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Minecraft Survival Games | Episode 2 | Swearing and Censorship – Video


Minecraft Survival Games | Episode 2 | Swearing and Censorship
Open for some duckie love- What #39;s up guys? Fusionz here and today I play a game of MCSG on the map Survival Games Highway and I talk about Swearing and Censorship! Will I win? Will I lose?...

By: FusionzHD_

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Minecraft Survival Games | Episode 2 | Swearing and Censorship - Video

ALTERED STATES: Proof of NASA Censorship – Video


ALTERED STATES: Proof of NASA Censorship
Okay. I showed you the last two videos so that I could show you THIS video. The same place TWICE. But with MAJOR differences. Same angle, so I don #39;t want to hear from the NASA apologists...

By: technothanks

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ALTERED STATES: Proof of NASA Censorship - Video

"Censorship" Jews Want The Dr. of Common Sense Banned On YouTube – Video


"Censorship" Jews Want The Dr. of Common Sense Banned On YouTube
"Censorship" Jews Want The Dr. of Common Sense Banned On YouTube http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lisa-braver-moss/metzitzah-bpeh-circumcision-ritual-inconsistent-with-jewish-principles_b_1598281.h...

By: Promoting Common Sense One Person At A Time

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"Censorship" Jews Want The Dr. of Common Sense Banned On YouTube - Video

Thailand army chief decrees censorship of mediaThailands army chief on Tuesday ordered the censorship of the media in …

Why Thai protests make observers nervous

Globe and Mail - Tuesday 20th May, 2014

Earlier this month, German journalist Nick Nostitz was standing outside a courthouse in Bangkok, cigarette in hand, waiting to hear a verdict on a case that would evict Thailand's prime ...

The Guardian - Tuesday 20th May, 2014

Thailand's army has declared martial law 'to keep law and order' after six months of violent unrest and anti-government demonstrations. The move was announced on the military's ...

RTT News - Tuesday 20th May, 2014

The Thai stock market has moved higher now in back-to-back sessions, collecting more than 15 points or 1 percent along the way. The Stock Exchange of Thailand finished just above the 1,410-point ...

Novinite - Tuesday 20th May, 2014

Thai soldiers with their weapons guard from a military vehicle after declared martial law at the Ratchaprasong shopping intersections in Bangkok, Thailand, 20 May 2014. Photo by ...

New Europe - Tuesday 20th May, 2014

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Thailand army chief decrees censorship of mediaThailands army chief on Tuesday ordered the censorship of the media in ...

N. Korea building collapse study in media control – NBC40.net

By FOSTER KLUG Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - When a South Korean ferry sank with hundreds trapped inside last month, the whole world knew about it. But in North Korea, there was utter silence about the collapse of a 23-story apartment building for five days, until state media issued a rare apology.

The North is not a black hole for information. More than 2 million people have cellphones. Hundreds of foreigners live in Pyongyang, the showcase capital where the collapse occurred a week ago Tuesday. A handful of international news bureaus, including The Associated Press, operate there, and the city sees a steady procession of visiting tourists, academics and diplomats.

But with no Internet for most citizens, a local press that operates as the government's propaganda wing and a security apparatus that severely curbs foreigners and citizens alike, if North Koreans get news about something, it is almost always because the nation's young leader, Kim Jong Un, wants them to get it.

Kim may not have meant for his people to know anything about the collapse at first. Three days after it happened, a North Korean state-run newspaper carried a photo of the beaming leader watching a soccer match. The date shown on a screen display of a telephone beside Kim was a day after the collapse, according to a South Korean official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak to media about the matter.

Chang Yong Seok, an analyst at Seoul National University, said North Korea may have finally publicized the building collapse because news was likely spreading among citizens in Pyongyang via the domestic cellphone service.

In any case, the delay in reporting gave North Korea's propaganda mavens more time to spin the narrative in a way that glorified the ruling Kim family.

The North Korean story highlighted a grieving Kim Jong Un, who one official told state media "sat up all night, feeling painful after being told about the accident."

The state-run Korean Central News Agency said there were casualties but released no specifics on deaths or injuries. Most of the few details to emerge - things that people in democracies would likely consider newsworthy - have come from South Korean officials, who said they believe many people died because nearly 100 families had likely moved into the building, even while it was under construction.

The North Korean report includes apologies from five officials who accepted responsibility for the collapse. It is in keeping with a consistent propaganda message framed to show Kim as a man of the people with no patience for his officials' failures. Kim's late father and predecessor, Kim Jong Il, was seen as more aloof than his son.

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N. Korea building collapse study in media control - NBC40.net