Censorship, Socrates, and 1984

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Death, it is the simplest solution to stop unwanted dreams, ideas or thoughts. Even though thoughts and ideas are meant to be the most personal of properties there are, have and will be entities that will silence those any undesirable ideas by any mean necessary. Death appears to be a harsh and unnecessary word but that is what censorship is, death of ideas that come from dreams to create new realities. Although an example of a child might seem unsolicited yet a child can in their short knowledge of how the world works, see the evils of not allowing certain books to be read for fear of what their ideas could bring. Then to further accentuate these motives, the general consensus is that any human, regardless of their race or ethnicity has certain inalienable rights, and one of these rights is liberty. Alas countless times has liberty been hit by entities that felt their wants justified the acts committed as it was to the Greek philosopher Socrates who to certain people was corrupting the youth. Another clear example of said dystopian future is a book with the title 1984. Finally at the end of this work, the conclusion will instigate a necessity to fight any form of Censorship in the world in order to promote life, liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. Although it may seem incoherent to start with the opinion of children, it is necessary in order to state an undeniable truth. That even a child who has not had many experiences feels a certain way; their fore it could be considered human nature as is the general sense of justice each one of us has. Here is an extraction of the article “a focus-group interview with six children age’s nine to twelve. The results indicate that children have and can articulate opinions about censorship... ... middle of paper ... ... future of said book, humans will always fight for what is right and there will always be some sort of resistance. Works Cited Isajlovic-Terry, Natasha1, and Lynne (E.F.)2 McKechnie. "An Exploratory Study Of Children's Views Of Censorship." Children & Libraries: The Journal Of The Association For Library Service To Children 10.1 (2012): 38-43. OmniFile Full Text Select (H.W. Wilson). Web. 30 Apr. 2014. O’Flaherty, Michael. "Freedom Of Expression: Article 19 Of The International Covenant On Civil And Political Rights And The Human Rights Committee’S General Comment No 34." Human Rights Law Review 12.4 (2012): 627-654. Political Science Complete. Web. 30 Apr. 2014. SHAKURY, SABAH A. "George Orwell's 1984: The Dangers Of Totalitarianism." Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai, Philologia 58.3 (2013): 219. Publisher Provided Full Text Searching File. Web. 30 Apr. 2014.

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