How Television Distorts Reality
This video delves into how the media and news stations use censorship and bias to distort what the public is informed about.From:TGelshRSCViews:9 0ratingsTime:05:23More inNonprofits Activism
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How Television Distorts Reality - Video
Censorship: Where is the Freedom?
Many books are banned from schools and libraries across the United States. What would you do if someone banned you from reading what you want? This video is a story about a boring infomercial that gets a creative spin from the conversation of two students.From:sarahbazzoli1Views:3 0ratingsTime:02:13More inFilm Animation
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Censorship: Where is the Freedom? - Video
PJTV #39;s InstaVision: Why Colleges Are the Greatest Threat to Free Speech
Glenn Reynolds talks to Greg Lukianoff, the President of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. Lukianoff is the author of Unlearning Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate. Hear how higher education is censoring speech and imperiling First Amendment rights on this InstaVision.From:PajamasmediaViews:800 65ratingsTime:07:03More inNews Politics
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PJTV's InstaVision: Why Colleges Are the Greatest Threat to Free Speech - Video
Who is Anonymous?
"who is anonymous" "who are anonymous" "who are anonymous hackers" chanology anonymous legion cake scientology SP fair game "who is anonymous documentary" "who is anonymous and what is the plan" "who is anonymous hackers" "who is anonymous abridged" "anonymous trailer" "anonymous message to the american people" "anonymous hackers" "occupy wallstreet" occupy wallstreet "lady gaga" scientology illuminati power freedom "kanye west" internet people "internet censorship Anonymous is for FreedomFrom:Manoj KumarViews:28 1ratingsTime:04:58More inNonprofits Activism
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Who is Anonymous? - Video
The Swazi Observer, the newspaper in effect owned by King Mswati III, has backed the Prime Minister Barnabas Dlamini's ban on MPs going on the radio.
Dlamini had banned MPs from the airwaves in Swaziland, where all but one radio station is state-controlled and the PM is editor-in-chief.
Dlamini said MPs could not go on air without the permission of their areas' chiefs. He said it was wrong for them to just go on radio with issues which the chiefs were not even aware of.
The Observer, in an editorial, backed the premier, saying, 'We don't care about the national radio ban he effected on them.'
In particular, the newspaper objected to MPs drawing attention to the development needs of their constituents. 'MPs are in Parliament to make laws and not to play small time development officers,' it said.
It went on to say it did not want to hear the MPs talking about people's needs like burials, school fees and elderly grants.
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Swaziland: King's Paper Backs Radio Censorship