Examples of Free Speech League in the following topics:
-
- The league was the brainchild of U.S.
- President Woodrow Wilson, who first unveiled the idea in his famed speech to
Congress on January 18, 1918 outlining the Fourteen Points, his blueprint for
global postwar peace and diplomacy.
- Representation
at the league was often a problem.
- Harding, continued American opposition to the
League of Nations.
- The league cannot be labeled a failure, however, as it laid the
groundwork for the United Nations, which replaced the League of Nations after
World War II and inherited a number of agencies and organizations founded by
the league.
-
- He gave speeches, organized meetings, and adopted resounding resolutions that eventually culminated in the founding of the American Bimetallic League, which then evolved into the National Bimetallic Union, and finally the National Silver Committee.
- The ultimate goal of the League was to garner support on a national level for the reinstatement of the coinage of silver.
- Jones of the St Louis Post-Dispatch was put on the platform committee and Bryan's plank for free silver was adopted sixteen to one, and silently added to the Chicago Democratic Platform in order to avoid controversy.
- Bryan delivered speeches across the country for free silver from 1894 to 1896, building a grass-roots reputation as a powerful champion of the cause.
- His "Cross of Gold" speech made him the sensational new face in the Democratic party.
-
- Within these limited areas, other limitations on free speech balance rights to free speech and other rights, such as rights for authors and inventors over their works and discoveries (copyright and patent), protection from imminent or potential violence against particular persons (restrictions on fighting words), or the use of untruths to harm others (slander).
- Commercial speech.
- Certain exceptions to free speech exist, usually when it can be justified that restricting free speech is necessary to protect others from harm.
- The government may set up time, place, or manner restrictions to free speech.
- This image is a picture of the free speech zone of the 2004 Democratic National Convention.
-
- Wilson's speech translated
many of the principles of Progressivism that had produced domestic reform in the U.S. into foreign policy
objectives for all nations, including free trade, open agreements, democracy,
and self-determination.
- Restoration of the Balkan nations and free access to the sea for Serbia.
- Protection for minorities in Turkey and the free passage of the ships of all nations through the Dardanelles.
- Establishment of a League of Nations to protect "mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity to great and small nations alike."
- Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points speech outlined his goals for postwar cooperation.
-
- Davis (1924) and Al Smith (1928), who mobilized businessmen into the American Liberty League.
- Opposition to the New Deal also came from the Old Right, a group of conservative free-market anti-interventionists, originally associated with midwestern Republicans led by Hoover and Robert A.
- His first radio speech was broadcast on September 15, 1939 over all three of the major radio networks.
- Lindbergh urged listeners to look beyond the speeches and propaganda they were being fed and instead look at who was writing the speeches and reports, who owned the papers, and who influenced the speakers.
- Nothing did more to escalate the tensions than the speech he delivered to a rally in Des Moines, Iowa on September 11, 1941.
-
- While
many historians disagree over the exact dates of the Progressive Era, most see
World War I as a globalized expression of the American movement, with Wilson's
fight for the League of NationsĀ envisioned
in his Fourteen Points as
its climax.
- The
Fourteen Points was a speech given by Wilson to a joint session of Congress on
January 8, 1918.
- Delivered
10 months before the armistice with Germany, the speech became the basis for
the terms of the German surrender as negotiated at the Paris Peace ConferenceĀ in
1919.
- Wilson's
speech translated many of the principles of Progressivism that had produced
domestic reform in the U.S. into foreign policy encompassing free trade, open
agreements, democracy, and self-determination, which was the ideal of nations
determining their own futures without outside political or military interference.
- The speech was the only explicit statement of aims by any of the nations involved
in World War I and led to Wilson receiving the 1919 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts
to create a peaceful global community.
-
- You have come to fight as free men, and free men you are.
- Some of the most famous inspirational speeches in history include Martin Luther King Jr.'
- Kennedy's inauguration speech.
- You have come to fight as free men, and free men you are.
- An inspirational speech straight out of Hollywood in the Mel Gibson classic, Braveheart.
-
- Goodwill speeches are informative while at the same time persuasive.
- Perhaps one of the most famous goodwill speeches was made by President John F.
- Freedom is indivisible, and when one man is enslaved, all are not free.
- All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin.
- And, therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words, "Ich bin ein Berliner. "
-
- s "I Have a Dream" speech .
- The speech uses rhetoric to convey the point of equal opportunity for all people.
- He closes his speech with the repeated line, "Free at last!"
- s "I Have a Dream" speech.
- Identify the components that produce an emotional appeal in a speech
-
- In their view, the
public was making its own attempts to punish unpopular speech due to the
government's unwillingness or inability to do so.
- The
acts met considerable opposition in the Senate, almost entirely from
Republicans like Henry Cabot Lodge and Hiram Johnson, the former defending free
speech and the latter assailing the administration for failing to use laws
already in place.
- Attorney General
Gregory supported the work of the American Protective League (APL), which was
one of the many patriotic associations that sprang up to support the war and,
in coordination with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, identify anti-war
organizations and those it deemed slackers, spies or draft dodgers.
- In a July 1917 speech, Max Eastman
complained that the government's ongoing aggressive prosecutions of dissent
meant, "You can't even collect your thoughts without getting arrested for
unlawful assemblage."
- Debs, the Socialist Party presidential candidate in 1904, 1908 and
1912, was arrested in June 1918 for making a speech in Canton, Ohio, denouncing
military conscription and urging listeners not to take part in the draft.