| Edward Gibbon Wakefield - 1849 - 554 psl.
...they understand nothing. It must not be inferred from this, that we think it a really good system. It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...personal interest in the welfare of those over whom they rulewho reside at a distance from them-who never have ocular experience of their conditionwho... | |
| Edward Gibbon Wakefield - 1849 - 554 psl.
...they understand nothing. It must not be inferred from this, that we think it a really good system. It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...personal interest in the welfare of those over whom they rulewho reside at a distance from themwho never have ocular experience of their conditionwho... | |
| Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett - 1901 - 414 psl.
...He quoted Charles Buller 's well-known attack upon the then existing Colonial Office system : It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...second-hand and one-sided information, and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
| Edward Potts Cheyney - 1908 - 830 psl.
...intrusting absolute power (for such it is) to one wholly irresponsible is obviously most faulty. ... It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government...second-hand and one-sided information, and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
| William Cunningham - 1908 - 520 psl.
...intrusting absolute power (for such it is), to one wholly irresponsible is obviously most faulty. * * * It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...second-hand and one-sided information and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
| William Cunningham - 1908 - 516 psl.
...intrusting absolute power (for each it is), to one wholly irresponsible is obviously most faulty. * * * It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...have ocular experience of their condition who are obh'ged to trust to second-hand and one-sided information and who are exposed to the operation... | |
| William Cunningham - 1908 - 516 psl.
...(for such it is), to one wholly irresponsible is obviously most faulty. * It has all the faulU of an essentially arbitrary government, in the hands...personal interest in the welfare of those over whom they rulewho reside at a distance from themwho never have ocular experience of their conditionwho... | |
| Edward Gibbon Wakefield - 1914 - 570 psl.
...they understand nothing. It must not be inferred from this, that we think it a really good system. It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...second-hand and one-sided information and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences, which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
| Edward Murray Wrong - 1926 - 368 psl.
...they understand nothing. It must not be inferred from this, that we think it a really good system. It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...second-hand and one-sided information and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences, which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
| William Cunningham - 1968 - 1098 psl.
...intrusting absolute power (for such it is), to one wholly irresponsible is obviously most faulty. * * * It has all the faults of an essentially arbitrary government,...second-hand and one-sided information and who are exposed to the operation of all those sinister influences which prevail wherever publicity and freedom... | |
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