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Category Archives: Freedom of Speech

Eddie Griffin Stand Up Comedy Freedom Of Speech New Video HD – Video

Posted: March 12, 2015 at 7:53 pm


Eddie Griffin Stand Up Comedy Freedom Of Speech New Video HD
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Eddie Griffin Stand Up Comedy Freedom Of Speech New Video HD - Video

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This "Marxist" Doesn’t Understand Freedom of Speech – Video

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This "Marxist" Doesn #39;t Understand Freedom of Speech
This video may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. This video constitutes a #39;fair use #39; of any such copyrighted...

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This "Marxist" Doesn't Understand Freedom of Speech - Video

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Islam and the freedom of speech – Video

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Islam and the freedom of speech
How does the gen next from the Muslim community view the Charlie Hebdo shooting? What were their views on the cartoon that caused it? We spoke to a few young members of the community who ...

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Islam and the freedom of speech - Video

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Move to ban US flag at California university sparks uproar, free speech-vs.-hate speech debate

Posted: at 7:53 pm

IRVINE, Calif. When student government representatives at the University of California, Irvine voted to ban all flags including the American one from their tiny office, they thought they had found a solution to a battle over freedom of speech that began when someone first tacked a U.S. flag to the wall in January. The flag had been at the center of an increasingly bitter game of cat-and-mouse, with some students taking it down repeatedly and others replacing it in the dark of night.

Last week, six student legislative council members passed a resolution banning all flags from their office space, saying the U.S. flag could be viewed as hate speech because some consider it a symbol of colonialism and imperialism. The executive cabinet of the Associated Students organization vetoed the legislation two days later but it was too late.

The vote prompted a furor: Taxpayers protested on the campus plaza, the school was bombarded with angry comments on its social media sites and one state lawmaker proposed a constitutional amendment that would prohibit state-funded colleges and universities from banning the U.S. flag on campus. On Thursday, student government meetings were canceled for the second day in a row because of an unspecified threat.

The debate resonated on the ethnically and religiously diverse suburban campus south of Los Angeles, where tensions over freedom of speech have taken the national stage several times before. For years, Jewish students and members of the Muslim Student Union have sparred in a dispute that came to a head in 2011, when 10 Muslim students were arrested and prosecuted for disrupting a speech by Israeli ambassador Michael Oren. In 2007, federal civil rights investigators looked into complaints of anti-Semitic speeches given at the university by invited Muslim speakers, but they found the comments were directed as Israeli policies, not Jewish students.

"It's the nature of young minds questioning and activism at a young age. I think people notice it at UCI more because they think, 'Oh, that's the quiet conservative campus in the middle of Orange County.' But the reality is the students are from all over the place and they're testing out their ideas just like they are at any other campus," said Cathy Lawhon, university spokeswoman. About 14 percent of the university's nearly 30,000 students are from other countries.

The tension between Muslim and Jewish undergraduates has calmed recently, and President Barack Obama gave the university commencement speech last spring. So current students said they were dismayed to be in the national spotlight again on freedom of speech issues.

Daniel Kellogg, a fourth-year cognitive sciences major, wore a muscle shirt emblazoned with the American flag as he walked across campus to drop off a term paper. The attention was unsettling, he said, particularly since UC Irvine was being portrayed nationally as a hotbed of anti-American fervor because of the actions of six students.

"We have a lot of international students, and I could see how somebody could possibly be uncomfortable by a gigantic flag in the middle of the common area. But at the same time, this is the United States, and they should just get used to that," Kellogg said.

Meeting minutes show legislative council members grappled with whose rights were more important as they voted: those offended by the flag or those who were offended by its removal. One council member noted that an anonymous letter that criticized the flag was free speech but taking it down was impinging on the free speech of others who wanted it left up.

Associated Students President Reza Zomorrodian did not respond to emails nor did any of the legislative council members involved in the vote or the resolution's author. But in a statement earlier this week, three of the six students who passed the resolution said that they were grateful to be "privileged enough to even have these kinds of conversations" and said they had meant to create a "safe, inclusive space" for all students.

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Move to ban US flag at California university sparks uproar, free speech-vs.-hate speech debate

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LETTERS: Disrespecting our veterans' sacrifices

Posted: at 7:53 pm

What a sad statement to have to hear that the UC Irvine student government considered removing the American flag from their lobby. As a vet, I fully support freedom of speech, but that freedom always comes at a cost. Our soldiers and nation deserve more than some student body making a mockery of the flag and the blood, sweat and the loss of life expended making sure that these freedoms exist, not to mention ensuring the flag that represents this nation flies or is displayed where people want it to be.

People come from around the world to this nation because it offers a quality of life and a quality of people without exception. It is rare that people come because their countries are so much better than ours. Is it that hard to show respect for what this nation does for people immigrating here?

Regarding freedom of speech, Id like to make this point: Soldiers lay down their lives for the flag, so maybe the university student body can stop accepting federal grants.

We are a great nation. Maybe a little respect for the flag for which it stands would not be too much to ask.

John Friske

Menifee

Liberals not to blame

After reading John W. Burns Liberals dragging down California [Letters, March 9], Ive come to the conclusion that he may need some assistance.

Burns complains that progressive liberals are dragging down the state. Perhaps he would feel better living in a state where folks share his conservative views. States like Mississippi, Louisiana, West Virginia or Alabama might be just right.

Never mind the fact that these states have some of the lowest levels of education and some of the most severe problems with their infrastructure, as well as some of the worst living conditions in the country.

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LETTERS: Disrespecting our veterans' sacrifices

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A message to Sasenarine: Laugh and Funny by the Freedom of speech – Video

Posted: March 11, 2015 at 7:54 am


A message to Sasenarine: Laugh and Funny by the Freedom of speech
Freedom of speech / expression: Past to Present This video is SO FUNNY.

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A message to Sasenarine: Laugh and Funny by the Freedom of speech - Video

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…FREEDOM of SPEECH – FREEDOM of EXPRESSION – Video

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...FREEDOM of SPEECH - FREEDOM of EXPRESSION
Sacramento, California-Saturday February 28th, 2015: Local resident, "Doug" expressed his views under the Freedom of the U. S. Constitution. Local radio talk show host, Pat Walsh does the same...

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...FREEDOM of SPEECH - FREEDOM of EXPRESSION - Video

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Eddie Griffin Stand Up Comedy Freedom Of Speech Stand Up Comedy Full HD – Video

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Eddie Griffin Stand Up Comedy Freedom Of Speech Stand Up Comedy Full HD
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World leaders denounce Copenhagen shootings as attack on freedom of speech, offer condolences

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Published February 15, 2015

Dansh Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt pays respects Sunday Feb. 15, 2015, at the Copenhagen Synagogue for the victims for the Saturday nights shootings in Copenhagen. Danish police shot and killed a man early Sunday suspected of carrying out shooting attacks at a free speech event and then at a Copenhagen synagogue, killing two men, including a member of Denmark's Jewish community. Five police officers were also wounded in the attacks. (AP Photo / Thomas Borberg, Polfoto) DENMARK OUT(The Associated Press)

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chairs the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015. (AP Photo/Abir Sultan)(The Associated Press)

Police working at the scene where police shot and killed the alleged shooter in Copenhagen. Shooting took place early Sunday morning close to Noerrebro commuter station. Danish police shot and killed a man early Sunday suspected of carrying out shooting attacks at a free speech event and then at a Copenhagen synagogue, killing two men, including a member of Denmark's Jewish community. Five police officers were also wounded in the attacks. (AP Photo / Jens Dresling, Polfoto) DENMARK OUT(The Associated Press)

Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt in front of the Synagogue in Copehagen, Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015. A man opened fire Saturday killing a Danish documentary filmmaker and a member of the Scandinavian countrys Jewish community and wounding five police officers in the attacks. (AP Photo/Polfoto, Jens Dresling) DENMARK OUT(The Associated Press)

COPENHAGEN, Denmark Public figures across Europe and beyond on Sunday condemned the attack by an unidentified gunman against a free speech event and a synagogue in Copenhagen that left three people dead, including the suspected perpetrator. Investigators in the Danish capital say the gunman could have been inspired by the terror attacks in Paris last month, in which three Islamic radicals killed 17 people at the Charlie Hebdo newspaper, a kosher grocery store and elsewhere.

Here's a look at some of the reactions to the events in Copenhagen:

"Denmark has been hit by terror."

"As a nation we have experienced a few hours that we will never forget. We have tasted the nasty taste of fear and powerlessness that the terrorists want us to taste."

"We do not know the motive for the alleged perpetrator's actions, but we know that there are forces that want to hurt Denmark. They want to rebuke our freedom of speech." - Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt.

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World leaders denounce Copenhagen shootings as attack on freedom of speech, offer condolences

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Watch Noam Chomsky School Ezra Levant On Free Speech (VIDEO)

Posted: at 7:54 am

Noam Chomsky may be 86, but he doesn't pull his punches.

In a recent interview with Ezra Levant, the famed U.S. linguist and social justice activist took the Canadian commentator to task over freedom of speech.

Levant interviewed Chomsky in a video chat for his new website, The Rebel, and free speech was at the top of the agenda. Levant wasted no time in asking why the left doesn't care as much about freedom of speech now as it did in the 1960s.

"Why [is it] today's leftists are the enforcers of speech codes?" Levant asks.

"I don't think that's true at all," Chomsky answered.

Levant then asks Chomsky "aren't there more speech codes being enforced by leftists now than ever before?"

"That's a dramatic exaggeration," Chomsky said. "The restrictions on freedom of expression come from the corporate sector and the state sector and they're pretty rigid."

The two don't find a lot of common ground on the issue. Watch the full interview at The Rebel.

Just after the 20-minute mark, Levant moves on to foreign affairs and asks Chomsky if it's a sign of anti-Semitism that the international community is "obsessing" over Israel while "ignoring" Syria's Bashar Al-Assad and the Islamic State.

"That's like asking me do I agree that the moon is made out of green cheese," Chomsky replied without missing a beat.

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