Wednesday, May 7, 2025

the virtue of free expression........

 

     The opinions people have, Franklin wrote, are "almost as various as their faces."  The job a printers is to allow people to express these differing opinions.  "There would be very little printed," he noted, if publishers produced only things that offended nobody.  At stake was the virtue of free expression, and Franklin summed up the Enlightenment position in a sentence that is now framed on newsroom walls: "Printers are educated in the belief that when men differ in opinion, both sides ought equally to have the advantage of being heard by the public; and when Truth and Error have fair play, the former is always an overmatch for the latter."

-Walter Isaacson, Benjamin Franklin: An American Life


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