The Danish cartoons of Prophet Mohammad are an example of freedom of speeech.
Last year's publication of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad in Danish and other European newspapers angered a particular kind of Muslims worldwide.
As a retaliation, Iran's best-selling newspaper, Hamshahri, launched a competition in February to find the best cartoon about the Holocaust, in which 6 million Jews were killed by the Nazis.
America's Founding Fathers, knowing the world to be far from ideal, held freedom of speech as inviolable precisely for the positive exploration and exchange of ideas that it can foster.
I wanted to see the Danish cartoons, and I found them online.
I want to see the Iranian Holocaust cartoons, and I cant.
Is someone manipulating the Net?
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The point is: I want my freedom of information.
No one, I repeat, no one, should tell me what to think, what to see, or what to read.
Last year's publication of caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad in Danish and other European newspapers angered a particular kind of Muslims worldwide.
As a retaliation, Iran's best-selling newspaper, Hamshahri, launched a competition in February to find the best cartoon about the Holocaust, in which 6 million Jews were killed by the Nazis.
America's Founding Fathers, knowing the world to be far from ideal, held freedom of speech as inviolable precisely for the positive exploration and exchange of ideas that it can foster.
I wanted to see the Danish cartoons, and I found them online.
I want to see the Iranian Holocaust cartoons, and I cant.
Is someone manipulating the Net?
---
The point is: I want my freedom of information.
No one, I repeat, no one, should tell me what to think, what to see, or what to read.
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