Petition Supporting Google Call to End Internet Censorship in China

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has an online petition for your signature supporting Google’s call for ending censorship on Google.cn and asking them to stand by their decision on “a new approach to China.”   R.E.A.L. has posted on this subject at our blog at https://www.realcourage.org

We urge you to sign this petition to show Google how we feel at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/flowerch/petition.html
R.E.A.L.’s petition reads:

We, the members of the world community who stand for our universal human rights of liberty and freedom, support Google corporate management in its calls to end Internet censorship in Communist China.  We urge Google corporate management to stand by its call for “a new approach to China.”  We support Google corporate management’s position that “We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn.”

Our universal human rights of freedom, liberty, and equality apply to every part of the world, including Communist China.  We support Google corporate management’s decision to defend such universal human rights, and we urge all Google corporate management to stand firm to this statement.

Like those in Beijing today who have supported Google’s statement by leaving flowers at Google’s Beijing office, we too extend our “flowers for Google” by supporting their position to be responsible for equality and liberty in China today.  We urge other corporations to learn from Google’s statement and recognize that their customers do view our universal human rights as a human priority.

Universal human rights are all of our rights, and all of our responsibility.

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Show Google that corporate responsibility on universal human rights (everywhere – in any language)  is the type of responsibility that we share and that we appreciate.

Communist China - Flowers laid at the entrance to Google's China headquarters in Beijing (Wall Street Journal - Photo by Josh Chin)

Communist China - Flowers laid at the entrance to Google's China headquarters in Beijing (Wall Street Journal - Photo by Josh Chin)