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“Truth is not absolute; it is uncertain.”

— Francis P. Karam, The Truth Engine: Cross-Examination Outside the Box, Share via Whatsapp

“There is no other way to put it: Our country is now faced with the problem of a lawless White House which addresses itself to every new dilemma or check on its power with the belief that following the rules is optional, and that breaking them comes at minimal, if not zero, cost. Sadly, though wrong-headed, this belief has been continually reinforced by the many institutions that have opted not to prove to the president, through their legitimate powers of oversight, that he is, in fact, not above the law; and specifically by an Attorney General and White House counsel who think of themselves as defense attorneys representing the personal interest of the president, rather than as public officials who represent the interest of the presidency and serve the public.”

— Andrew Weissmann, Where Law Ends: Inside the Mueller Investigation, Share via Whatsapp

“The power to pardon is conferred upon the presidency. It is not a personal power of the man or woman who inhabits the office. ... Where a pardon is being used to protect the president personally, or protect the president’s family, friends, or conspirators, it should not be seen as a valid exercise of that constitutional power. Being able to tell one scenario from the other may not be difficult. Until Trump’s presidency, all recent presidents used a formal process for evaluating and granting pardons. Where pardons are awarded to conspirators of the president, and without any consistent rationale to support them, a court could find the pardon to be an invalid exercise of the power of the presidency.”

— Andrew Weissmann, Where Law Ends: Inside the Mueller Investigation, Share via Whatsapp

“..fairy was delusion, so was the law. At any rate, it was a sort of magic, moulding reality into any shape it chose.”

— Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist, Share via Whatsapp

“No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.”

— Anonymous, The Magna Carta, Share via Whatsapp

“To no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice.”

— Anonymous, The Magna Carta, Share via Whatsapp

“We will appoint as justices, constables, sheriffs, or other officials, only men that know the law of the realm and are minded to keep it well.”

— Anonymous, The Magna Carta, Share via Whatsapp

“There were four white cops in the polling place where I went to vote. Right in the middle of Harlem, four white cops. Everybody else there were colored, voters all colored, officials all colored registering the books, only the cops white--to remind me of which color is the law. I went inside that voting booth and shut the door and stood there all by myself and put the biggest black mark I could make in front of every black name on the ballot. At least up North I can vote black. If enough of us votes black in Harlem, maybe someday we can change the color of the law.”

— Langston Hughes, The Return of Simple, Share via Whatsapp

“A judicial system is corrupt if truth is denied the right to be a witness.”

— Suzy Kassem, Share via Whatsapp

“If we, our chief justice, our officials, or any of our servants offend in any respect against any man, or transgress any of the articles of the peace or of this security, and the offence is made known to four of the said twenty-five barons, they shall come to us – or in our absence from the kingdom to the chief justice – to declare it and claim immediate redress. If we, or in our absence abroad the chief justice, make no redress within forty days, reckoning from the day on which the offence was declared to us or to him, the four barons shall refer the matter to the rest of the twenty-five barons, who may distrain upon and assail us in every way possible, with the support of the whole community of the land, by seizing our castles, lands, possessions, or anything else saving only our own person and those of the queen and our children, until they have secured such redress as they have determined upon. Having secured the redress, they may then resume their normal obedience to us.”

— Anonymous, The Magna Carta, Share via Whatsapp

“And so the new century will bring a new kind of law, was how Mr. Picton summed things up..... Proceedings where victims and witnesses are put on trial instead of defendants, where a murderer in identified as a woman instead of an individual....If things go on like this we ll find ourselves in some shadow world, where lawyers use the ignorance of the average citizen to manipulate justice the way priests did in the Middle ages.”

— Caleb Carr, The Angel of Darkness, Share via Whatsapp

“The most important value of the law is protecting the weak.”

— Ja Ya, Ebony, Share via Whatsapp

“The purpose of law is to punish inhumanity, whereas the purpose of armed forces is to prevent inhumanity”

— Abhijit Naskar, Sleepless for Society, Share via Whatsapp

“The actual structure of the life we know is deeply and pervasively anchored in the particularities of the periodic table. If one wishes to propose an abstraction of life away from its chemical substrate, one should first consider seriously the depth of this embedding, and should ask, if the chemical particulars were removed, how much of the structure we think of as living would remain to be abstracted. This embedding, of course, is also the basis for belief that the emergence of life was heavily scaffolded in the structure of physical laws, and thus not an arbitrary and vastly improbable discovery.”

— Eric Smith, The Origin and Nature of Life on Earth: The Emergence of the Fourth Geosphere, Share via Whatsapp

“Those who will not fight to protect their rights, deserve to lose them.”

— C.A.A. Savastano, Share via Whatsapp

“Justice on earth is no legal matter, If one soul is hurt all must rise together.”

— Abhijit Naskar, Boldly Comes Justice: Sentient Not Silent, Share via Whatsapp

“And is … mercy such a bad thing, aboshi?” “Not bad; merely chaotic. If you look through the records in this hall, you will find the same story told again and again. Leniency and mercy. Men set free despite crimes, because they were good fathers, or well-liked in the community, or in the favor of someone important. Some of those who are set free change their lives and go on to produce for society. Others recidivate and create great tragedies. The thing is, Szeth-son-Neturo, we humans are terrible at spotting which will be which. The purpose of the law is so we do not have to choose. So our native sentimentality will not harm us.”

— Brandon Sanderson, Oathbringer, Share via Whatsapp