate the between allowing free speech on the one hand, and terminating interlocutors on the other.
With that in mind, I am a little disappointed, to be honest, by the quality of the devastating retorts to my free - speech piece in the Speccie.
Continuing on his meme of a few weeks ago, blogfather Volokh takes a long look at Sweden's incomplete protection for free speech (in this case, a «hate speech» against homosexuality), and provides a little historical perspective for a logic - based (and refreshingly non-PC) reality check:
, legislative facts and law (the WHO website shows that drinking water is not safe in that country, so little Jethro won't be moving overseas with dad any time soon), or less crucially about everyday society, like contextual facts and definitions — such as how free speech is jealously protected, how children can't really be blamed for being born out of wedlock, or how married women are natural bartenders.
The sort of introduction I'm particularly thinking of here is the musical lead - in to old standards, or, to be a little more technical, the «introductory sectional verse... that typically has a free musical structure, speech - like rhythms, and rubato delivery.»
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