English, asked by arya3422, 11 months ago

friends, I need a help , i need a speech on the topic " media and its violation"

Answers

Answered by shaikh12366
1

Social media is a Janus-faced creature. In principle, it offers the possibility of enhancing free speech and gives a voice to millions. It makes authors and opinion makers of folks who otherwise would have been passive consumers of opinion. But there’s also another face that social media wears – a face that is sometimes ugly and threatening. Often, it can blur the lines separating fact from fiction. The multitudinous voices can, at times, be deeply offensive, divisive, violent and plain disgusting. If you are feminist and a woman, and vocal on Twitter, you know what I am talking about.

More often than not, one refrains from making a general case for speech regulation on social media, because if social media is a strange beast, law regulating free-speech is a stranger beast still – known to be capricious, discriminatory, and necessarily power-driven.

Recently, the Ghaziabad police arrested a Nagar Palika councillor from Loni earlier this month and charged him with posting a derogatory photograph of chief minister Adityanath on his Facebook wall.

Last month, a 22-year-old man was arrested by the Greater Noida police for allegedly posting objectionable content against Adityanath on his Facebook wall.

On March 25, filmmaker Sirish Kunder had a FIR registered against him over his tweets criticising the BJP’s decision to appoint Adityanath as UP chief minister.

On March 28, a medical practitioner was arrested in Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh, on charges of hurting the religious sentiments of a particular community by posting a picture of a sadhu buying meat.

On April 15, the Delhi BJP lodged a complaint with the police against Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal for dubbing the Election Commission as Dhritrashtra!

YOU MAY THINK THESE ARE THE NEWS.

But sorry to say these are the fights which certainly took place only due to media.The use of media is beneficial but the public we are struck in can't do so and always want a reason or a way to fight for .

They literally hurt caste,religion and such sought of things which we can't bear and this is the reason where we are lacking,where we are in the the last number,in the last queue and in the last row.

Because of which our country is back, because of which we are back and again today still India is a developing country.......

THANK YOU......


arya3422: thankyou
Answered by sanjeevbandi
0

Social media is a Janus-faced creature. In principle, it offers the possibility of enhancing free speech and gives a voice to millions. It makes authors and opinion makers of folks who otherwise would have been passive consumers of opinion. But there’s also another face that social media wears – a face that is sometimes ugly and threatening. Often, it can blur the lines separating fact from fiction. The multitudinous voices can, at times, be deeply offensive, divisive, violent and plain disgusting. If you are feminist and a woman, and vocal on Twitter, you know what I am talking about.

More often than not, one refrains from making a general case for speech regulation on social media, because if social media is a strange beast, law regulating free-speech is a stranger beast still – known to be capricious, discriminatory, and necessarily power-driven.

Recently, the Ghaziabad police arrested a Nagar Palika councillor from Loni earlier this month and charged him with posting a derogatory photograph of chief minister Adityanath on his Facebook wall.

Last month, a 22-year-old man was arrested by the Greater Noida police for allegedly posting objectionable content against Adityanath on his Facebook wall.

On March 25, filmmaker Sirish Kunder had a FIR registered against him over his tweets criticising the BJP’s decision to appoint Adityanath as UP chief minister.

On March 28, a medical practitioner was arrested in Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh, on charges of hurting the religious sentiments of a particular community by posting a picture of a sadhu buying meat.

On April 15, the Delhi BJP lodged a complaint with the police against Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal for dubbing the Election Commission as Dhritrashtra!

YOU MAY THINK THESE ARE THE NEWS.

But sorry to say these are the fights which certainly took place only due to media.The use of media is beneficial but the public we are struck in can't do so and always want a reason or a way to fight for .

They literally hurt caste,religion and such sought of things which we can't bear and this is the reason where we are lacking,where we are in the the last number,in the last queue and in the last row.

Because of which our country is back, because of which we are back and again today still India is a developing country.......

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