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There are many prices we pay for freedoms secured by the First Amendment the risk of undue influence is one of them, confirming what we have long known: Freedom is hazardous, but some restraints are worse.
Warren E. Burger
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Warren E. Burger
Age: 87 †
Born: 1907
Born: September 17
Died: 1995
Died: June 25
Former Chief Justice Of The United States
Judge
Lawyer
Politician
St Paul
Minnesota
Warren Earl Burger
First
Worse
Restraints
Many
Speech
Secured
Long
Pay
Freedoms
Influence
Amendment
Risk
Amendments
Known
Prices
Confirming
Freedom
Restraint
Undue
Firsts
Propaganda
Hazardous
More quotes by Warren E. Burger
For better or worse, editing is what editors are for and editing is selection and choice of material. That editors newspaper or broadcast can and do abuse this power is beyond doubt, but that is no reason to deny the discretion Congress provided.
Warren E. Burger
Doctors still retain a high degree of public confidence because they are perceived as healers. Should lawyers not be healers? Healers, not warriors? Healers, not procurers? Healers, not hired guns?
Warren E. Burger
[No one will be able to] deter the scientific mind from probing into the unknown any more than Canute could command the tides.
Warren E. Burger
The trial of a case is a three-legged stool - a judge and two advocates.
Warren E. Burger
The right of every person to be let alone must be placed in the scales with the right of others to communicate.
Warren E. Burger
The president's need for complete candor and objectivity from advisers calls for great deference from the courts.
Warren E. Burger
The policeman on the beat or in the patrol car makes more decisions and exercises broader discretion affecting the daily lives of people every day and to a greater extent, in many respects, than a judge will ordinarily exercise in a week.
Warren E. Burger
Trials by the adversarial contest must in time go the way of the ancient trial by battle and blood.
Warren E. Burger
Concepts of justice must have hands and feet...to carry out justice in every case in the shortest possible time and the lowest possible cost. This is the challenge to every lawyer and judge in America.
Warren E. Burger
Crime and the fear of crime have permeated the fabric of American life.
Warren E. Burger
A far greater factor than abolishing poverty is the deterrent effect of swift and certain consequences: swift arrest, prompt trial, certain penalty and - at some point - finality of judgment.
Warren E. Burger
There may be some incorrigible human beings who cannot be changed except by God's own mercy to that one person.
Warren E. Burger
We are more casual about qualifying the people we allow to act as advocates in the courtroom than we are about licensing electricians.
Warren E. Burger
There can be no doubt that the practice of opening legislative sessions with prayer has become part of the fabric of our society.
Warren E. Burger
The notion that most people want black-robed judges, well-dressed lawyers and fine-paneled courtrooms as the setting to resolve their disputes is not correct. People with problems, like people with pains, want relief, and they want it as quickly and inexpensively as possible.
Warren E. Burger
It is indeed an odd business that it has taken this Court nearly two centuries to discover a constitutional mandate to have counsel at a preliminary hearing.
Warren E. Burger
[I]n constitutional adjudication some steps, which when taken were thought to approach 'the verge,' have become the platform for yet further steps. A certain momentum develops in constitutional theory and it can be a 'downhill thrust' easily set in motion but difficult to retard or stop.
Warren E. Burger
There can be no assumption that today's majority is right and the Amish or others like them are wrong. A way of life that is odd or even erratic but interferes with no right or interests of others is not to be condemned because it is different.
Warren E. Burger
To hold that the act of homosexual sodomy is somehow protected as a fundamental right would be to cast aside millennia of moral teaching.
Warren E. Burger
History is filled with examples of men and women who rendered highly effective performance without the conventional badges of accomplishment in terms of certificates, diplomas, or degrees. Diplomas and tests are useful servants, but Congress has mandated the commonsense proposition that they are not to become masters of reality.
Warren E. Burger