“It infuriates me to be wrong when I know I'm right.”
“Few things infuriate the ordinary citizen more than liberal attitudes to crime and criminals. And not only infuriate, but offend against justice, common sense, and fair play. The ordinary citizen is neither a brute nor a sadist; he is humane (as most liberals are not), he is compassionate when it is called for, leans over backwards to be fair, and is ready to give a second chance. But he knows the difference between right and wrong, and has an instinctive sense of the difference between right and mere legality. He believes that wrongdoing should be punished with appropriate degrees of severity; deep in his understanding lies a feeling that eye for eye and tooth for tooth is not without merit, and that the punishment should fit the crime.”
Crime and Punishment. p. 142.
The Light's On At Signpost (2002)
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George MacDonald Fraser 39
English-born author of Scottish descent 1925–2008Related quotes
Stuart Chase in S. I. Hayakawa (1949) Language in Thought and Action. p. 29-30
In the matter of Van Gelder's Patent (1888), 6 Rep. Pat. Cas. 28
“[T]he real root of Liberalism is fairness.”
Remarks to a friend (1909), quoted in G. M. Trevelyan, Grey of Fallodon; Being the Life of Sir Edward Grey afterwards Viscount Grey of Fallodon (1937), p. 170
1900s
Source: Mind and Nature, a necessary unity, 1988, p. 74-75
1900s, Letter to Winfield T. Durbin (1903)
“The Kindness of (Caucasian) Strangers” http://barelyablog.com/the-kindness-of-caucasian-stangers, Barely A Blog, January 31, 2014.
2010s, 2014