"Purely Personal Prejudices" http://books.google.com/books?id=DLcEAQAAIAAJ&q=%22A+person+who+is+going+to+commit+an+inhuman+act+invariably+excuses+himself++to+himself+by+saying+I'm+only+human+after+all%22&pg=PA232#v=onepage
Strictly Personal (1953)
“No longer may the head of a state consider himself outside of the law, and impose inhuman acts on the peoples of the world.”
Regarding the Nuremberg Trials
New York Times Obituary (October 10, 1954)
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Robert H. Jackson 96
American judge 1892–1954Related quotes

He explained the intricate relationship of the concepts of law and order, public order and the security of the State, in a particular case.
Full Court Reference in Memory of The Late Justice M. Hidayatullah

“Why the United States Is Destroying Its Education System” (2011)

Attorney-General v. Kerr (1840), 2 Beav. 428.
Quote

"A Free Inquiry into the Vulgar Notion of Nature" Sect.2 ibid.

“A cry of horror against the inhuman brutality of this act of tyranny.”
Quote of Zadkine c. 1953; as cited by M.G. Schenk, in Ossip Zadkine', Amsterdam 1967; as quoted in Sculpture International Rotterdam https://www.sculptureinternationalrotterdam.nl/en/collectie/the-destroyed-city - 'The Destroyed City'
According to Zadkine the idea for his sculpture 'The Destroyed City' was born when he arrived by train in the devastated city of Rotterdam in 1946/47, and saw the destroyed heart of the city because of the bombings by the German air-force, 14 May 1940
1940 - 1960

"Ballad of the Double-Soul"
The Certain Hour (1916)
Context: In the beginning the Gods made man, and fashioned the sky and the sea,
And the earth's fair face for man's dwelling-place, and this was the Gods' decree: — "Lo, We have given to man five wits: he discerneth folly and sin;
He is swift to deride all the world outside, and blind to the world within:
So that man may make sport and amuse Us, in battling for phrases or pelf,
Now that each may know what forebodeth woe to his neighbor, and not to himself."

"1892", p. 1
A Writer's Notebook (1946)