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Quotes about Injustice

The cemetery of the victims of human cruelty in our century is extended to include yet another vast cemetery, that of the unborn.
— Pope John Paul II
They put chains on me; they chained my waist, my legs. Put me in the back of a squad car, and I literally blacked out. I didn't even - there's whole pieces missing.
— Jim Bakker
They - you know, when we walked in - when I walked in with the two white men that had carried me down - and they cursed me all the way down. They would ask me questions, and when I would try to answer, they would tell me to hush.
— Fannie Lou Hamer
No slavery can be abolished without a double emancipation, and the master will benefit by freedom more than the freed-man.
— Thomas Henry Huxley
The issue of race is not an issue of choice. It's an issue of birth.
— Tony Evans
It's easier to blame the person with less power.
— Gloria Steinem
I have suffered as much as Martin Luther King. Only I didn't get the bullet. And I would have taken the bullet if I could have.
— Ralph Abernathy
If you put a chain around the neck of a slave, the other end fastens itself around your own.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
You haven't got a chance kid,' he had told him glumly.'They hate Jews.' 'But I'm not Jewish,' answered Clevinger. 'It will make no difference,' Yossarian promised, and Yossarian was right. 'They're after everybody.
— Joseph Heller
It's only that I feel an injustice has been committed. Why should I have somebody else's malaria and you have my dose of clap?
— Joseph Heller
Pharaoh is clearly a metaphor. He embodies and represents raw, absolute, worldly power. He is, like Pilate after him, a stand-in for the whole of the empire. As the agent of the "empire of force," he reappears in many different personae.9
— Walter Brueggemann
The wonder of the Exodus narrative is that the role of pharaoh continues to be reperformed in many times and many places. "Pharaoh" reappears in the course of history in the guise of coercive economic production. In every new performance, the character of Pharaoh makes claims to be absolute to perpetuity; the character is regularly propelled by fearful greed; the character imposes stringent economic demands on a vulnerable labor force.
— Walter Brueggemann