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Edmund Burke

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On one side, your lordships have the prisoner declaring that the people have no laws, no rights, no usages, no distinctions of rank, no sense of honor, no property; in short that they are nothing but a herd of slaves to be governed by the arbitrary will of a master. On the other side, we assert that the direct contrary of this is true. And to prove our assertion we have referred you to the institutes of Ghinges Khân and of Tamerlane: we have referred you to the Mahomedan law, which is binding upon all, from the crowned head to the meanest subject; a law interwoven with a system of the wisest, the most learned, and most enlightened jurisprudence that perhaps ever existed in the world. We have shown you, that if these parties are to be compared together, it is not the rights of the people which are nothing, but rather the rights of the sovereign which are so. The rights of the people are every thing, as they ought to be in the true and natural order of things.
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From Final Speech at the Trial of Warren Hastings, May 28, 1794: Burke, Edmund (1877). The Works of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke, vol. 8 (5th ed.). p. 51. 

 
Edmund Burke

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Ron Paul: Pardon me?
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Ron Paul: Yes, but not in — I wouldn’t vote against getting rid of the Jim Crow laws.
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Ron Paul: Because — because of the property rights element, not because it got rid of the Jim Crow law.

 
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