The Works of Orestes A. Brownson: PoliticsT. Nourse, 1885 |
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Página 23
... foreign to our present purpose , we may answer the question by laying down the principle , that authority is always presumptively in the right , and the law prima facie evidence of justice . The onus probandi rests on the shoulders of ...
... foreign to our present purpose , we may answer the question by laying down the principle , that authority is always presumptively in the right , and the law prima facie evidence of justice . The onus probandi rests on the shoulders of ...
Página 33
... foreign theorists , and should be rooted up and rejected by every American who loves his country , and would be able to dis- tinguish between the state and the mob . Not one of our state governments has had a strictly pop- ular origin ...
... foreign theorists , and should be rooted up and rejected by every American who loves his country , and would be able to dis- tinguish between the state and the mob . Not one of our state governments has had a strictly pop- ular origin ...
Página 43
... foreign relations , and several independent , sovereign states in all our internal relations . This , if intended merely to state the practical fact , that under the constitution the foreign relations of the country are subjected to the ...
... foreign relations , and several independent , sovereign states in all our internal relations . This , if intended merely to state the practical fact , that under the constitution the foreign relations of the country are subjected to the ...
Página 44
... foreign relations before the adoption of the con- stitution , as , in refuting Mr. Adams , we have shown we were not , we could not be made one people in reference to those relations any more than in reference to our internal relations ...
... foreign relations before the adoption of the con- stitution , as , in refuting Mr. Adams , we have shown we were not , we could not be made one people in reference to those relations any more than in reference to our internal relations ...
Página 54
... foreign power . In the true issue , congress might have hesitated ; in the one actually pre- sented , there was no room to hesitate , if the official an- nouncement of the president was to be credited , and hesita- tion would have been ...
... foreign power . In the true issue , congress might have hesitated ; in the one actually pre- sented , there was no room to hesitate , if the official an- nouncement of the president was to be credited , and hesita- tion would have been ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
adopt allies American assert attempt Austria Austrian empire authority believe bound Britain British cæsarism Catholic Christian church citizens concede congress constitution Cuba Danubian principalities defend democracy democratic despotism doctrine dominions doubt emperor empire England English ernment Europe European evil expedition fact favor federal Federalists foreign form of government France freedom French friends honor hostile Hungarian Hungary imperial independence institutions interests Ireland Irish Italian Italy Jacobinical justice king Kossuth Koszta law of nations legitimate liberty Louis Napoleon Magyar ment Mexico monarchy moral Napoleon Napoleon III never obliged opposed Ottoman Ottoman empire ourselves party patriots peace piratical political popular population present prince principles protection Protestantism prove question rebels regard religion render republic republican respect revolution revolutionists Russia Sardinia secure slavery sover sovereign sovereignty Spain subjects sympathy territory thing tion treaty Turkey Union United Webster Whig party Whigs wish
Pasajes populares
Página 16 - Let every soul be subject to higher powers : for there is no power but from God; and those that are, are ordained of God.
Página 199 - Useful and necessary changes in legislation and administration," says the Laybach Circular of May, 1821, "ought only to emanate from the free will and intelligent conviction of those whom God has rendered responsible for power; all that deviates from this line necessarily leads to disorder, commotions, and evils far more insufferable than those which they pretend to remedy.
Página 302 - And the better to obtain this effect, both parties oblige themselves expressly to restrain, by force, all hostilities on the part of the Indian nations living within their boundary : so that Spain will not suffer her Indians to attack the citizens of the United States, nor the Indians inhabiting their territory; nor will the United States permit these last mentioned Indians to commence hostilities against the subjects of his catholic majesty, or his Indians, in any manner whatever.
Página 196 - ... constitutions themselves are wholly founded, they could not but command the warm sympathy of the people of this country. Well-known circumstances in their history, indeed their whole history, have made them the representatives of purely popular principles of government. In this light they now stand before the world. They could not, if they would, conceal their character, their condition, or their destiny.
Página 198 - These declarations amount to nothing less than a denial of the lawfulness of the origin of the government of the United States, since it is certain that that government was established in consequence of a change which did not proceed from thrones or the permission of crowned heads. But the government of the United States heard these denunciations of its fundamental principles without remonstrance, or the disturbance of its equanimity.
Página 184 - Of course, questions of prudence naturally arise in reference to new states, brought by successful revolutions into the family of nations; but it is not to be required of neutral powers that they should await the recognition of the new government by the parent state. No principle of public law has been more frequently acted upon, within the last thirty years, by the great powers of the world than this. Within that period eight or ten new states have established independent governments within the...
Página 316 - ... by all means in their power, to protect and defend all vessels and other effects belonging to the citizens or subjects of the other, which shall be within the extent of their jurisdiction by sea or by land, and shall use all their efforts to recover and cause to be restored to the right owners their vessels and effects which may have been taken from them within the extent of their said jurisdiction, whether they are at war or not with the power whose subjects have taken possession of the said...
Página 22 - Alio modo leges possunt esse injustae per contrarietatem ad bonum divinum, sicut leges tyrannorum inducentes ad idololatriam, vel ad quodcumque aliud quod sit contra legem divinam, et tales leges nullo modo licet observare, quia sicut dicitur Act.
Página 46 - ... The judges are not appointed for the same terms, nor is the jurisdiction which they exercise part of the judicial power conferred by the constitution or the general government. The courts are the legislative courts of the territories, created in virtue of the clause which authorizes Congress to make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territories belonging to the United States.
Página 190 - A spy is a person sent by one belligerent to gain secret information of the forces and defences of the other, to be used for hostile purposes. According to practice, he may use deception, under the penalty of being lawfully hanged if detected. To give this odious name and character to a confidential agent of a neutral power, bearing the commission of his country, and sent for a purpose fully warranted by the law of nations, is not only to abuse language, but also to confound all just ideas, and to...