<li> {{quote-book|year=2003|author=Mike Godwin|authorlink=w:Mike Godwin|title={{w|Cyber Rights}}|publisher=The MIT Press|url=|isbn=0262571684|page=2|passage=The term <em>free speech</em>, which appears in this book's subtitle as well as in its text, is used more or less interchangeably with <em>freedom of the press</em>, <b><em>freedom of speech</b></em>, and <em>freedom of expression</em> to refer to all of the expressive rights guaranteed by the forty-five words of the First Amendment, as interpreted by the U.S. courts.}}</li>
<li> {{quote-book| last =Green | first =David L. | title =IQuote: Brilliance and Banter from the Internet Age | publisher =Globe Pequot | date =2007 | pages =113 | isbn = 1599211505|passage={{w|Mike Godwin}} (1994): Cyberspace may give <b>freedom of speech</b> more muscle than the First Amendment does. It may already have become literally impossible for a government to shut people up.}}</li>
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+<li> {{&lit|freedom|speech}}</li>
<ul><li> {{quote-book|chapter=Of Simulation and Dissimulation|year=1625|title=The essays, or Counsels, civil & moral, with a table of the colours of good and evil. Whereunto is added The wisdome of the ancients, enlarged by the author|author=Francis Bacon|year_published=1680|passage=For to him that opens himself, Men will hardly shew themselves averse, but will (fair) let him go on, and turn their <b>freedom of speech</b> to freedom of thought. And therefore it is a good shrewd Proverb of the <em>Spaniard, Tell a lye, and find a Troth</em>; as if there were no way of discovery, but by <em>Simulation</em>.|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xjQCAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA20&dq=%22freedom+of+speech%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=zTI-T9zcDYnr0gHcx_HOBw&ved=0CNoBEOgBMBo#v=onepage&q=%22freedom%20of%20speech%22&f=false}}</li>
</ul>
</ol>