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Sedition

2019
Abstract This chapter examines the concept of “sedition” and efforts to suppress dissent and disloyalty. President Adams used the Sedition Act of 1798 to prosecute and jail his critics and political opponents. That episode ultimately revealed the “central meaning of the First Amendment”—that Americans must be free to criticize their ...
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Toleration as sedition

Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 2011
This paper examines and criticizes the defence of toleration due to John Rawls in Political Liberalism, and similar strategies mobilized in defence of toleration. It argues that the notion of the burdens of judgement, used by Rawls to defend his doctrine of reasonable pluralism, faces incoherence: schematically, either disagreement succumbs to reason ...
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Solidarity and Sedition

Perfect Beat, 2015
Walker, C (1997) Stranded: the secret history of Australian independent music 1977-1991, Sydney: Pan Macmillan 
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Revolt and Sedition

2017
The reign of six Achaemenid kings is related. Succeeding each other feature Artaxerxes I, Xerxes II, Sogdianus, Darius II, Artaxerxes II, and Artaxerxes III. Amongst others attention is paid to the revolt of Cyrus the Younger, supported by a Greek mercenary force, against his brother Artaxerxes II and the role Queen Atossa, the mother of both ...
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Sedition Act

The Sedition Act of 1918 was an attempt to limit freedom of speech that opposed—or even questioned—U.S. intervention in World War I. Technically it was not a separate act but instead a series of amendments to the Espionage Act of 1917. That act had given the administration of Woodrow Wilson the power to imprison and fine people who interfered with the ...
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