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Poems or famous sayings that legally safeguard rights and interests
1. The law needs to be believed, otherwise it is useless. Nothing is more harmful to a society than a judge misinterpreting the law. Judicial corruption, even partial corruption, is also a stain on the source of justice. Judicial independence is the premise of judicial justice. No one can judge his own affairs. Where will, not law, rules, there is no justice. Procedure determines the fundamental difference between the rule of law and the rule of man. -American Douglas

2. In a democratic country, the law is king; In an authoritarian country, the king is the law. -De Marx

3. The first principle of natural fairness is that all parties to the lawsuit must have sufficient opportunities to state their reasons. This means that they must be informed of the complaint procedure and be informed of any possible charges in time so that they can exercise their rights. Peter? Stan

The law cannot make everyone equal, but everyone is equal before the law. -(British) Pollock

5. A judge is a talking law, and the law is a silent judge. Edward? Cowen

Generally speaking, if there are only some gods in our country's laws, instead of trying to rub them into the constitution, the laws will be better. -Mark Twain

7. Crimes will always be compensated by punishment; Only punishment can make the crime be repaid. -Ying Da Rael L.

8. How did people first get out of the animal kingdom (in a narrow sense) and how did they enter the history? They are still semi-animals, savage, powerless in the face of natural forces and unaware of their own strength; So they are as poor as animals, and they are not necessarily better than animals in production. At that time, there was a certain equality in living conditions, and for parents, there was also a certain equality in social status, at least there was no social class. This equality continued to exist in primitive agricultural communes of ethnic groups with relatively late civilization. In every such commune, there are some common interests from the beginning, and the work of safeguarding these interests, although under the supervision of the whole society, cannot but be undertaken by individual members: for example, resolving disputes; Stop individuals from exceeding their authority; Supervise the use of water, especially in hot places; Finally, perform religious functions in a very primitive state. Such positions can be found at any time in primitive society, such as the oldest Deutsche Mark Commune, and even in India today. These positions are endowed with some sufficient power, which is the bud of state power. -Engels: On Anti-Turin, in Selected Works of Marx and Engels, Volume 3.

9. The more sacred the security, the more freedom the monarch protects and the fairer the punishment. -Beccaria: On Crime and Punishment

10. The law is by no means immutable. On the contrary, just as the sky and the sea change with the wind and waves, the law also changes with the environment and fate. -Hegel: Principles of Philosophy of Right