I would emphasise that this is not an argument for prohibitory laws or legally enforced censorship. |
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He takes pains to limit the range and reach of his case against censorship. |
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This handbook offers advice on blogging anonymously and getting round censorship. |
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Their censorship of foreign art films shows the party recoiling from foreign ideas that many of its members neither understand nor like. |
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Hoping to successfully merge daffiness with doctrine, it has a lot to say about censorship and self-righteousness. |
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Gossett also addresses lacunas in the manuscript, suggesting that they may have involved some form of censorship. |
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Regardless of your religion or personal beliefs, I will always stand against censorship. |
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Many columnists are expressing concern about the censorship of unpopular views, and what that might mean for freedom of expression. |
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Charges of censorship, however, will not impress a country that likes to consider itself a champion of literary freedom. |
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For liberal feminism, censorship in one area cannot be separated from censorship in another. |
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The age-old debate on censorship in the so-called free world has returned to the headlines. |
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By 1835 the regime had imposed stricter censorship than the Restoration and the republican clubs folded. |
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If too rigidly enforced, the existence of copyright could become a tool for censorship or a bar to the free circulation of ideas. |
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As a cost-saving device, I would advocate liberalization of censorship laws. |
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Art must rather be liberated from commercial constraints, whilst enjoying complete freedom from censorship or control over its production. |
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Most countries indulging in censorship claim to be protecting their citizens from pornographic contagion. |
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At best it seems to be a correlative relationship, and that should not provide justification for censorship. |
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If textbook screening is politicized, confidence in the censorship system itself will be lost. |
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Because the issues of censorship are so convoluted and complicated I find it difficult to come down completely on one side or the other. |
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Debates about censorship and journalistic ethics prevented an interpretative, critical investigation of the disaster. |
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I'm not big on censorship and I will only delete a posting if it contains insulting language. |
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In 1943, however, we were instructed that in some situations requiring instant response, censorship regulations should be waived. |
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Now, in this increasingly conformist society, even students are joining in with the spirit of censorship. |
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Freenet isn't just a file-sharing network designed to resist censorship of all kinds. |
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Other authorial alterations were not due to censorship but to changes in time, space, or other conditions of performance. |
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The emergent dream, like a neurotic symptom, is a compromise between censorship and direct expression. |
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This reference to the top-secret atomic bomb was a little too informational to pass army censorship. |
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In two words, Milton's case against censorship is inconclusive and qualified. |
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In the era of the internet and video communications there is also an element of impracticality to such attempts at censorship. |
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It is not coincidental that tighter censorship is being introduced amidst a wave of severe cuts to social services. |
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He is also perturbed by the fact that no meaningful debate is being made on this illogical act of film censorship. |
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From that point on, homophile magazines were spared censorship by postal or other authorities. |
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Where usually the power of suggestion would suffice, he delves into the reality of that violence and its consequences without censorship. |
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He lost a celebrated censorship case that was ruled on by the Supreme Court. |
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That seemingly innocuous statute implicitly included rules for classification and censorship. |
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How would you evaluate the media in terms of technique, objectivism and censorship during the war? |
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This feature is as noteworthy for its censorship woes as it is for its content. |
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If community standards of good taste are substituted for principles of free speech, does that amount to censorship violative of academic freedom? |
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First, the scope of censorship has narrowed to such an extent that entire domains are now almost a free-for-all. |
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To do otherwise would involve an unacceptable level of censorship and harm to the public good. |
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Sorry for those who fear censorship but there is not a single mention in the document of the right to reply to opinions. |
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He has launched a blistering attack on film censorship and said there is nothing wrong with showing extreme violence on screen. |
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The government has imposed a censorship blackout on the media and no journalists are permitted in the war zone. |
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The government, however, maintains tough media censorship including a virtual blackout on military operations. |
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Their basic belief system is built on censorship, repression, and keeping people ignorant. |
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Through the department of moral censorship, provision has been made for the eradication of beggary. |
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I am not a supporter of the censorship of any voice, but I do believe the dialogue must be framed respectfully. |
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Jessie, if there is any censorship in the postings that I have read on this site, it is self-censorship. |
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His good relationship with the authorities was bought at the price of both self-censorship and compliance with formal censorship. |
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We don't get a whole lot of out-and-out censorship here, but it's not for a lack of the basic human urge to silence people we disagree with. |
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The whole labelling thing isn't some sort of sneaky back-door censorship program, but its a way of protecting free speech. |
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So long as I am a school director I will raise my voice against bowdlerism, and censorship of any kind. |
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Conversely, the apparatus of state censorship demands the literary malefactions it polices. |
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Allegations of censorship, bias and sensationalism have dogged the current saturation coverage of the war. |
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Forcing a publisher to publish something against their will is tantamount to censorship. |
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The cabaret performers and their audiences shared a more or less hidden opposition to social taboos and censorship. |
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Because it comes under the rubric of internet self-regulation, this kind of censorship is seen as less intrusive. |
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Of course, it won't sell over here because we have some of the most draconian censorship laws in the world. |
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In times of crisis and press censorship, resistance movements relied on songs or fiction with double meanings to circulate rebel messages. |
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What's so depressing about the current censorship is its lack of imagination, its dull-witted displacements and deletions, its demagogic vacuity. |
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He also points out a bit of censorship when one line proved too hot for the dialogue track, though it's there for lip-readers. |
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Indeed, the history of caricature has often been entwined with the history of censorship. |
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We endeavor to create a sanctuary where they can express themselves without censorship. |
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Legal bans, eliminationist campaigns, and censorship are the means of subordinating effeminacy that refuses to know its place. |
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Not surprisingly, for connoisseurs of media history, the prime optic of this dilatory policy exercise has been censorship. |
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Internet use in China has quadrupled since 2000 and ultimately censorship may prove futile. |
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It was precisely such censorship under the Taliban that liberal warmongers cited as a reason for violent regime change. |
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That is not a call for censorship, but it is legitimate to query whether this project is the most suitable to receive public money. |
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All Americans abhour censorship, just as they abhour war, but the experience of this and of all other nations has demonstrated that some degree of censorship is essential in war time, and we are at war. |
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Simon Elegant, in Time, writes on how Mo adroitly negotiates the edges of censorship. |
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Jackson was also blamed for widespread censorship on the airwaves, which went all-out in banning any sort of nudity or profanity. |
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Jordan also banned it, and Malaysia, Egypt, and Indonesia subjected it to their censorship boards. |
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The CDA was passed not in the name of censorship but in the name of protecting children from stumbling across sexual material. |
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To many of us, that smacks of censorship, the highest offense to our pride in self-publicity. |
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So this startling move towards Internet censorship should come as no surprise. |
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Ironically, Trotter had succeeded in tightening a censorship bill but failed to stop the movie. |
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The jitters sent through the government by recent protests are leading to the implementation of even more intrusive and innovative censorship and control tools. |
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His new documentary, A Cinema of discontent, is about film censorship in Iran. |
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The twentieth century saw many examples of arts playing a powerful political role, sometimes eliciting harsh reprisals and censorship, even death. |
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He passes the time by visiting bathhouses, where he writhes in licentious congress soapy enough to lave his sins and conceal the nether regions forbade by Japanese censorship. |
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I don't support censorship or rooting out the Commies, but I do think it means that mainstream organizers and people of conscience have to take a more active leadership role. |
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Yet critics of the right to be forgotten argue that by removing Google search results, the law is enabling censorship. |
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The myths surrounding censorship are legion, and are largely based on the unproven premise that screen violence incites people to actual violence. |
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Unimpeded by antique censorship codes or outdated moral guidelines, they lent a painful emotional truth and sometimes savage sexual energy to characters who lived on the edge. |
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Any effort to aestheticize or commodify art is an attempt at censorship. |
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Double-think, censorship, and fear permeate daily life, often subconsciously. |
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There is also a danger that, if too rigidly enforced, the existence of copyright could become a tool for censorship or a bar to the free circulation of ideas. |
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The introduction of political censorship by the PA cannot be allowed to take root. |
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Despite continuing censorship, Chinese media have come a long way from the days of unrelenting and mind-numbing propaganda. |
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The neuralgic issue of censorship is confined to a substantial but specific range of books both in Chinese and from abroad. |
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But human rights guidelines reserve censorship for only the most extreme cases because censorship itself is a blunt instrument that can be deadly. |
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He remained a critic of censorship, a bon viveur, and a raffish wit. |
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In intellectual circles, censorship was mitigated by the hand-copying and circulation of original works, some of which remained unprinted for decades. |
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The challenge has yet to be decided, leaving open the possibility that the university-funded paper could be considered a nonpublic forum and thus subject to censorship. |
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I'd noticed something similar during a number of stoushes on censorship. |
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He relaxed press censorship, slowed the rate of farm collectivization, and reduced investment in heavy industry in favour of the manufacture of consumer goods. |
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Surveillance and severe censorship were the orders of the day. |
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If this palliative censorship worked at all, it worked to alleviate some symptoms manifest in racist broadcasts at the dawn of commercial television. |
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Its failure to delve properly into the past also explains its insensitivity to certain kinds of censorship and to the continued, heavy presence of secret police. |
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By the eighteenth century a comprehensive system of prepublication censorship and licensing, even of private writing, was in place throughout Imperial China. |
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But censorship aside, the film does deal with elements of teenage girlhood that would make family therapists rub their hands together with delight. |
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Before this time there had been strict censorship over all publications. |
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Opponents of prior restraint or censorship often argue that there is no empirical relationship between the restraining expression and the predicted harms. |
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This case follows a long line of Supreme Court cases protecting such disfavored businesses from that type of censorship. |
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They had to publish a funny story about Facebook censorship to get unbanned. |
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Internet censorship in Hong Kong operates under different principles and regulations from those of mainland China. |
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The Theatres Act 1968 finally abolished censorship of the stage in the United Kingdom. |
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During the 1950s and 1960s, many plays were produced in theatre clubs, to evade the censorship then exercised by the Lord Chamberlain's Office. |
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To get around the British Army's postal censorship, the Tolkiens developed a secret code for his letters home. |
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To evade the British Army's postal censorship, he also developed a code of dots by which Edith could track his movements. |
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The official break in literary culture caused by censorship and radically moralist standards effectively created a gap in literary tradition. |
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Although liable to censorship, the latter has a tradition of satirising and attacking School policies, as well as documenting recent events. |
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Freedom of the media remains a major concern, due to government attempts at censorship and harassment of journalists. |
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Pamphlets by liberal nobles and clergy became widespread after the lifting of press censorship. |
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Across continental Europe, but in France especially, booksellers and publishers had to negotiate censorship laws of varying strictness. |
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Only school administrators have the power to enact censorship, after all. |
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In France, the government was hostile, and the philosophes fought against its censorship, sometimes being imprisoned or hounded into exile. |
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In the last 15 years of the 18th century the authorities relaxed the censorship which had existed since the beginning of the 17th century. |
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They variously attacked spiritual and scientific authority, dogmatism, intolerance, censorship, and economic and social restraints. |
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Journalists who had boycotted and stopped writing called for harsh treatment of the newspapers that submitted to German censorship. |
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The control of the media was exercised directly by the communist party itself, and by state censorship, which was also controlled by the party. |
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Internet censorship includes the control or suppression of the publishing or accessing of information on the Internet. |
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He officially instituted the change during his censorship but they did not survive his reign. |
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The concept of freedom of information has emerged in response to state sponsored censorship, monitoring and surveillance of the internet. |
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Freedom of speech is the right to articulate one's opinions and ideas without fear of government retaliation or censorship. |
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The PER had allowed restrictions on speech, public gatherings, and censorship of news media and had given security forces added powers. |
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Stockily built, like the former rugby front row forward he once was, Ken Buckley confronted injustice and censorship front-on. |
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Chapter 12 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana guarantees freedom of the press and independence of the media, while Chapter 2 prohibits censorship. |
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After the consulship had been opened to the plebeians, the plebeians were able to hold both the dictatorship and the censorship. |
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The Great Firewall of China is a case of corporate collaboration in censorship. |
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No amount of censorship, fines, imprisonment, or banishment, it seemed, could stem the criticism. |
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Leopold II of Tuscany abolished the death penalty in Tuscany and reduced censorship. |
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In France, the government was hostile and the philosophes fought against its censorship, sometimes being imprisoned or hounded into exile. |
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Following the Khrushchev Thaw of the late 1950s and early 1960s, censorship was diminished. |
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The targets suggest the attackers are sympathetic to the vast censorship apparatus known as the Great Firewall of China. |
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In the 1930s censorship over literature was tightened in line with the policy of socialist realism. |
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He was referring to web censorship behind the Great Firewall. |
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His policy of glasnost freed public access to information after decades of heavy government censorship. |
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Under this law, police powers were extended, constitutional rights suspended and censorship legalised. |
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Accusations of media censorship have increased since 2009 due to the alleged intensification of restrictions on political criticism. |
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Industrial Commission of Ohio ruling that photodrama was entertainment rather than information and thus subject to state censorship. |
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The suspicious omissions in the new edition of the book attracted claims of censorship. |
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He was an outspoken advocate of civil liberties, despite the risk this placed him in under the strict censorship laws of the time. |
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Until 1989, the political establishment relied on censorship of the opposition. |
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German Ideology is written in a humorously satirical form, but even this satirical form did not save the work from censorship. |
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Themes of human rights, censorship and political freedom pervade his work along with exploration of linguistics and philosophy. |
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Production of serious plays was restricted to the patent theatres, and new plays were subject to censorship by the Lord Chamberlain's Office. |
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Other notable Canadian censorship attempts are have had such strong Streisand Effects, they might as well have directed and starred in the romantic drama Prince Of Tides. |
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Biographers have noted that Hitchcock had always pushed the limits of film censorship, often managing to fool Joseph Breen, the longtime head of Hollywood's Production Code. |
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This, in turn, led to a media backlash against DND censorship that resulted in Masse looking like a far bigger doofus than in the original offending article. |
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Only loosely embedded within the framework of a travelogue, his Reisebilder allowed him to convey political ideas under the conditions of harshened post-Metternich censorship. |
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Due to wartime censorship and the desire to keep up British morale, the full extent of the unfolding disaster at Dunkirk was not initially publicised. |
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After the war, due to the Cold war, a long period of censorship, disinterest and denial occurred about the Italian war crimes and the Yugoslav's foibe killings. |
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The passion that the ACLU has historically marshalled to combat censorship and racial bigotry is now leading it to fight even the most benign safety measures. |
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A Mestan dispelled the concerns that the proposed amendments to the Penal Code criminalising the spreading of information leading to bank panic would lead to censorship. |
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Unlike crying wolf, crying censorship never seems to backfire. |
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After the overthrow of Sukarno by Suharto's New Order regime, films were regulated through a censorship code that aimed to maintain the social order. |
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Such works have also often been subject to censorship and other legal restraints to publication, display, or possession, leading in many cases to their loss. |
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The courts became feared for their censorship of opposing religious views, and became unpopular among the propertied classes for inflicting degrading punishments on gentlemen. |
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Barrie was involved in the 1909 and 1911 attempts to challenge the censorship of the theatre by the Lord Chamberlain, along with a number of other playwrights. |
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This period of his rule was characterized by political repression, censorship, and human rights violations but the US were steadfast in their support. |
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The cosmic censorship hypothesis rules out the formation of such singularities, when they are created through the gravitational collapse of realistic matter. |
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An influential advocate of freedom of speech, Mill objected to censorship. |
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The members of Sudan's parliament who deliberated on the parliament formal response to president Bashir's speech, called upon the government to stop press censorship. |
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Censorship was reformed, to repress both pacifists and defeatists for military reasons, but to restore freedoms otherwise. |
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Censorship burns me up, and I wish that anime distributors were required to state up front that the content has been censored. |
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Censorship has occurred most often in periods of conflict and, in some, severely. |
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The poll results indicate that the Color of Change Censorship Campaign has indeed backfired. |
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Censorship and Media freedom in Russia has always been a main theme of Russian media. |
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The conspiracy of Gaius Silius in the year after his Censorship, 48, is detailed in the section discussing Claudius' third wife, Messalina. |
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Censorship drives poisonous ideas to the fringes, where they are readily fertilised in the darkness, and grow malignantly to burst splenetically into our body democratic. |
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