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== Under capitalism ==
== Under capitalism ==
In spite of the claims of [[Western]] governments that nominally constitutionally guarantee free speech, they do suppress freedom of speech. As these governments decide what narratives constitute as "[[Bourgeois media|mainstream]]", [[Anti-imperialism|alternative]] voices are portrayed as "fringe".  
In spite of the claims of [[western]] governments, capitalist western countries do suppress freedom of speech. As these governments decide what narratives constitute as "[[Bourgeois media|mainstream]]", [[Anti-imperialism|alternative]] voices are portrayed as "fringe".  


=== In the United States ===
=== In the United States ===
In 1938, the [[United States]] government established the [[House Committee on Un-American Activities]], to investigate communist "subversion" in the country. Individuals and organizations were persecuted and accused of "disloyalty". Victims of political persecution include civil rights activist [[Paul Robeson]] and Charlie Chaplin, who was accused of "communist sympathies" for his anti-war stance. The [[House Judiciary Committee]] has carried on the functions of HCUA since 1975.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Charles E. Schamel|newspaper=National Archives and Records Administration|title=Records of the House Un-American Activities Committee|date=July, 1995|url=https://archive.org/details/RecordsOfTheHouseUn-americanActivitiesCommittee-NaraFindingAid|retrieved=02/07/2024}}</ref>
In 1938, the [[United States]] government established the [[House Committee on Un-American Activities]], to investigate communist "subversion" in the country. Leftist individuals and organizations were persecuted and accused of "disloyalty". Victims of political persecution include civil rights activist [[Paul Robeson]] and Charlie Chaplin, who was accused of "communist sympathies" for his anti-war stance. The House Judiciary Committee has carried on the functions of HCUA since 1975.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Charles E. Schamel|newspaper=National Archives and Records Administration|title=Records of the House Un-American Activities Committee|date=July, 1995|url=https://archive.org/details/RecordsOfTheHouseUn-americanActivitiesCommittee-NaraFindingAid|retrieved=02/07/2024}}</ref>


In recent times, [[police]] in the United States frequently raid press companies and harass reporters for challenging the Statesian [[MICIMATT]] system.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Steven Lee Myers and Benjamin Mullin|newspaper=New York Times|title=Raid of Small Kansas Newspaper Raises Free Press Concerns|date=2023-08-13|archive-url=Raid of Small Kansas Newspaper Raises Free Press Concerns|quote=The raid is one of several recent cases of local authorities taking aggressive actions against news organizations — some of which are part of a dwindling cohort left in their area to hold governments to account. And it fits a pattern of pressure being applied to local newsrooms. One recent example is the 2019 police raid of the home of Bryan Carmody, a freelance journalist in San Francisco, who was reporting on the death of Jeff Adachi, a longtime public defender.}}</ref><ref>{{Web citation|author=B|newspaper=Moon of Alabama|title="Exceedingly Rare"|date=2023-08-14|url=https://www.moonofalabama.org/2023/08/exceedingly-rare.html}}</ref> Notable examples of censorship include the cases of [[Edward Snowden]], [[Chelsea Manning]], and [[Julian Assange]].
In recent times, [[police]] in the United States frequently raid press companies and harass reporters for challenging the Statesian [[MICIMATT]] system.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Steven Lee Myers and Benjamin Mullin|newspaper=New York Times|title=Raid of Small Kansas Newspaper Raises Free Press Concerns|date=2023-08-13|archive-url=Raid of Small Kansas Newspaper Raises Free Press Concerns|quote=The raid is one of several recent cases of local authorities taking aggressive actions against news organizations — some of which are part of a dwindling cohort left in their area to hold governments to account. And it fits a pattern of pressure being applied to local newsrooms. One recent example is the 2019 police raid of the home of Bryan Carmody, a freelance journalist in San Francisco, who was reporting on the death of Jeff Adachi, a longtime public defender.}}</ref><ref>{{Web citation|author=B|newspaper=Moon of Alabama|title="Exceedingly Rare"|date=2023-08-14|url=https://www.moonofalabama.org/2023/08/exceedingly-rare.html}}</ref> Notable examples of censorship include the cases of [[Edward Snowden]], [[Chelsea Manning]], and [[Julian Assange]].
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