Terry Tempest Williams (1955) American writer
Source: When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice
As quoted in Democracy Now! interview by Amy Goodman (30 January 2006) http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/01/30/157217&mode=thread&tid=25 <br class="br">Context: I think most important is that we have words that attempt to give us moral cleansing, so that somehow we hold those responsible for crashing into the Twin Towers and killing over 2,000 Americans citizens in cold blood, which is an act of terrorism — people who have done that should be sought out and brought to justice; there’s no question of that — but when we do what we have done, illegal war, going into the Middle East, bombing at will, and then hundreds of thousands of people get caught, who are either maimed or over 100,000 have already been killed, who are innocent men, women and children, and we chalk that off to a thing called "collateral damage," as if somehow that murderous thing that we’re doing so cruelly and so inhumanely has no judgment before world opinion, that we are somehow righteous and above criticism and above the law. That is unacceptable. And that’s what I speak out against.
Terry Tempest Williams (1955) American writer
Source: When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on Voice
“What do you mean by communal? If I speak against the terrorism, is it communal?”
Narendra Modi (1950) Prime Minister of India
2008, Speech, 14 January 2008
Ernesto Che Guevara (1928–1967) Argentine Marxist revolutionary
Address to the United Nations (1964)
Context: We speak out to put the world on guard against what is happening in South Africa. The brutal policy of apartheid is applied before the eyes of the nations of the world. The peoples of Africa are compelled to endure the fact that on the African continent the superiority of one race over another remains official policy, and that in the name of this racial superiority murder is committed with impunity. Can the United Nations do nothing to stop this?
Geert Wilders (1963) Dutch politician
Speech https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pfEJaI2iS4 (7 February 2011) <br class="br">2010s
Jon Appleton (1939) American composer
"The Decline of Academic Freedom at Dartmouth College", 20 October 2005.
Letter published in "Appleton Leaves Dartmouth", 2005
“There is a war against vice in Lancaster. I am going home to speak for vice.”
Charles Demuth (1883–1935) American painter
Quoted in Speaking for Vice: Homosexuality in the Art of Charles Demuth, Marsden Hartley, and the First American Avant-Garde by Jonathan Weinberg (Yale University Press, 1993).
Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929–1968) American clergyman, activist, and leader in the American Civil Rights Movement
1960s, Why I Am Opposed to the War in Vietnam (1967)
Đorđe Balašević (1953) Serbian songwriter
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(from an interview for Croatian television, aired on December 29 2000).