Is censorship strong enough in today's media?
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Words: 889
Pages: 3
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 3
(approximately 235 words/page)
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Censorship is the control and supervision of ideas and information, which is supplied to society. It is necessary to have censorship for the protection of the family, the church and the state. All forms of communication media have to be censored for example: television, videos, cinema, books, radio programmes, news reports, tabloids, broadsheet papers and the Internet. In these modern times social attitudes have changed and censorship has adapted to meet these changes but there
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showed first 75 words of 889 total
showed last 75 words of 889 total
will be accepted. There does not seem to be future without censorship. There is the need to protect our family but we cannot rely on censorship alone, parents need to take responsibility and supervise what their children have access to, especially the Internet. Bibliography (1)MccGwire, Scarlett, Censorship Changing Attitudes 1900-2000, pg 56, 1999, Wayland Publishers, East Sussex. (2)Anderson, Craig, Sciencedaily.com, Aggression, 2000. (3)Steele, Philip, Censorship, 1999, Evans Brothers, London. (4)Donnellan, Craig, The Censorship Issue, 2001, The Burlington Press, Cambridge.
will be accepted. There does not seem to be future without censorship. There is the need to protect our family but we cannot rely on censorship alone, parents need to take responsibility and supervise what their children have access to, especially the Internet. Bibliography (1)MccGwire, Scarlett, Censorship Changing Attitudes 1900-2000, pg 56, 1999, Wayland Publishers, East Sussex. (2)Anderson, Craig, Sciencedaily.com, Aggression, 2000. (3)Steele, Philip, Censorship, 1999, Evans Brothers, London. (4)Donnellan, Craig, The Censorship Issue, 2001, The Burlington Press, Cambridge.