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"Lochner, L. P"
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Drawing a line on censorship
2013
The American journalist hoped his tone, pauses and use of Americanisms that the censors didn't fully understand would indicate a truth, or an official lie. \"But the Nazis are on to me,\" he confided to his diary. \"I haven't the slightest interest in remaining here unless I can continue to give a fairly accurate report,\" he wrote in an account later published as \"Berlin Diary.\" That December, Mr. [William L. Shirer] left Germany. China is not like Nazi Germany, said Andrew Nagorski, a former Newsweek journalist and the author of \"Hitlerland.\" \"In political terms, there's no comparison between Nazi Germany and China today,\" he wrote in an email. \"Nazi Germany was a state based on harebrained racial theories, the cult of the leader and a commitment to a messianic vision of conquering\" the world. \"If the message is really, 'Your priority is not to offend,' then you've got a problem. You've got a problem because then you're engaged in the game of self-censorship,\" which can be worse than overt censorship, said Mr. Nagorski, who was expelled from the Soviet Union in 1982.
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