Delores Phillips (1950–2014) American writer
Source: The Darkest Child
Delores Phillips (1950–2014) American writer
Source: The Darkest Child
Ulysses S. Grant (1822–1885) 18th President of the United States
Reply to brokers who urged him to lend $44 million from the U.S. Treasury reserve to banks. Harper's Weekly (11 October 1873).
1870s
Booker T. Washington (1856–1915) African-American educator, author, orator, and advisor
"The Problems of the Colored Race in the South," lecture, Hamilton Club, Chicago (10 December 1895) http://web.archive.org/20071031084051/www.historycooperative.org/btw/Vol.4/html/93.html <br class="br">Context: Men may make laws to hinder and fetter the ballot, but men cannot make laws that will bind or retard the growth of manhood.<br>We went into slavery a piece of property; we came out American citizens. We went into slavery pagans; we came out Christians. We went into slavery without a language; we came out speaking the proud Anglo-Saxon tongue. We went into slavery with slave chains clanking about our wrists; we came out with the American ballot in our hands.<br>Progress, progress is the law of nature; under God it shall be our eternal guiding star.
Robert Boyle (1627–1691) English natural philosopher, chemist, physicist, and inventor
"A Free Inquiry into the Vulgar Notion of Nature" Sect.1 ibid.
Robert Holmes (1765–1859) Irish writer
Speech (1848-05-20) in the case of John Mitchel, Young Irelander and one of the Irish Confederation Leaders. Mitchel was later sentenced to fourteen years transportation.
James Comey (1960) American lawyer and the seventh director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
2010s, Hard Truths: Law Enforcement (2015)
“A community of free men cannot exist if its spiritual base is not solely law.”
Jacques Maritain (1882–1973) French philosopher
Christianity and Democracy (1943), p. 43.
John Marshall (1755–1835) fourth Chief Justice of the United States
17 U.S. (4 Wheaton) 316, 426
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Context: This great principle is that the Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof are supreme; that they control the Constitution and laws of the respective States, and cannot be controlled by them. From this, which may be almost termed an axiom, other propositions are deduced as corollaries, on the truth or error of which, and on their application to this case, the cause has been supposed to depend. These are, 1st. That a power to create implies a power to preserve; 2d. That a power to destroy, if wielded by a different hand, is hostile to, and incompatible with these powers to create and to preserve; 3d. That, where this repugnancy exists, that authority which is supreme must control, not yield to that over which it is supreme.