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MrBubbles said:
famousringo said:

Does the Honduran constitution also have legal provisions for cracking down on the media in the event that the military must overthrow the President?

if the media was supporting zelaya, then yes, it might have.  239 also mentioned "those that support such violation directly or indirectly".   someone supporting the violater would qualify.   so they could be forced to cease doing that if necessary.

Then I'm going to have to agree with ManusJustus. There's nothing democratic about a law which the people aren't even allowed to discuss changing. If it was enshrining individual freedoms, I might understand, but this is just a mechanism which puts ultimate control of the government in the hands of the military.



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