The Government of the People's Republic of China reserves the right to limit speech that it sees as disruptive to public order, detrimental to the hold of the Communist Party of China on power or disruptive to the unity of China.
In effect, there is limited freedom of speech in comparison with North America, Australia and Europe.
no
Well, I used to live in Beijing and I would say we partly have religious freedom. My mom and I used to go to a Christian church close to our apartment on Sunday. These Christian churches or Buddhist and Islamic temples are registered in government documents so they are legal. Basically, as long as a religious organization does not trying to convince people the Chinese government is bad, it is okay for it to build its own church or temple and spread its religion. Some religious groups are seen by government as illegal in China because their doctrines or activities make the government feels being threatened. So Chinese government does not encourage people to be religious, but they don't care as long as you "support" the government's authority.
Nonetheless strict censorship is widespread in mainland China. There is heavy government involvement in the media, with many of the largest media organizations being run by the Communist government. References to democracy, the free Tibet movement, Taiwan as an independent country, certain religious organizations and anything questioning the legitimacy of the Communist Party of China are banned from use in public and blocked on the internet. Web portals including Microsoft's MSN have come under criticism for aiding in these practices, including banning the word "democracy" from its chat-rooms in China.
Due to close geographical proximity to Hong Kong, parts of southern China are able to receive broadcast signals from television channels in Hong Kong, where China's censorship does not apply. However, comments that the Communist Party feel uncomfortable with are cut out and replaced with TV commercials before they can reach consumers TVs in mainland China. Very few Western films are given permission to play in Chinese theatres, although widespread unlicensed copying of these films makes them widely available.
Yes as long as they are citizens of the U.S because it is in the Declaration of Independence and the declaration addresses every citizen of the United States.
No
None
no
The Yuan dynasty imposed strict racial segregation across China, but it allowed a broad degree of religious freedom, with the exception of Daoism.
The Yuan dynasty imposed strict racial segregation across China, but it allowed a broad degree of religious freedom, with the exception of Daoism.
The Yuan dynasty imposed strict racial segregation across China, but it allowed a broad degree of religious freedom, with the exception of Daoism.
The Yuan dynasty imposed strict racial segregation across China, but it allowed a broad degree of religious freedom, with the exception of Daoism.
Complete religious freedom
The Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom attracted settlers desiring religious freedom
There was religious freedom in colonial Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania was founded by William Penn in 1681 and was originally based on religious freedom for the Quakers.
religious freedom and wealth
many people support religious freedom.
I believe the most religious freedom was christians and catholics
we are sure we have religious freedom because of the first amendment.
The Virginia statute for religious freedom established precedent of religious tol rance and freedom.