
From article The case for a new EU approach in Bosnia and Herzegovina published in New Europe magazine on 13 January 2014 http://www.neurope.eu/article/case-new-eu-approach-bosnia-and-herzegovina
Addressing the Stockholm International forum on the Holocaust, 27 January 2000 http://www.dccam.org/Projects/Affinity/SIF/DATA/2000/page940.html
2000s
From article The case for a new EU approach in Bosnia and Herzegovina published in New Europe magazine on 13 January 2014 http://www.neurope.eu/article/case-new-eu-approach-bosnia-and-herzegovina
Lecture at Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey (March 1954); published in “The Two Planes of International Reality” in Realities of American Foreign Policy (1954), p. 4
The Thirty Years War
"How to Save Bosnia," The World and I, July 1994, by Michael Johns: Seeking Bipartisan Consensus to 'Save Bosnia'
compare Dwight Eisenhower's January, 1961 Farewell Speech
1930s- 1950s, The New Society (1950)
"In conversation with Hassan Rouhani" http://www.aawsat.net/2013/06/article55305525, Ashraq Al-Awsat, (June 15, 2013)
The Bramley Moore [1964] P 200 at 220, commenting on the limitation of liability in maritime claims.
Judgments
“We kill them by carrying out policies, supporting the regimes”
Quotes 1960s-1980s, 1980s, Talk at University of California, Berkeley, 1984
Context: Rio de Janeiro, incidentally, is not the poor part of the country, that sort of the rich part of the country. It's not the northeast, where 35 million people or so, nobody knows what happens to them, or cares. But Rio de Janeiro, that's where people are looking, the rich parts. And this journal is a science journal, kinda like Science in the United States. It was studying malnutrition. And here's the figures it had for Rio de Janeiro: infants from 0 to 5 months, severe malnutrition, meaning medically severe, 67%; 5 months to a year, 41%; a year to 5 years, 11%. Now the reason of course for the decline, from 67 to 41 to 11, is that they will die. So that's what happens under the conditions of the economic miracle, like in Guatemala. Now, it's a little wrong to say that the people die. The fact is, they don't die. We kill them, that's what happens. We kill them by carrying out policies, supporting the regimes of the kind that I've described. And by intervening with force and violence to suppress and destroy any attempt, however minimal, even on a speck like Grenada, we've got to stop any attempt to bring some change into this. That's the history of our hemisphere.
Source: The Political Economy Of Growth (1957), Chapter Four, Standstill and Movement Under Monopoly Capitalism, II, p. 119