Website review: firstamendmentcenter.org: Welcome t...

Jack-Benny Jack-Benny discovered this in Liberties/Rights 13 reviews since Aug 8, 2003
icon tagsliberties, first-amendment, government firstamendmentcenter.org

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Thumbs up Reviews of this website

cherry52 rated 2 months ago
learn this if you want a free America.
thefunkypig rated 7 months ago
... are you people serious?
playermatt rated 27 months ago
I'm getting a little tired of these web sites that exist simply to show us the newest outrage by some political entity or another. I'm quite able, on my own, to see how outrageous each of these political entities are. There are politicians who seek power, at the cost of our liberty? I... I had no idea! Thank you, www.firstamendmentcenter.org, for opening my eyes to the true nature of the world! Now I never have to read any of those overly-intellectual newspapers like The New York Times or The New Yorker ever again, because you bring me all the latest government outrages, instructing me what to stew over and what to ignore! Plus, I can act like I'm more informed and tsk-tsk over people who use the internet for entertainment purposes!

Yes, in real-life, I'm just as insufferably egotistical and elitist as anyone I might satirize, but that's the great thing about the internet: nobody knows you're a wanker.
MNGophers3 rated 27 months ago
Offers a great wealth of information to anyone interested in learning more about his or her first amendment rights.
Lilaena rated 28 months ago
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances (First Ammendment to the U.S. Constitution).
LostWolf rated 29 months ago
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
SFgal rated 30 months ago
every once in awhile i wish they'd let me give three or four thumbs up, just so a particular site would show up even when someone was stumbling for ... celebrity gossip or news about the cast of Lost. This is one of those times. first amendment center. We get a chance to see where Alito sort of sits when 3 cases, kind of bundled, get tossed before the SC on February 28 which is, in case you're thinking of sending gifts, my birthday. Thank you in advance for a lovely pair of earrings.
kayester rated 30 months ago
helping to fight the tyranny of the majority.
WaitingforGodot rated 30 months ago

"It's through art that the generations converse with one another."

Arthur Miller
playwright, essayist and author, 2000"
ferretsgames rated 30 months ago
The First Amendment to the US Constitution Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. The feds Google for a chill on freedom Inside the First Amendment By Paul K. McMasters First Amendment Center ombudsman 01.29.06 Most Americans are always ready to tick off any number of reasons they value their privacy. They want to avoid junk mail, junk faxes, junk calls and junk e-mail. They want to maintain physical and financial security. They want to keep medical and psychological information confidential. They want to keep nosy neighbors and Big Brother out of their business. One of the most important reasons does not come quickly to mind, however, and that is how important personal privacy is to freedom of expression. Because the Constitution guarantees their right to engage fully and freely in such activities, Americans should feel comfortable speaking out about issues, communicating by phone or e-mail, associating with whomever they choose, and going to the library or the Internet to learn more about whatever interests them. But that comfort is compromised if they feel that the government is looking over their shoulders when they speak, correspond or associate. And increasingly, government law enforcement and intelligence agents not only are doing that but also tucking away vast stores of personal information in impersonal government databases. Privacy advocates and ordinary citizens are alarmed when they learn of secret searches for private information under the Patriot Act, or of warrantless eavesdropping on telephone and e-mail communications by the National Security Agency, or of the gathering of information on peaceful citizens by the Pentagon and the FBI. That unease has grown more palpable with news that the federal government has demanded from four popular Internet search engines data on search requests and Web-site destinations. Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL all complied in some form with the government request. But the world's largest such firm, Google, refused.
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