License to Publish?
From
Foreign dissidents facing U.S. hurdles to publishing
By Scott Martelle
Los Angeles Times
In an apparent reversal of decades of U.S. practice, recent federal Office of Foreign Assets Control regulations bar American companies from publishing works by dissident writers in countries under sanction unless they first obtain U.S. government approval.
The restriction, condemned by critics as a violation of the First Amendment, means that books and other works banned by some totalitarian regimes cannot be published freely in the United States.
There's more. Read the whole thing.
I think I'll go be sick now.
Foreign dissidents facing U.S. hurdles to publishing
By Scott Martelle
Los Angeles Times
In an apparent reversal of decades of U.S. practice, recent federal Office of Foreign Assets Control regulations bar American companies from publishing works by dissident writers in countries under sanction unless they first obtain U.S. government approval.
The restriction, condemned by critics as a violation of the First Amendment, means that books and other works banned by some totalitarian regimes cannot be published freely in the United States.
There's more. Read the whole thing.
I think I'll go be sick now.
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