<Li> John F. Kennedy </Li> <Li> Coretta Scott King </Li> <Li> Harry S. Truman </Li> <Ul> <Li> John Crowley's novel Four Freedoms (2009) is largely based on the themes of Roosevelt's speech . </Li> <Li> FDR commissioned sculptor Walter Russell to design a monument to be dedicated to the first hero of the war . The Four Freedoms Monument was created in 1941 and dedicated at Madison Square Garden, in New York City, in 1943 . </Li> <Li> Artist Kindred McLeary painted America the Mighty (1941), also known as Defense of Human Freedoms, in the State Department's Harry S. Truman Building . </Li> <Li> Artist Hugo Ballin painted The Four Freedoms mural (1942) in the Council Chamber of the City Hall of Burbank, California . </Li> <Li> New Jersey muralist Michael Lenson (1903--1972) painted The Four Freedoms mural (1943) for the Fourteenth Street School in Newark, New Jersey . </Li> <Li> Muralist Anton Refregier painted the History of San Francisco (completed 1948) in the Rincon Center in San Francisco, California; panel 27 depicts the four freedoms . </Li> <Li> Artist Mildred Nungester Wolfe painted a four - panel Four Freedoms mural (complete 1959) depicting the four freedoms for a country store in Richton, Mississippi . Those panels now hang in the Mississippi Museum of Art . </Li> <Li> Allyn Cox painted four Four Freedoms murals (completed 1982) which hang in the Great Experiment Hall in the United States House of Representatives; each of the four panels depicts allegorical figures representing the four freedoms . </Li> <Li> Since 1986, the fictional Four Freedoms Plaza has served as the headquarters for Marvel Comics superhero team Fantastic Four . </Li> <Li> In the early 1990s, artist David McDonald reproduced Rockwell's Four Freedoms paintings as four large murals on the side of an old grocery building in downtown Silverton, Oregon . </Li> <Li> In 2008, Florida International University's Wolfsonian museum hosted the Thoughts on Democracy exhibition that displayed posters created by 60 leading contemporary artists and designers, invited to create a new graphic design inspired by American illustrator Norman Rockwell's Four Freedoms posters . </Li> </Ul>

What are the four freedoms protected by the first amendment