Law, Political Theory and Psychological Science
Religious Defamation and Political Correctness
The greatest civil liberty granted is the freedom to express individual views and beliefs regardless of the consequences that may transpire. As famously phrased by John Stuart Mill, the freedom to express concern, against any who oppose or affront, is the only way to progress further ideologies and evidence inadequacies in whatever has been challenged. To vilify religion, in the 21st century, is perhaps one of the most difficult expositions to endeavour in. Whenever a religion is opposed, even questioned on its veracity, the guise of racially charged political congeniality, leaves those who wish to oppose regimes of bigotry, oppression and degradation, categorized as racial discriminates poised on self motivated agendas. But this surely cannot be the case. It seems evident that in today’s modern civility religious defamation is not only being vilified, it is be quashed by marginalised conservatism and political correctness gone mad. It is time that freedom and civil rights be safeguarded, it is time that we live in a free society with unconditional freedom of speech, it is time, not for revile and digestion on religious defamation and political correctness, but time, to stand against the big brother of limitation and take action before all our rights are attenuated.
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| Print article | This entry was posted by Andrew Crichton on 01/05/2009 at 12:00 AM, and is filed under Philosophy, Theory. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |






