Freedom of expression is a cornerstone of a functioning democracy. Freedom of expression promotes certain societal values, as noted by Professor Emerson in 1963: "Maintenance of a system of free expression is necessary (1) as assuring individual self-fulfillment, (2) as a means of attaining the truth, (3) as a method of securing participation by the members of the society in social, including political, decision-making, and (4) as maintaining the balance between stability and change in society." Our constitutional commitment to free speech is predicated on the belief that a free society cannot function with coercive legal censorship in the hands of persons supporting one ideology who are motivated to use the power of the censor to suppress opposing viewpoints.
Post Tenebras Lux wrote:So what's he going to do about the article posted on American web sites?
His actions have only drawn attention to this matter and now more than ever people will be reading what Kay wrote.
Mark Fournier wrote:Post Tenebras Lux wrote:So what's he going to do about the article posted on American web sites?
His actions have only drawn attention to this matter and now more than ever people will be reading what Kay wrote.
There is nothing he can do about the article being posted on a lot of websites on the internet. It looks like he can force us to take down our reproduction of it as it appeared at the National Post but the real damage is being done by the precedent this sets. Of course this only makes more people aware of the Kay article but that's how the internet works. No one is going to have any luck trying to create an Orwellian internet memory hole, that's not how the internet works.
Richard Warman managed to sue his way into getting books pulled from British Columbia libraries but his scope is very limited when trying to get information removed from the internet.
Mark Fournier wrote:There is nothing he can do about the article being posted on a lot of websites on the internet. It looks like he can force us to take down our reproduction of it as it appeared at the National Post but the real damage is being done by the precedent this sets. Of course this only makes more people aware of the Kay article but that's how the internet works. No one is going to have any luck trying to create an Orwellian internet memory hole, that's not how the internet works.
Richard Warman managed to sue his way into getting books pulled from British Columbia libraries but his scope is very limited when trying to get information removed from the internet.
civic.duty wrote:Supreme Court revives "Fair Comment" Defence
<a href=http://www.cjfe.org/specials/2009/faircomment.pdf>Read the Court's ruling here</a>
Return to Censorship Files - The Blogosphere under attack
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests