The dead cannot cry out for justice. It is a duty of the living to do so for them.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day is a time to honor the greatest champion of racial equality who taught a nation - through compassion and courage - about democracy nonviolence and racial justice.
Freedom. And Justice. If you have those two it covers everything. You must stick to those principles and have the courage of your convictions.
I know that throughout their history the people of the United States defended their freedom their liberty their justice and their rights - if need be - with their lives. I think their courage is so admirable.
Unjust. How many times I've used that word scolded myself with it. All I mean by it now is that I don't have the final courage to say that I refuse to preside over violations against myself and to hell with justice.
Rather like Batman I embody the themes of the movie which are the values of family courage and compassion and a sense of right and wrong good and bad and justice.
Whoever is content with the world and who profits from its lack of justice does not want to change it.
I came to poetry through the urgent need to denounce injustice exploitation humiliation. I know that's not enough to change the world. But to remain silent would have been a kind of intolerable complicity.
Ethics and equity and the principles of justice do not change with the calendar.
Justice means minding one's own business and not meddling with other men's concerns.