Sentences with phrase «place for free speech»

And Tor isn't all bad: The network was originally created for military communications and has become a place for free speech advocates like journalists and whistleblowers to speak out anonymously.
So if this isn't a place for free speech who on this site is going to tel us what we can write?

Not exact matches

But the consequences remain the same, important voices for free speech have been silenced in the places where they are needed the most.»
For precisely the same reasons that I found your statement to be laughable, the government must insure that mechanisms are put in place to insure that the actual persons granted free speech rights by the Supreme Court (the owners of the corporations) are the ones actually exercising their new rights instead of having those rights stolen by fat - cat executives and self - appointed boards.
Even in the Peoria speech that gained him national attention, however, he left no doubt that his opposition to Kansas - Nebraska was based on the conviction that the «new free states are places for poor people to go to and better their condition.»
Such groups have claimed that federal hate crimes laws will silence preachers, ignoring those laws» robust protections for free speech and religious expression, as well as the experience in the many states with such protections already in place.
The NFL Players» Union issued a statement defending its members right to free speech, saying «It is a source of enormous pride that some of the best conversations about these issues have taken place in our locker rooms in a respectful, civil and thoughtful way that should serve as a model for how all of us can communicate with each other.
For instance, in a major policy speech before the Constituent Assembly in Karachi on August 11, 1947, just three days before Pakistan's inception, he stated, «You are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place or worship in this state of Pakistan.
Borough President Melinda Katz called it a hub for free speech, while Public Advocate Letitia James hailed the plazaas a «safe and accepting place for New Yorkers of all religions, ethnicities, sexual orientations and genders» to gather without fear of bigotry or hatred.
Whether we're talking about free speech on Usenet, the policy questions of legitimate marketing and com - mercial activity conducted over email, or the desirable but spam - ish mes - sages that trip the filters and disappear, there is always friction not around the most egregious case (no one argues for Leo Kuvayev's «\ / 1@gR / - \» messages) but at the blurry places where spam threatens to blend into acceptable use, and fighting one might have a deleterious effect on the other.
The Catholic church is not a bastion of free speech, but it remains, at least for this lapsed Catholic, a place I can go to get away from the harsh realities of the world, take a breath and, after genuflection, feel safe.
The tribunal took the Charter argument for free speech seriously but, correctly within the context of the existing BC human rights regime, ruled that Pardy's right not to be faced with discrimination in a public place while being served trumped Earle's Charter Right to say whatever he wanted.
While there are several places dedicated to allowing for these types of conversation, free speech is not always appreciated and encouraged.
In Pruneyard, the court established that free speech activities were protected in shopping centers, and the only restrictions that mall owners could impose upon these activities were for «objectively reasonable» and «narrowly tailored» time, place, and manner restrictions.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z