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ddvivbhys
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Quote ddvivbhys Replybullet Topic: cheaptomsshoessalei.com the right of the people t
    Posted: May 03 2013 at 10:02pm
s nothing more than a token step to showcase the alignment of government policy with public faith. Essentially,cheaptomsshoessalei.com, the hubbub over the whole issue is a tempest in a teapot.Political censorship of books takes into account the government’s flawed notion that people are gullible and certain reading material should not be accessible to them. However, in India people have the right to choose which book to read and a book on Shivaji by a foreign writer will only be read by an interested few.It makes one wonder how some stanzas in a book can mar the image of this legendary Maratha king. Protests from a certain section of society cannot be a criterion for deciding the fate of a book. In fact, it sends the wrong signal to the public that violent protests can make the government cave in to a group’s demands on censorship.There is no such thing as selective censorship on free speech as a subjective opinion of any author will always hurt the sentiments of someone or the other. The ban on “The Satanic Verses” and Taslima Nasrin’s “Lajja” should be viewed as a blot on our democracy. Sadly, these cases are used as a precedent for demanding a ban on other books.Raghuvir Dass: Yes, for the Greater Good[Raghuvir Dass is an alumnus of Vasant Valley School and is currently pursuing a degree in history from Hindu College in Delhi University.]In 2003, Oxford University Press published a book titled “Shivaji – A Hindu King in Muslim India.” In 2004, the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute in Pune, containing a number of ancient manuscripts, copper and clay tablets,cheaptomsshoessalei.com, was ransacked and destroyed because of the research they undertook for the author, James Laine.Citing its sparking communal violence, the Maharashtra government led by Ashok Chavan of the Congress party banned the book. The Bombay High Court repealed the ban in 2007 and the Supreme Court upheld the decision. The situation on the ground now is that despite the ban being lifted, not a single bookshop in Bombay will stock the book. A spokesman for the Shiv Sena declared success in ensuring that no bookstore in Maharashtra is even contemplating its sale.Mr. Chavan is torn by two conflicting responsibilities. The first is to the right of freedom of expression, the right of the people to knowledge, essentially what everyone would recognize to be the “right” thing, to allow the unhindered publication and sale of Mr,cheap toms. Laine’s book and to let the people who choose to read it to judge it on their own standards of good and bad. The second responsibility is to keep himself and the Congress in power. It’s rather sad that the two are mutually exclusive.Let us assume that he does the “right thing.” He demands that the book be allowed into circulation and works to ensure that the ban is uplifted in reality as well as on paper. The day he does this he will be subject to a firestorm of protest and violence. The MNS and Shiv Sena will ensure a breakdown of law and order and destruction of public property, buses will be burned, roads will be broken and immigrants will Related articles:
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