The Dangers of Censorship: Static Science, Diminished Liberty, and a Population in the Dark
FEATURES
- Where the Ground Still Knows by Paul Bishop
- The Question About Forgiveness That Troubles Almost Everyone by Roger Connors
- Where Hope Meets Us in Our Pain by Paul Bishop
- Magic in the Mundane and Monotonous Mondays by Patrick D. Degn
- The Privilege of Requesting and Receiving Angelic Assistance by Anne Hinton Pratt
- The Constitution—Man-Made or Divinely Inspired? by Tad R. Callister
- Pack Your Bags, We’re Staying Home by Carolyn Nicolaysen
- What Loyalty Looks like—Come Follow Me, Podcast: Ruth, 1 Sam. 1-3 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- The Biscuit Test: Ocean to Ice — Dispatch 07 by Mike Loveridge
- Why “Here Am I” Is a Powerful Sentence by Maurine Proctor
















Comments | Return to Story
Harold RustNovember 2, 2020
I have learned over the years that most important public policy issues raised by our children, grand children and friends are best answered by addressing what that policy will do to impact freedom of speech and liberty to act. It is as though the more free we feel, the greater the potential there is that we could be deceived into giving away some of that freedom. We must be very alert to any erosion of that freedom. Thanks for your additional alerts.
Valiant JonesNovember 2, 2020
Excellent post, Jeff. Our judicial system assumes innocence until proven guilty, erring on the side of preferring to let the guilty go free rather than wrongly imprison an innocent person. We need a similar approach on information.
Mary TarbetNovember 2, 2020
Very well written. Persuasion using common sense. Einstein would agree with all you’ve written.
Jessica WhitakerNovember 1, 2020
Inspirational and insightful, thank you!
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