| United States. Supreme Court - 1938 - 126 lapas
...merely from the humility of his nature. It arose also from his profound conviction that, as he put it,1s "one kind of liberty may cancel and destroy another,"...Cardozo saw nothing in the Constitution which forbade 16 Dissenting in United States v. Constantine, 296 US 287, 299. 17 Mayflower Farms, Inc., v. Ten Eyck,... | |
| United States. Congress. House Ways and Means - 1959 - 766 lapas
...create them. In choosing between these points of view, we should remember Cardozo's caution in 1931 : Many an appeal to freedom Is the masquerade of privilege or inequality seeking to intrench itself behind the catchwork of a principle." People are tired and resentful of abuses permitted... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Ways and Means - 1959 - 760 lapas
...create them. In choosing between these points of view, we should remember Cardozo's caution in 1931 : Many an appeal to freedom is the masquerade of privilege or inequality seeking to intrench itself behind the catchwork of a principle." People are tired and resentful of abuses permitted... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Commerce Committee - 1975 - 470 lapas
..."general propositions do not decide concrete cases." We should also remember Mr. Justice Cardozo's words : "Many an appeal to freedom is the masquerade of privilege...entrench itself behind the catchword of a principle." Neither personal liberty nor personal property, the two poles of the American experience, are without... | |
| 1988 - 472 lapas
...of freedom, but which actually constitute its denial. Justice Cordozo referred to this when he said: "Many an appeal to freedom is the masquerade of privilege or inequality seeking to intrench itself behind . . . principle." Let me give you some examples of this masquerade of freedom.... | |
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