"Fairness Doctrine" Essays and Research Papers

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    UNFAIR DOCTRINE A media subject to the power of the government is not representative of making “no law…abridging the freedom of speech or of the press” (NARA). The First Amendment is explicit: the government cannot reduce the freedom of the press‚ which was deliberately infringed upon by the Fairness Doctrine. It is understandable that broadcast over publicly-owned airwaves should be subject to federal regulation‚ but there is a vast difference between regulation and oppression‚ which is what the

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    1. Using examples‚ explain the difference between obscene and indecent materials. Obscene and indecent both have different meanings but are similar in many ways. Obscene material is described as disgusting or repulsive but indecent material is described as being offensive to the public. Both obscene and indecent can be view differently by the public; however‚ the Constitution plays a role with indecent material. Obscene material "is not protected by the First Amendment‚” (The Dynamics of Mass

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    Week 9's Final

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    Part One •           Write an essay of at least 700 words.  Comprehensive writing skills must be used. •           The First Amendment to the Constitution bars Congress from infringing on the freedom of speech of the citizenry of the United States. It does not prohibit private restrictions on speech. With this in mind‚ many universities have over the years instituted speech codes or have banned hate-speech. If you were in charge of a university what rules would you make for student conduct online

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    gives them meaning."Journalism in today’s news is not the same as it was over half a century ago. The Fairness Doctrine‚ which was eliminated in 1987‚ was a policy that required the holders of broadcast licenses to both present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that was‚ in the Federal Communications Commission’s view‚ honest‚ equitable and balanced. The Doctrine obligated broadcasters to devote some of their airtime to discussing controversial matters of public policy

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    Justice as Fairness

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    Harvard philosopher John Rawls (1921-2002 ) developed a conception of justice as fairness in his now classic work A Theory of Justice . Using elements of both Kantian and utilitarian philosophy‚ he has described a method for the moral evaluation of social and political institutions. Imagine that you have set for yourself the task of developing a totally new social contract for today’s society. How could you do so fairly? Although you could never actually eliminate all of your personal biases and

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    The Bush Doctrine

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    2/19/2013 The Bush Doctrine The Bush Doctrine is a phrase used to describe different ideas related to US foreign policy that the US held in the Bush’s administration. In the doctrine‚ it states America has a right to attack or go to war with any country that is a potential threat before the threat can do grave damage. It also describes that if any country harbor or supports terrorism‚ they will be treated as terrorists. The Bush Doctrine was the new American security strategy to prevent terrorists

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    Monroe Doctrine Impact

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    Monroe doctrine has changed many things in our lives today. The Monroe doctrine is an American government policy statement of no invention that has worldwide raging If sporadic enforcement and uses since it was introduced. It stated that further efforts by European nations to colonize land or interfere with states in North or South America would be Viewed as acts of aggression‚ requiring U.S. intervention. James Quincy Adams played a large role in the Monroe doctrine. As a

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    Throughput/Fairness Trade offs for the iSLIP Scheduling Algorithm Petros Mol Todor Ristov Nikolaos Trogkanis University of California‚ San Diego University of California‚ San Diego University of California‚ San Diego pmol@cs.ucsd.edu tristov@cs.ucsd.edu nikos@cs.ucsd.edu ABSTRACT High throughput and fairness consist two desirable properties when scheduling traffic in an Input-Queued crossbar switch. Unfortunately‚ these two goals are conflicting which makes the job

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    The Monroe Doctrine has been described as a "hands off" warning to Europe. How did the U.S interpret the doctrine in practice? On December second‚ 1823‚ President Monroe declared to the public his concerns on domestic and foreign affairs in his annual speech. In his words one could find ideas that did not matter only the U.S‚ but it interested Europe and the Americas as a whole. Such concerns would turn out to be a basis of a set principles that the U.S would implement in the future years‚ Monroe’s

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    Monroe Doctrine The fifth American President James Monroe released a document on December 2‚ 1823‚ during the sixth annual message to Union Address to Congress‚ which is known as Monroe Doctrine. “The Monroe Doctrine proposed that further efforts by European nations to colonize land or interfere with states in North or South America would be viewed as acts of aggression.” This movement from America was an important expression of the growing nationalism that helped US to be the dominant power in

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