"In 1942, there were 110,000 Japanese American citizens in good standing, law-abiding people who were thrown into internment camps simply because their parents were born in the wrong country. That's all they did wrong. They had no right to a lawyer, no right to a fair trial, no right to a jury of their peers no right to due process of any kind. The only right they had: "Right this way" into the internment camps! Just when these American citizens needed their rights the most, their government took them away! And rights aren't rights if someone can take them away. They're privileges. That's all we've ever had in this country, is a bill of temporary privileges. And if you read the news even badly, you know that every year the list gets shorter and shorter."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
George Carlin, It's Bad for Ya (2008), "You Have No Rights".
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Concentration_camp
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Concentration camp
56 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Concentration camp →
Related Quotes
"Total loyalty to the movement, which is the psychological basis for total domination, can be expected, Arendt contend…"
"Despite the hundreds of attempts, police terror and the concentration camps have proved to be more or less impossible…"
"... nowhere else in the world did reality have as much effective power as in the camp, nowhere else was reality so re…"
"This is a history of the : a history of a vast network of labor camps that were once scattered across the length and …"
"The Gulag had antecedents in Czarist Russia, in the forced-labor brigades... in Siberia from the seventeenth century …"
"Eastern Prussia was a battlefield during World War I years. And right from here, on September 1, 1939, began the spar…"
"...[T]here remains time to turn back the constitutional clock and roll back excessive post-9/11 powers before we turn…"
"Once a refugee, forever a refugee. Roads back to the lost (or rather no longer existing) home paradise have been all …"
"The hallmarks of a regime which flouts the rule of law are, alas, all too familiar: the midnight knock on the door, t…"
"Until the very end... Foucault continued to investigate the "process of subjectivization" that, in the passage from t…"