Why Free Speech Matters. The work is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

I will pay for the following article Why Free Speech Matters. The work is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. In the current world of intense political and social awareness facilitated by higher literacy and technological levels globally free speech proves to be of paramount importance. Freedom of speech in many countries is non-existent while in others it has been restricted to a certain level. Governments and human rights groups have been at loggerheads in order to strike a balance on what freedom of speech entails. There is no country where this freedom can be termed as absolute since the political class on numerous occasions curtails it. This applies to democratic countries like the USA, Canada, and Britain, African countries, and extends to the East and the Arab World where free speech has been badly hampered (Barendt, 2005). The United Arab Emirates to be precise has offered minimal platform towards the development of free speech and this hampers other developments economically, politically, and socially.

The world is drifting towards being free where all have the freedom to choose what to say and when to say it without fear of punishment. This has been a result of much pressure from countries that exercise this freedom to a huge extent like the United States. Democratic governance does not go well with certain countries more so in the East where freedom of speech is almost absent (Barendt, 2005). This freedom is significant because it results in changes in the way people live and most importantly, governed. It is important to note in general that freedom of speech results in a wide-scale spreading of lies and propaganda as we usually see in the media and day-to-day political gimmick. This hits on the political class than it does the corporate or any other. Free speech is fought for where the governance of a country or region has failed in one or many aspects of service delivery. This is one of the major reasons why we see governments being against free speech.

The other issue with free speech lies in the extent to which this freedom is to be exercised. Looking at the UK for example, Nick Griffin and David Irving are controversial figures based on their sentiments on the Holocaust and other politically unsound arguments (Books, LLC, 2010). The two have for a long time triggered violent demonstrations across the UK where they have been scheduled to speak.