
“Why should only a few people be freed and not others when we are all serving under the same law?”
2000, Excerpts from an address to Fiji's Great Council of Chiefs, 28 July 2005
Source: To Die for the People: The Writings of Huey P. Newton
“Why should only a few people be freed and not others when we are all serving under the same law?”
2000, Excerpts from an address to Fiji's Great Council of Chiefs, 28 July 2005
"In Defense of Self-defense" I (June 20, 1967)
To Die For The People
Letter accepting the nomination for governor of New York (October 1882).
America Live
Fox News
2011-10-21
Television, quoted in * Herman Cain: I’m Not Pro-Choice, I’m Pro-Choice On Getting An Illegal Abortion
Mediaite
2011-10-21
Alex
Alvarez
http://www.mediaite.com/tv/herman-cain-im-not-pro-choice-im-pro-choice-on-getting-an-illegal-abortion/
2011-10-23
“To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.”
Address to the Tenth National Women's Rights Convention on Marriage and Divorce, New York City, May 11, 1860; as published in Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Feminist as Thinker: A Reader in Documents and Essays edited by Ellen Carol DuBois and Richard Cándida Smith.
1960s, Memorial Day speech (1963)
Context: The law cannot save those who deny it but neither can the law serve any who do not use it. The history of injustice and inequality is a history of disuse of the law. Law has not failed — and is not failing. We as a nation have failed ourselves by not trusting the law and by not using the law to gain sooner the ends of justice which law alone serves. If the white over-estimates what he has done for the Negro without the law, the Negro may under-estimate what he is doing and can do for himself with the law.
Socrates, p. 137
Eupalinos ou l'architecte (1921)