Quotes About Injustice
So many people of color who made major contributions to American history have been trapped in the purgatory of history.
~ Henry Louis Gates
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Gay people don't have a personality problem. They have a problem with small-minded motherfuckers who can't conquer a 1-inch high curb.
~ Henry Rollins
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You can't right the wrongs because you'll never understand the cause and you'll be too busy dodging the effect.
~ Henry Rollins
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If it's a man's world, as they say, then men: your world is a poorly run carnage fest.
~ Henry Rollins
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I hate misogyny, and I find it everywhere.
~ Henry Rollins
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People demand freedom only when they have no power.
~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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but that what was for him the greatest and most cruel injustice appeared to others a quite ordinary occurrence.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Where there is law there is injustice
~ Leo Tolstoy
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It is impossible that all men have been doomed to suffer this awful horror!
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Millions of men, renouncing their human feelings and reason, had to go from west to east to slay their fellows, just as some centuries previously hordes of men had come from the east to the west slaying their fellows.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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The constant, obvious flattery, contrary to all evidence, of the people around him [Tsar Nicholas I] had brought him to the point that he no longer saw his contradictions, no longer conformed his actions and words to reality, logic, or even simple common sense, but was fully convinced that all his orders, however senseless, unjust, and inconsistent with each other, became sensible, just, and consistent with each other only because he gave them.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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A commercial company enslaved a nation comprising two hundred millions. Tell this to a man free from superstition and he will fail to grasp what these words mean. What does it mean that thirty thousand men, not athletes but rather weak and ordinary people, have subdued two hundred million vigorous, clever, capable, and freedom-loving people?
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Woman is deprived of rights from lack of education, and the lack of education results from the absence of rights. We must not forget that the subjection of women is so complete, and dates from such ages back that we are often unwilling to recognise the gulf that separates them from us.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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And what is justice? The princess thought of that proud word 'justice'. All the complex laws of man centered for her in one clear and simple law—the law of love and self-sacrifice taught us by Him who lovingly suffered for mankind though He Himself was God. What had she to do with justice or injustice of other people? She had to endure and love, and that she did.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Luxury cannot be obtained other than by enslaving other people.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Nekhlúdoff clearly saw that all these people were arrested, locked up, exiled, not really because they transgressed against justice or behaved unlawfully, but only because they were an obstacle hindering the officials and the rich from enjoying the property they had taken away from the people.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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It never occurred to my mind that possibly poor Ilinka was suffering far less from bodily pain than from the thought that five companions for whom he may have felt a genuine liking had, for no reason at all, combined to hurt and humiliate him.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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But all profit that is out of proportion to the labor expended is dishonest.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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He [Tsar Nicholas I] had done much evil to the Poles. To explain that evil he had to be convinced that all Poles were scoundrels. And Nicholas regarded them as such and hated them in proportion to the evil he had done them.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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All the wounds of society, the wounds of poverty, of vice, of ignorance—all will be laid bare. Is there not something re-assuring in this?
~ Leo Tolstoy
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War is so unjust and ugly that all who wage it must try to stifle the voice of conscience within themselves.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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Where there's law there's injustice,
~ Leo Tolstoy
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And what is justice? The princess never thought of that proud word "justice." All the complex laws of man centered for her in one clear and simple law—the law of love and self-sacrifice taught us by Him who lovingly suffered for mankind though He Himself was God. What had she to do with the justice or injustice of other people? She had to endure and love, and that she did.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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an event took place opposed to human reason and to human nature. Millions of men perpetrated against one another such innumerable crimes, frauds, treacheries, thefts, forgeries, issues of false money, burglaries, incendiarisms, and murders as in whole centuries are not recorded in the annals of all the law courts of the world, but which those who committed them did not at the time regard as being crimes.
~ Leo Tolstoy
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