1. Without complete equality, there is no love.
From: [Russian] Turgenev's "Roting"
Introduction: Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev (Russian name: Иван Сергеевич Тургенев, 1818-1883), 19th century Russian critical realist writer. His major works include the novels "Luoting", "The Noble House", "The Night Before", "Father and Son", "Virgin Land", and the novellas "Axia", "First Love", etc.
2. People should respect themselves, and people should proudly say to all people: I am the same as you, I am equal to you in all aspects, and I have the same right to live as you. Live well and have the right to live an abundant life.
From: [Su] Gorky's "Gebi Yatravin"
Introduction: Maxim Gorky (March 28, 1868 - 1936) June 18, 2011), formerly known as Alexei Maximovich Beshkov, a former Soviet writer, poet, critic, political commentator, and scholar.
3. People may be unequal in strength and intelligence, but by agreement and according to rights, they are all equal.
From: [France] Rousseau's "Social Contract"
Introduction: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (June 28, 1712 - July 2, 1778) (Japanese), a French Enlightenment thinker, philosopher, educator, writer, democratic political commentator and founder of the romantic literary school in the eighteenth century, and one of the representatives of the Enlightenment Movement.
4. Equality of rights is stipulated by nature: society not only does not destroy this equality, but also ensures that violence is not abused to turn equality into an illusion.
From: [Law] Robespierre's "Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen"
5. It is the right of every individual to eliminate inequality, which is the subject of human resentment. May everyone realize his own worth and his place on the scale of moral existence.
From: [Greek] Diogenes, quoted from Shelley's "A Praise of Love and Beauty—Shelley's Prose Collection"
Introduction: Diogenes (Greek Διογνη English Diogenēs (approximately 412 BC - 324 BC) "Diogenēs o Sinopeus" (Diogenēs o Sinopeus, also translated as Diogenes and Diogenes) was an ancient Greek philosopher who was born in a banker family. Representative of Cynicism.