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Six decades before Guantanamo, Fred Korematsu refused to go quietly when the government tried to put him in a prison camp because of his race.
By Gary Kamiya
June 29, 2004
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Newspaper publishing in the days of Ben Franklin and his grandson was a filthy, grinding business. Fighting for freedom of the press was an even more wretched a task.
By David Talbot
September 2, 2003
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Thanks to the martyred comedian, American culture is free to be a wild kingdom. But with his new anti-porn crusade, Attorney General Ashcroft wants to turn back the clock.
By Gary Kamiya
August 26, 2003
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The power of Martin Luther King Jr.'s civil rights call-to-arms comes from watching a great man grapple with the possibility that he's wrong.
By Joan Walsh
August 19, 2003
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John Stuart Mill's classic is all over the Web, because it reminded us that freedom requires reckoning with "heretical opinions" -- a message we need now more than ever.
By Scott Rosenberg
August 12, 2003
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Sojourner Truth's impromptu personal oratory gave women's rights a voice of fire.
By Laura Miller
July 29, 2003
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More than an indestructible wall limiting the power of government, the Bill of Rights is a testament of hope.
By Roger K. Newman
July 22, 2003
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Eleven years before Tiananmen Square, a courageous Chinese worker dared to call for democracy. He was imprisoned for 15 years, but his message defies iron bars.
By Andrew Leonard
July 15, 2003
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In "Areopagitica," Milton made a magisterial case not just for freedom of speech, but for freedom of soul.
By Gary Kamiya
July 8, 2003
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From Milton to China's Democracy Wall, Salon's new series honors the milestones of human liberty.
July 1, 2003
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The Supreme Court's Pentagon Papers decision barred an imperious president from blocking publication of explosive government documents about an ill-conceived war. Today, journalists may not be so brave -- or judges so vigilant.
By Gary Kamiya
July 1, 2003