No. You have the freedom do express an opinion, but you must express it as such. For example, "The teletubbies stink" is an insult. You may not just insult anyone. "In my opinion, the teletubbies stink." However, is an opinion.
No country has absolute freedom of speech. Each country has its own laws and limitations on free speech, which can vary widely.
In practice, the right to freedom of speech is not absolute in any country and the right is commonly subject to limitations, particulary if your speech infringes on somebody elses human rights.
The freedom of speech is not absolute. You can say almost anything you want, but you can't intentionally incite violence or overthrow of the government.
One kind of freedom can conflict with another kind of freedom, or it can conflict with legal responsibilities. Absolute freedom overrides everything, it can have no exceptions, and that is impractical. For example, there are many ways that free speech can be harmful. We do not allow fraud, slander, false advertising, or copyright violation, even though all of those are forms of speech. Society will respect someone's rights if that person will respect other people's rights in turn.
individual freedom is a absolute right
individual freedom is a absolute right
Is virtual freedom of speech the same of freedom of speech in other media outlets
One kind of freedom can conflict with another kind of freedom, or it can conflict with legal responsibilities. Absolute freedom overrides everything, it can have no exceptions, and that is impractical. For example, there are many ways that free speech can be harmful. We do not allow fraud, slander, false advertising, or copyright violation, even though all of those are forms of speech. Society will respect someone's rights if that person will respect other people's rights in turn.
the 5 freedoms are freedom of press. freedom of speech. freedom of religion. freedom of Assembly and freedom of petition
Yes they do have freedom of speech.
freedom of speech
its answered on the internet. == There is no definition of freedom of speech in the U.S. Constitution. Instead, it is defined by the decisions of courts when cases are presented to them. Generally speaking, the right to freedom of speech is only protected from interference by the actions of government. It is generally not protected from interference by private persons or companies. Even when protected from interference by government, freedom of speech is not absolute. There are exceptions. The most often quoted example of this is that a person is not protected from punishment if he yells "Fire!" in a crowded theater when there is no fire.