{"id":66737,"date":"2015-09-27T12:46:37","date_gmt":"2015-09-27T16:46:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/freedom-of-speech-and-freedom-of-expression\/"},"modified":"2015-09-27T12:46:37","modified_gmt":"2015-09-27T16:46:37","slug":"freedom-of-speech-and-freedom-of-expression","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/freedom-of-speech\/freedom-of-speech-and-freedom-of-expression\/","title":{"rendered":"Freedom Of Speech And Freedom Of Expression"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    6.1 Importance Of Freedom Of Speech And Expression    The importance of free speech as a basic and valuable    characteristic of western society cannot be underestimated. As    well as emphasizing the value of free speech, it is proposed to    make an evaluation of some of the traditional restrictions on    what may be freely said or published, such as the defamation    laws, contempt of court, national security and so on. The    approach is one which makes the case for free speech, since the    world is now a place where people's unfettered freedoms are by    and large in retreat. One of the difficulties inherent in    discussing freedom of speech is that it contains what    libertarians often describe as the paradox of freedom. The    classical exposition of this paradox was described by John    Stuart Mill in his essayOn Liberty in Utilitarianism    Etc: (London, 1910) p 83  <\/p>\n<p>    In other words, unless we ensure to the enemies of freedom the    liberties which they are keen to abuse, then we deny the    essence of what we ultimately stand for and are therefore no    better than those to whom we are opposed. Or as Voltaire has    been paraphrased,  <\/p>\n<p>    On a more practical plane, freedom of speech serves many    functions. One of its most important functions is that    decision-making at all levels is preceded by discussion and    consideration of a representative range of views. A decision    made after adequate consultation is likely to be a better one    which less imperfectly mirrors the opinions, interests and    needs of all concerned, than a decision taken with little or no    consultation. Thus freedom of speech is important at all levels    in society. Yet it is most important for government. A    government which does not know what the people feel and think    is in a dangerous position. The government that muzzles free    speech runs a risk of destroying the creative instincts of its    people.  <\/p>\n<p>    Freedom of speech is also important to governments because when    criticisms of a government are freely voiced, the government    has the opportunity to respond to answer unfair comments and    criticisms about its actions. On the other hand, when freedom    of speech is restricted, rumours, unfair criticisms, comments    and downright falsehoods are circulated by word of mouth. These    have a habit of spreading across the length and breadth of the    country through conversation and surreptitiously circulated    writings. The government is in no position to answer these    views, because they are not publicly stated. It is in a    government's interest to have criticisms in the public arena    where it can answer its critics and correct its mistakes. The    government generally has access to electronic and printing    communication far in excess of individuals and groups. It is    able to present its view only if the opposing views are in the    open and known.  <\/p>\n<p>    Finally, the freedom of speech is the single most important    political right of citizens, although private property is    required for its operation. See further chapter 8. Without free speech no political    action is possible and no resistance to injustice and    oppression is possible. Without free speech elections would    have no meaning at all. Policies of contestants become known to    the public and become responsive to public opinion only by    virtue of free speech. Between elections the freely expressed    opinions of citizens help restrain oppressive rule. Without    this freedom it is futile to expect political freedom or    consequently economic freedom. The sine qua non of a    democratic society is the freedom of speech.  <\/p>\n<p>    Freedom of speech involves toleration of a great deal of    nonsense, and even of matters which are in bad taste. There are    those, among them notably Justice Douglas of the American    Supreme Court, who have argued for near absolute freedom of    speech and against the restrictions based on many of the common    exceptions. In Roth v US 354 US 476 (1957) a case about    obscenity, Justice Douglas said in dissent:  <\/p>\n<p>    Similarly, in Australia, Robert Pullan has recently published a    book (Guilty Secrets: Free Speech in Australia (North    Ryde, 1984)) in which he finds not only the obscenity laws but    also the defamation and sedition laws so repugnant, he would    throw them all out. But while it is thought that even the most    open-minded people would draw the line somewhere (child    pornography) it must also be recognised that there is an    increasing tendency to argue that views based merely on bad    taste and offensiveness to particular groups should be    censored. Yet bad taste, discrimination and mere offensiveness    to individuals are not grounds for restricting free speech.    They have to be accepted as an unavoidable by-product of the    advantages of freedom of speech.  <\/p>\n<p>    It must be realized that what constitutes bad taste or    discrimination or offensiveness is to a very great extent    subjective. The folly of the increasing practice, in recent    times, of placing censorship powers in the hands of bureaucrats    and tribunals is illustrated by the manner in which the works    of authors like D H Lawrence were banned from sale. Even    recently the Chief Commonwealth Film Censor banned a Brazilian    film by Hector Babenco portraying the desperate hand-to-mouth    existence of a Brazilian boy from being shown at the Sydney    Film Festival on the grounds of child abuse, even though it was    the first censoring since 1969 of a film entered for the    Melbourne or Sydney Film Festivals. After an outcry from the    directors of both Festivals, the ban was overruled by the Films    Board of Review. The film, titled Pixote, was shown and    voted the best film by the Film Festival subscribers.  <\/p>\n<p>    Larger problems arise where some people call for groups such as    National Action to be made illegal as tending to encourage    racism. In a recent incident at a University, where National    Action had set up some tables to distribute literature, tables    were overturned and groups of students shouted against racism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Those who attempt to resort to such tactics to stifle    presentation of an opposing view give the impression that    reason and logic are not on their side. Freedom of speech has    as its necessary corollary the expression of a wide range of    views, some of which of course will be unpalatable, or clearly    wrong. But the alternative of placing the agenda for public    discussion in the hands of paternalistic bureaucrats (who as    human beings will be fallible and have subjective views and    personal prejudices) whose rulings often cannot or can only    with difficulty and cost be reviewed in the courts, is    increasingly becoming the norm. It is an undesirable and    unfortunate trend.  <\/p>\n<p>    The attacks on Geoffrey Blainey are symptomatic of developing    trends. History demonstrates that problems have arisen in    multi-racial, multi-lingual and multi-religious societies. The    Blainey view should be freely expressible as part of the public    discussion about our immigration policy, along with any other    views, without his being subjected to personal and vituperative    abuse and threatened with violence. The process of public    debate provides an opportunity for an evaluation of his views.  <\/p>\n<p>    6.2 The Racial Discrimination Act Amendments    One of the thorniest issues that has arisen in recent times is    that of the proposed amendments to the Racial Discrimination    Act by the Human Rights Commission which would:  <\/p>\n<p>    While some may find this a laudable weapon against racists,    this is yet another serious restriction upon free speech. What    the amendment really strikes at is hurtful speech or wounding    words. For example, if somebody publicly said, \"Aboriginals are    just lazy drunks\", it is likely that such a person could be    prosecuted under the Act. Such a statement is a deplorable    generalization, no more applicable to aboriginals than any    other race or nationality. But why give the statement any more    treatment than it deserves  simply to be ignored? Doubtless,    many aboriginals may feel deeply hurt by such a comment. But    what mature person expects to pass through life without having    wounding words spoken to him or her?  <\/p>\n<p>    Any sensible person can see that the statement reflects more    upon the person who made it than it does on Australian    aboriginals. Why should migrants or members of ethnic groups be    protected from the slings and arrows of normal human living?    Indeed, many traits of the various cultures may well deserve    severe criticism for the sake of social discipline and national    cohesion. For example, the aboriginal practice of organized    infanticide or some of their customs relating to treatment of    women, may legitimately be strongly criticised. Have not other    cultures been criticised in the past for their sanitary habits    which were a danger to public health? Members of these    communities and groups may be deeply offended or hurt by such    criticisms. But should the Commonwealth Parliament be    legislating to forbid this simply because it arouses ill    feeling?  <\/p>\n<p>    Further, should we not be free to criticise white South African    members of the Australian community who are unrepentant about    apartheid policies maintained in their home country,    irrespective of whether it causes intolerance of their    community in Australia? It is ludicrous that such a    condemnation of a racist policy would in fact be a breach of    the Racial Discrimination Act.  <\/p>\n<p>    Laws already exist to adequately deal with any physical attacks    which are made by one group or person against another, whether    of racist origin or not and to deal with incitement to    violence. New laws which enable prosecution at a much earlier    time are both unnecessary and exceedingly vague (and therefore    potentially dangerous) in their operation. Indeed, the freedom    to make such statements is an important safety valve which    society needs in order to lessen the likelihood of resort to    physical aggression. Tensions of a racial nature are bound to    develop in all walks of life and should not be suppressed. A    heated public debate does not necessarily lead to, and is far    more desirable than violence.  <\/p>\n<p>    Those in Australia who are proponents of the fashionable term,    Multiculturalism, mostly politicians, journalists and certain    segments of academia (very few of whom are actually migrants),    make strange bedfellows with those who promote the latest    version of the Racial Discrimination Act. Indeed, it seems that    most of these people wear two night-caps. They cannot be    ignorant of what Italians feel about Greeks, Ukrainians about    Russians, Chinese about Vietnamese, Turks about Armenians,    Indians about Pakistanis, Nigerians about Ghanians, or Croats    about Slavs  and vice versa.  <\/p>\n<p>    Australia's attitude to all this should be that we welcome    immigrants from any country, with the stern proviso that their    national politics be firmly left at home. But the    transformation of theory into reality may at times be more    aptly described as metamorphosis, except that this time the    butterfly can be uglier than the caterpillar. One simply cannot    legislate to prevent people from holding what may be racist    attitudes, especially migrants who could have fought against    each other in the World Wars. The best we can do is to educate    and attempt to change attitudes and let time heal these wounds    as new generations of Australian-born children leave these    views behind. Certainly legislating to make these thoughts    inexpressible is likely only to harden people's feelings and    prolong the whole process. Professor Lauchlan Chipman has this    to say (Quadrant May 1984, p 24) about the amendment    (quoted above) proposed by the Human Rights Commission:  <\/p>\n<p>    It is not excessively dramatic to say that not since the Second    World War have we seen proposals for limiting freedom of    expression as restrictive as some that are currently under    discussion. All of them derive from the progressives of the new    class and more importantly all of them are put forward in the    name of protection of the innocent from hurtful speech.    At first, the proposed amendment might seem unexceptionable;    something that only racists or people insensitive to the hurt    caused by racists would oppose. And indeed, as is so often the    case, people who oppose this amendment in good faith will be    called racists. Regular readers of Quadrant will recall    that the present Commonwealth Attorney General was, as Shadow    Attorney, not averse to using parliamentary privilege to    describe Quadrant contributors who criticised    multiculturalism as \"sophisticated\" and \"more    dangerous\" racists. Late last year the Evans speech was    cited at a multiculturalism conference in Adelaide as proof    that this writer \"hated ethnics\").  <\/p>\n<p>    One thing that is particularly worrying about the Human Rights    Commission's proposed amendment is that it has deliberately    chosen (it considered the alternative and rejected it) to    construct the offence in terms of objective consequence    rather than intended effect, in a way that is modelled    on the defamation laws of most States. Thus if a newspaper were    to report, in good faith, claims about the comparative    alcoholism rates among Aborigines and non-Aboriginal    Australians... and as a result a minority of the readers were    reinforced in an intolerant attitude to Aborigines, an offence    may have been committed. Now we will be hastily reassured that    the proposed legislative amendment is not intended to extend to    \"bona fide public discussions\", scientific reports, or    works of art (the latter exemption no doubt intended to save    Wagner and Irish jokes).  <\/p>\n<p>    It is difficult to imagine anything more ludicrous than the    Human Rights Commission making judgements about whether    something is a work of art, whether a public discussion is bona    fide, or whether a report is genuinely scientific. It is not    just ludicrous. It reeks of all of the classical dangers of    censorship. Moreover it is doubtful if it will achieve anything    in relation to its declared and legitimate objective of    diminishing racial tensions. (Comparative English legislation    actually correlates with a rise in overt racist activity, and    in the proportion of racist smut which is anonymous.) It may    succeed in having Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf banned in    Australia, unless it qualifies as a work of art.  <\/p>\n<p>    6.3 Defamation    Free speech is simply what is left when many other things are    taken out. One of those things is the effect of defamation    laws, which seek to protect an individual's reputation. The    central problem is to reconcile this purpose with the competing    demands of free speech or to put the problem another way    (through the eyes of a journalist):  <\/p>\n<p>    In a free society there is a strong presumption that people    should be able to speak freely, especially in relation to    public issues and an individual's behaviour in relation to    these issues. However, the reality of potential for abuse of    this freedom remains and so with it the need for defamation    laws.  <\/p>\n<p>    In an action for defamation, there has for a long time been the    defence of truthfulness but the onus is on the defence (the    defamer) to prove it. Beevis v Dawson (1957) 1 QB 195.    The truth of all material statements contained in the libel    must be proven.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is also the legal defence of \"absolute privilege\".    In simple language this means that whatever is said (however    defamatory) is \"absolutely privileged\" and no action can    be maintained. \"Absolute privilege\" attaches to whatever    is said in Parliament or during evidence given in the course of    judicial proceedings. There is also the defence of    \"qualified privileged\" which is where an action cannot    be maintained unless there is malice, such as in the reporting    by the media of matters in respect of which \"absolute    privilege\" exists. Privilege is often justified on the    ground that  <\/p>\n<p>    But, adds FlemingP  <\/p>\n<p>    It is in view of these often extreme abuses of Parliamentary    Privilege that there is good reason for exposing    parliamentarians to the same liability as anyone else. Truth of    the statements should be a complete defence. Perhaps a balance    could be struck that those with privilege not carry the burden    of proof. Rather, they would be liable if the plaintiff proved    the ntruthfulness of the statement.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the United States a person holding political or public    office has no right to sue for defamation. The reason given is    that a person who enters public office, unlike the private    citizen, should come under unrestrained public scrutiny. This    is considered essential to the workings of the US democracy.    Thus the law of defamation offers no refuge to the holder of    public office. There is an important lesson here for Australia.  <\/p>\n<p>    However, last year the Attorney General proposed new Uniform    Defamation Laws which would place much greater restrictions on    freedom of speech than do Australia's already restrictive laws.    The most severe aspect was that truth would not be a sufficient    defence, as it is in Victoria, nor truth and public interest,    as it is in New South Wales; rather, truth and public    benefit would have to be proved. Of course, none of these    new restrictions applied to Parliamentarians or others with    Absolute Privilege.  <\/p>\n<p>    In view of the criticisms which the draft Bill received from    the media, it now appears to have been put to one side. While    there may be a need to codify the law of defamation which at    present is in a very disorganised state, it should not be taken    as an opportunity to impose further constraints on freedom of    speech. In the following extract Professor Lauchlan Chipman    (Quadrant, May, 1984 p 25) has spelt out the ominous    nature of the reforms proposed to the law of defamation:  <\/p>\n<p>    The proposed amendment to the Racial Discrimination Act is not    the only proposal to restrict freedom of speech associated with    the present government A proposed Uniform Defamation Law,    floated last year, has been withdrawn in the light of the    belting it received from the media, but it has not been    scrapped. Much publicity has already been given to many of its    provisions which, if implemented, would have given Australia,    already suffering an international reputation for restrictive    defamation laws, the most restrictive defamation laws in the    English speaking world. The draft legislation which is now in    limbo was originally presented in a curiously disjunctive form.    Parliamentarians would have been free to pick and choose which    provisions of varying degree of illiberality they would seek to    impose uniformly throughout Australia. Among the options was    one that would give the dead a right to sue (through their    living representative) for up to three years, thus finally    ending the career of the honest obituary writer. Moreover truth    would not be a sufficient defence, as it is in Victoria, nor    truth and public interest, as in New South Wales; rather, under    one proposed option, truth and public benefit would have    to be proved.  <\/p>\n<p>    This last idea is a complete reversal of the fundamental    principle of freedom of expression as set out by John Stuart    Mill and quoted at the beginning of this article. The    traditional principle is one which presumed the right to    express oneself as one wishes unless some substantial harm to    innocent people will result. Under the proposed \"reform\" in one    of the draft options in the uniform Defamation Law the    presumption would be that you should not make statements about    identifiable living or recently dead people unless some    public good will be furthered. Many people have made    useful and sound criticisms of this proposed legislation, and    yet I think it has been insufficiently realized how profoundly    questionable are the principles implicit in it.  <\/p>\n<p>    What the proposed amendment to the Racial Discrimination Act    and the more restrictive proposed provisions of the uniform    Defamation law have in common is a \"wetter\" view than    Mill would ever have countenanced as to what constitutes a    sufficient degree of harm to innocent people, or indeed    how \"innocent\" they need be, to justify restricting    freedom of expression. At the time Mill wrote, privacy  the    value which the uniform Defamation law is really attempting to    protect  was not seen as an important competitor. Indeed it    was not until later in the nineteenth century that the American    Judge Cooley and later Judges Warren and Brandeis, writing in    the Harvard Law Review made privacy  what Judge Cooley    had called \"the right to be let alone\"  an intellectual    issue.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mill's famous principle that it is only the prevention of harm    to others which justifies the state in restricting our    voluntary conduct  a principle derived from Kant  has always    caused practical problems because of the vagueness of the    notion of harm. Some have attempted to give a    \"Millian\" justification for the proposed anti-racist and    defamation laws under discussion on the ground that the    restrictions they introduce are motivated by a desire to    prevent harm; the deep feeling of hurt in having one's racial    ancestry denigrated, or the dignity and embarrassment of having    what one thought were private shames publicised. But plainly    this is not good enough. As Mill himself once wrote:  <\/p>\n<p>    The issue is thus not whether some people are profoundly hurt    by what others are now permitted to say and write freely, but    rather whether this hurt is so great as to justify    curtailing by law the present right to do things which may    produce it. The issue is not whether people engage in    ethnic defamation and outrageous intrusions of privacy. It is    whether, and if so in what circumstances, the real hurt that    such people can and do sometimes produce is a sufficiently    great evil to justify further curtailing that freedom of    expression for which Voltaire, Milton, and Mill spoke so    eloquently and passionately. I do not believe it is. Those who    take the view I have just endorsed will of course, be called    fallaciously racists or friends of racists, and disrespecters    of privacy. It has not changed since that time of Mill who, in    the same essay, wrote:  <\/p>\n<p>    6.4 The New Censorship    The issue of the new censorship would not be complete without    note being taken of the new guidelines which have been    circulated by the Federation of Australian University Staff    Associations (FAUSA) titled Towards Non-Sexist Language.    These guidelines have the very objective which is set    out for Newspeak in the    appendix to Orwell's Nineteen    Eighty Four. The objective is to make certain thoughts    (sexist thoughts and attitudes) inexpressible. Needless    to say the guidelines are ridiculous in their justification,    and inaccurate  embarrassingly so in an organization which    claims to represent the interests of those in our highest    institutions of learning  in their substantial linguistic    claims. But what is more important is that in several    Australian universities committees have been established to    consider recommendations, inter alia, that compliance    with the guidelines in university lectures, tutorials,    administrative documents and research publications, be    university policy. While serious scholars will certainly ignore    the positive recommendations which are predictable given the    sorts of people who gravitate to such committees, the real    indictment of the quality of our tertiary academic community is    that there are sections within it who would take it seriously    at all.  <\/p>\n<p>    What sort of attitude to scholarship is held by someone who    would actually recommend, to take a real example, that in    lectures, tutorials, or research publications about Aristotle,    he should not in future be quoted directly as saying \"Man is a    political animal\", but rather, as university policy,    should be paraphrased as saying that people are naturally    political (or other non-sexist words to that effect)? It is    difficult to take a principled stand on university autonomy    against attacks from without, when it is being wilfully    subverted from within by people who, in the unlikely event that    they have read Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four, have    interpreted his discussion of Newspeak as a set of    useful positive recommendations. When a satirist provides an    archetype for a social policy within our institutions of higher    learning, retreat and withdrawal are very tempting.  <\/p>\n<p>    During 1983 several proposals were floated to re-write school    textbooks and revise school curricula so that men and women are    portrayed as having socially interchangeable roles. A new    organisation of Western Australian school teachers wants    history texts rewritten to write out wars and war heroes and    write in peace and peace heroes. More significant is the actual    culling of certain school and municipal libraries, under the    direction of committees filled with moral zeal, of racist,    sexist, and militarist works. In New South Wales, former    federal Commissioner for Community Relations and former    Immigration Minister in the Whitlam Labor Government Al Grasby,    is reported to have called for the removal of Clive of    India from New South Wales school libraries on the ground    that it is racist.  <\/p>\n<p>    The argument given for removing these books from school and    municipal libraries could be extended to removing them from all    libraries. The arguments are essentially those offered by Plato    in Book X of The Republic. Indeed the parallels between    Plato's Republic, Oceania in Nineteen Eighty Four    and the new illiberalism in Australia are striking. In all    cases a publicly educated elite, sure in its values but    untrusting of the rest of the community to quickly endorse or    understand its values, adopts a paternalistic (The    Republic) or Big Brotherly (Nineteen Eighty Four)    protective role. Plato's Guardians, and the new    moralists of the new class in Australia, who are associating    themselves with such very worrying agencies as the Commonwealth    Human Rights Commission (itself an interesting specimen    of Newspeak terminology, of which more below), various    Anti-Discrimination and Equal Opportunity Boards, and a number    of other advisory boards and ad hoc panels with direct    access to Attorneys-General and other political leaders, have a    remarkable amount in common. Like the Party in    Nineteen Eighty Four under the sternly protective but    nonetheless sibling image of Big Brother, these people believe    that not only do they know the truth on important    matters of social order, but they know it with a certainty    which justifies them in legislating for the implementation of    this certain truth by whatever measures are necessary. Like    Plato's Guardians, they fear that the lower classes    (Orwell's proles or quite simply \"ordinary    people\") will be too lethargic, weak-minded (the effects of    prior \"structural social conditioning\") or too    weak-willed to achieve voluntarily the rapid implementation of    these selectively revealed goods.  <\/p>\n<p>    6.5 Relative Freedom Of Speech    It is well to remember that in spite of the valid criticisms    which can be made of the way western societies have allowed    governments to place restrictions upon freedom of speech, it    virtually pales into insignificance when a comparison is made    with the countries which lie between the Elbe and the China    Sea. One vivid example is the care which the leader of the    Polish trade union Solidarity, Lech Walesa, has had to employ    in any \"statement\" which he makes about the problems    confronting that country. It is all the more of concern because    it seems clear that it is only the threat of criticism from the    international media which has prevented this episode from being    dealt with in the usual way. A similar problem has been shown    recently in the USSR by the controversy surrounding the health    of the Soviet dissident, Sakharov.  <\/p>\n<p>    This association of restrictions with socialism and freedom    with capitalism, is no matter of chance. Capitalism is, with    all its faults, a pluralist system. Power within it is    dispersed and various, and it is this pluralism which is the    necessary though not sufficient condition for freedom's    existence and continuance. Socialism, on the other hand, is a    highly centralized system, with political and economic power    concentrated in very few hands. Freedom of speech in the    Socialist bloc is all the more restricted where all causes must    bend to the Communist doctrine.  <\/p>\n<p>    6.6 Conclusions    A common justification for the restrictions upon the liberty of    individuals is the supposedly overriding interests of efficient    government and the public benefit. It is conveniently    overlooked that what constitutes \"efficient government\"    and \"public benefit\" are subjective concepts, the    interpretation of which will be in the hands of legislators,    bureaucrats and judges with human failings and feelings, lack    of vision, imperfect knowledge and understanding, subjective    views and personal prejudices. However, while public benefit is    an important factor, the test for allowing further restrictions    upon free speech should strive to be somewhat more stringent.    Legal restraints upon individual freedom of speech should only    be tolerated where they are absolutely necessary to prevent    infliction of actual harm or to secure the liberties of others.    A more or less remote possibility that someone will be harmed    or unbased claims that the stability of society will be    undermined is not sufficient justification for legal    prohibition.  <\/p>\n<p>    A balance must be struck between the ability of individuals to    be unrestricted in the free expression of thoughts and ideas,    and the need to ensure that governments are able to efficiently    carry out their function of administration, law and order, and    preserving the rights of individuals vis-a-vis each other.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.ourcivilisation.com\/cooray\/rights\/chap6.htm\" title=\"Freedom Of Speech And Freedom Of Expression\">Freedom Of Speech And Freedom Of Expression<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> 6.1 Importance Of Freedom Of Speech And Expression The importance of free speech as a basic and valuable characteristic of western society cannot be underestimated. As well as emphasizing the value of free speech, it is proposed to make an evaluation of some of the traditional restrictions on what may be freely said or published, such as the defamation laws, contempt of court, national security and so on.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/freedom-of-speech\/freedom-of-speech-and-freedom-of-expression\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[162383],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-66737","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-freedom-of-speech"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/66737"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=66737"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/66737\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=66737"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=66737"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=66737"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}