The Information Technology (Intermediaries Guidelines) Rules 2011, functioning in addition to the Act, arguments the capacity of the Indian Government to proscribe ‘hate speech’. It is worth noting that disparate existing ‘hate speech’ provisions, they explicitly prohibit the ‘hosting, display, uploading, modification, publication, transmission, updating, or sharing’ of any information which, as per clause 3(2)(b) of the Rules, is ‘blasphemous’; such judicious reference to ‘blasphemy’ is unprecedented
On Liberty is an amazing book that supports peoples’ individual freedom. It is written by John Stuart Mill, an English Utilitarian. Mill was born in London in 1806. He was the son of James Mill. Just like his father, he was a philosopher, economist, and a political theorist. Mill was very well educated as his father was the one who educated him. By twelve, he had learned Latin and Greek and by the age of sixteen he was a well trained economist. John is seen by many as the most influential English-speaking
Conservative government, which came to power, was led by the energetic M. Thatcher, who proposed an entirely new economic development program radically different from all previous programs. Such economic development strategy in history was known as neoconservatism. She rejected all strong state regulation of the economy, i.e. the idea of Keynesianism. The new government analyzed the accumulated economic problems and came to the conclusion that in order to exit the country from this situation it is necessary
and a non-existing threat. Despite the fact that the war itself was a brief affair, Iraq quickly fell into a military insurgency, political disorder, and uncertainty of what the future holds (MacMillan, 2005, p. 1). In this paper, I argue that neoconservatism was the driving force behind
Aftermath of the Invasion Finally, it is important to note that the invasion of Iraq has produced several challenging problems for Iraq, the region, the international community, and for neoconservatives themselves. In fact, the failure to find weapons of mass destruction, the lack of planning for the period after the military operations ended, as well as the violent opposition to the new regime were the primary results of the neoconservative misconceptions about Iraq (Plesch, 2005, p. 45). Additionally
the late Christopher Hitchens, author of god is Not Great, swapped one set of dogmatic beliefs for another throughout his life. He writes that Hitchens “moved from Marxism (he was a Trotskyist) to Greek Orthodox Christianity, then to American Neoconservatism, followed by an ‘antitheist’ stance…,” which is tantamount to “sprout[ing] a fresh dogmatic limb.” De Waals does not levy these criticisms because Hitchens’ views are ones with which De Waals disagrees - but rather because he held them irrationally
Neoconservatives talk of a ‘golden era’ of the family, where the majority lived in a ‘nuclear family’ consisting of; a married heterosexual couple and their joint biological children. In this ideal, the man is the breadwinner, while the woman stays at home caring for the children and home. They view this family as the cornerstone of society and see this family structure as under threat and mourn its decline. The neo-conservatives especially view single mothers as ‘problematic’ for society and being
Jacksonism in US politics In his original book "Uncommon Providence: American Foreign Policy and How it Changed the World" (Routledge, 2002), Walter Russell Mead exhibits the school of Andrew Jackson as a model constructing itself in light of the estimations of "society group": a code of respect, regard, independence, equity and self-change. Jacksonian morals, in this manner, mirror the some way or another out-dated standards of the agrarian pre-mechanical Republic that America was well into the
about seeking power and accumulating resources...” The next paradigm, the liberal paradigm asserts that countries would band together in the face of a zombie outbreak and form organizations to coordinate efficient responses. Another paradigm is neoconservatism. According to this paradigm, governments will want to be on the offense and attack the problem head on. The final paradigm, social constructivism, predicts that the zombie apocalypse will bring nations together, and they will share resources as
fear in Western societies to Islam and Islamic groups, who then called Islamophobia or Xenophobia. In the US, the expression of Islamophobia is not too thick. In fact, the tragedy of the WTC and the Pentagon in the US. The power of the neocons (Neoconservatism) or the ultra in the right side is also based in the United States (New York) but the attitude of the US society rather minimal Islamophobia found. It can happen because the majority of the US public is more rational and open to Islamic groups
Several influential social, political, and economic events occurred during the time period of 1960 to 2014, including the Cold War, the Civil Rights initiative that began with Kennedy, mass immigration, as well as several major turning points in American politics, such as the presidential elections of 1964 and 1980. These events collectively led to power shifts between the two major parties in the United States’ government, especially the shift from Carter to Reagan in the presidential election of
Scott’s Blade Runner draws upon the late 20th century’s neoconservatism and the scientific innovation of the information age to evoke the upheaval caused by the motivation to exploit technological advancements for one's personal gain. The predicament of the abuse of technology for the benefit of higher-class corporations