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Although TWR does not have as much money as it wants, and thus cannot exercise its freedom of speech as much as it would like, the Constitution "does not confer an entitlement to such funds as may be necessary to realize all the advantages of that freedom". Id., at 318, 100 S.Ct., at 2688.
It has no meaning in itself except as a material on which the self can exercise its freedom by shaping it according to its intentions.
"If Samsung's Korean parent company wants to exercise its freedom to ship into other European countries despite this injunction, it will have to reorganize its logistics chain in Europe accordingly," wrote Mr Mueller.
Charlie Hebdo was free at all times and dared to exercise its freedom in public.
It was all very well to defend the magazine's right to exercise its freedom and right to offend – including what Rusbridger called its "ethos and values" – but that could not be the defining issue for another publication.
If you exercise your freedom of speech by getting personal when you talk shit on Twitter, and scaring some lady from Denver, an airline can exercise its freedom to kick you off its plane.
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Everyone who's working at these media outlets realizes that one goal of the attacks in Paris is to render the Western press unfree, or to punish it for exercising its freedom (which is exactly the same thing).
Unbound as it is to national pay and conditions for teachers, the free school has exercised its freedom, stipulating that, along with allowing only six months of maternity leave, it "reserves the right to temporarily lay you off from work without normal contractual pay or to reduce your normal working hours and reduce your pay proportionately.
Jordan, one of the more moderate of Middle Eastern countries and seen by some as the would-be "Silicon Valley of the Middle East", is today exercising its freedom of expression in a SOPA-inspired media blackout to protest a piece of legislation that could threaten that freedom in the future.
In denying the request, the complaint alleges, Sterling Heights imposed a "substantial burden" on the center's ability to exercise its religious freedom.
Clearly, the paper was exercising both its freedom and its power (the freedom and the power to offend).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com