America shouldn’t copy Britain’s war on free speech
Source: Washington Examiner · Bias: Center Right
Summary
On April 1, the United Kingdom Home Secretary announced that British police would no longer record details of every “offensive” social media post, a move that was partially greeted with praise and with “this better not be an April Fool’s Day trick” by free speech advocates both in the U.K. and globally. It now looks like it […]
Related Coverage
- Rare ‘Exeter’ copy of Declaration of Independence discovered in UK (Center — The Hill News)
- Rare copy of US Declaration of Independence found by volunteer in UK archives (Center — BBC News)
- Trump’s ‘ramped up’ rhetoric leaves unifying tone of July Fourth speech in question (Center Left — NBC News Politics)
- America 250 Soars With Amazing Flyovers and Aerial Action Over the National Mall (Right — RedState)
- America declared independence in 1776. Yorktown secured it in 1781 (Center Right — Washington Examiner)
- Final preparations for America's 250th anniversary underway (Center — NewsNation)
- Warriors’ LeBron James free agency pursuit receives brutal reality check (Right — New York Post)
- Rich Paul reveals which teams LeBron James is considering in NBA free agency (Right — New York Post)
Daily Analysis
Read the full Parallax Pulse for April 9, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.
More Headlines From April 9, 2026
- New acting AG plans to operate as Trump’s personal lawyer (Left)
- Melania Trump’s surprise Epstein statement prompts bafflement (Center Left)
- Spain accuses Israel of breaking international law, truce with Lebanon attacks (Center)
- First Lady denies ties to Jeffrey Epstein (Center Left)
- “They’re stupid people”: Trump slams conservative MAGA critics like Carlson, Kelly (Left)






