We inherited the sedition law from the British. In 1942 itself, CJ Gwyer introduced the concept of inciting 바카라˜public disorder바카라™ and subversionof the government by attempting to violence. While upholding the validity of Section 124-A, Gwyer바카라™s interpretation was reiterated in different wordings and confirmed by the Supreme Court in Kedarnath case in 1962. In 1950, after we had adopted the present Constitution, a bench of Punjab & Haryana High Court comprising of CJ Eric Westson with Jusutice Khosla, while dealing with the case against 124A, stated that the 바카라˜law of sedition thought necessary during a period of foreign rule has become inappropriate by the very nature of the change which has come about바카라™ as India had become sovereign democratic State. Consequently, it held this section to be 바카라˜void바카라™. Our legislature acted and made this judgement redundant by amending the Constitution of India by adding the 바카라˜public order바카라™ in the exception to freedom of speech. Accordingly, in effect, till date, we have carried a British law with the British interpretation given in the year 1942. Interestingly, the Britishers moved in a reverse direction for their own domestic laws and repealed their Sedition Act in 1967 and in 2009, they clarified that sedition did not exist even in their common law.