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What is Justice?

Posted on Monday, May 22, 2023
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by AMAC, Robert B. Charles
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19 Comments
Justice

The question “what is justice?” has probably consumed mankind as much as any question ever asked, producing thousands of books, filling lives from Biblical and Confucian times to now. Yet if you read it all, you might come to the same conclusion that life, if we listen, teaches.

And what is that? Well, take a short journey with me. Early as the Old Testament, we are told God imbued in us a sense of justice, and expectation we will listen, do it. What does that mean? 

While citations are only citations, there are many. Psalm 82 says: “Give justice to the weak and the fatherless; maintain the right of the afflicted and the destitute,” that is – be alert, empathetic, kind, yearn to do good, make it a purpose.

Isaiah is more explicit. “Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, please the widow’s cause.” In other words, by focusing on others you are true to you.

This is not “procedural” justice, although that too is important – becomes due process in our Constitution. This is not exactly Socratic justice, what Plato called “superior character and intelligence,” although it approaches those.

It certainly is not the Marxist idea that whatever belongs to one should be given to others in the name of the misguided notion that “redistributive” justice corrects the world by coercion. Of course, what Marx misses, even Greeks and Romans undervalue, is heart, the conscience, the uniqueness of each individual and sovereignty of one soul to act – not in groups, not factions.

In another sense, justice is often described as “retributive,” punishments for wrongdoing, not the same as doing good. Justice can be “eye for an eye,” or can be “the Good Samaritan.”

Even Confucius wrote, “return good for good; return evil with justice.” Christ – God’s word on Earth – amended that, expanded the idea, asked more of us than retribution, asked forgiveness.

Shakespeare in Othello talks of our human, very real, unchanging good and bad sides, the good informed by our “better angels.” Lincoln, who read the Bible and Shakespeare, thus likely Othello, lifted and amplified notions found in Psalms, spoken by Christ, and in Shakespeare.

In Lincoln’s First Inaugural, he urged peace not war, empathy not judgment, perspective not myopia. He asked we hear our “better angels,” a plea adopted in time by Ronald Reagan.

There is in Lincoln’s words – and in Reagan’s – a flavor of justice, an appeal to something bigger, something to be plumbed by each of us in the deep, found in our own human depths.

In Lincoln’s words – spoken March 1861, a month before onset of a war that threatened to kill the Republic and all that bound us to each other – we hear echoes of the Bible and Shakespeare.

Spoke Lincoln: “I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and patriot grave to every living heart and hearth-stone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.

Is Lincoln appealing for something specific, thinking he can stop the war, or did he know it was inevitable? Was he appealing instead to what makes us different – to Americans as self-governing individuals? 

Was he saying, stop and remember – in all times – that justice, which includes love and forgiveness, empathy and principle – matters? It does for the Republic and for each individually?

Today, we hear the term “justice” bandied as if another word, worse a political signal for left or right activism – environmental, social gender justice, pick-your-favorite-cause justice. But that is not it.

Justice in the end is something real, much bigger, rooted deep, going way back in time, worth pondering over coffee, maybe reading about and writing on.

If you consulted modern writers, liberals like John Rawls and conservatives like Michael Novak, the idea of social justice looms large, and yet is elusive, subject to countless interpretations.

What really matters – and maybe this is what really binds all to all – is that beyond procedural, retributive, and redistributive justice, beyond all the pages written on justice, something glows.

Justice “rightly conceived” is being fair, respectful, right-minded, hearing your conscience, caring to act on it. For some it gets lofty, engraved writing over Corinthian pillars. For some, it is about lawfulness, fair processes, equal treatment. For some, it includes love and forgiveness.

But in the end, is a republican society means to survive, especially a republic such as ours, we must all stop and care about what justice means. More, in this Republic once led by Lincoln and Reagan, animated by Christian values, we must listen for our “better angles,” and then act on what we hear. Above all, “we must not be enemies.”

Robert Charles is a former Assistant Secretary of State under Colin Powell, former Reagan and Bush 41 White House staffer, attorney, and naval intelligence officer (USNR). He wrote “Narcotics and Terrorism” (2003), “Eagles and Evergreens” (2018), and is National Spokesman for AMAC.

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Rob citizenship
Rob citizenship
11 months ago

Great thoughts on Justice in this article you wrote Robert , the part about ” the uniqueness of each individual and the sovereignty of one soul to act — not in groups , not factions.” There is much significance in that thought
And the mention of how Christ brought the concept of forgiveness to the definition — adding to the comment by Confucius on the topic ,
very important . I think about the importance of balance , and how truth helps to bring balance to things that need to be balanced, and how the determination of truth requires understanding , a respect for the idea of justice makes it possible to connect truth , understanding , and the balance , the sense of fairness . All related to the value of justice. The similarities ,the differences in the various interpretations of justice
throughout the centuries, the history involved in the applications of justice ,
surely have meaning considering the survival of the republic. This article will help with that endeavor . Well Done !

SusanW
SusanW
11 months ago

What is justice? I fear in our nation today it is more distant and absent than ever before. As Thomas Jefferson, said, “I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.” We must stop the “ political signal for activism”. We must come together and practice more kindness, empathy, and forgiveness. If not, we may awaken one day and find that being unique, curious and a beacon for love is no longer valued nor allowed.

”In matters of truth and justice, there is no difference between large and small problems, for issues concerning the treatment of people are all the same.” AE

anna hubert
anna hubert
11 months ago

Justice is what those we elected to represent and serve us tell us it is We are expected to believe it

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
11 months ago

Justice is:
Fair
Equal
Everyone pays same
Beyond doubt
Provable
Proven
No 2 tier Justice

Texas Resister 64
Texas Resister 64
11 months ago

I believe that the phrase is properly “plead the widow’s cause.” Justice to widows and orphans is one of the big OT concerns expressed by God, part of His loving kindness and compassion. (Compassion literally means “to suffer with. . .”)

CLIFFORD F GERACI
CLIFFORD F GERACI
11 months ago

With the Democrats help, Justice in America is corrupt.

William (Dean) Hardy
William (Dean) Hardy
11 months ago

What a great perspective. I’m a member of a blog called “nextdoor.” It consists of one’s next door neighbors. I wish I could post Robert Charles article, but it would be steam-rolled by haters. The woke culture ignores the concept of “better angles.” Woke culture does not accept the concepts all Americans should be friends, not enemies. That’s why people shout over others perspective. It the old Marxist didactic–I’m right; you’re wrong & must be destroyed.

Rik
Rik
11 months ago

I can tell you what Justice is NOT, it’s definitely NOT JACK*SS JOE BIDEN!!!

LauraC
LauraC
11 months ago

The part of justice that is missing today is the rightful feeling that we’re all in this together and should work together for the good of us, as individuals, and greater society as a whole. Some want justice for the individual and some justice for society, but we’ve apparently forgotten how to integrate that all into one “liberty and justice for all” narrative. I pray for us to find each other again and pull together as God meant us to, as brothers and sisters.

RWC
RWC
11 months ago

Justice “right” from “wrong”!

Paul B.
Paul B.
11 months ago

As a former police officer, I was taught at the police academy that for justice to work, it has to be swift and sure. We have neither these days. That was many years ago and it’s still true today.

Centurion
Centurion
11 months ago

What is justice? Justice is only for those who can pay for it. The little guy never, ever will see justice. We have a legal system and we have a court system. We do NOT have a justice system.

David Millikan
David Millikan
11 months ago

Excellent article.
“Where there is no law, there is no liberty.”
-Founding Father Benjamin Rush
“If it be asked, what is the most sacred duty and the greatest resource of our security in a Republic?
The answer would be, an inviolable RESPECT FOR THE CONSTITUTION AND LAWS.”
-Founding Father Alexander Hamilton
Evil conquerors when Good Men do nothing.

Hal von Luebbert
Hal von Luebbert
10 months ago

As I’ve been saying and writing since the Sixties, the terminal cancer that will soon have destroyed the U.S. was injected by feminism, liberalism, and the Democratic Party when they attacked, weakened, and will soon have destroyed the basic unit of government and establisher of law, the family. Using massive taxation that forced everyone in the family including the family dog to seek employment and work gainfully, the forces of socialist “progressive” evil attacked both motherhood and belittled the male until American society had been reduced to virtual and effective impotence. The Democratic Party, in other words, sought to and accomplished what Delilah had done to Samson. The “hand that rocks the cradle” is no longer there – it’s a CEO, a U.S. Army Ranger, or a jet pilot. I said these things first in 1967 – my first response to the “Great Society.” I predicted in that first speech at a “Toastmaster” dinner what I called that night “The New Feudal Age – a time when no citizen would dare go about in public unarmed or accompanied by a bodyguard, be forced to live in gated communities behind walls, and our children would have gone wild and rebelled against both parents, parental authority, and moral law.” Private security, I said, would be the growth industry of the future. Not a day goes by that someone who knew me or knows me now doesn’t remark concerning how right5 I was.

tika
tika
10 months ago

in America it’s the U.S.Constitution, as written, as intended by the writers.

johnh
johnh
10 months ago

I see where Tiktok filed charges against Montana for boycotting them . They are using the first amendment & freedom of speech. The Justice is ” the 1st amendment only applies to American citizens & not people or companies from foreign countries”. Montana has the right to boycott Tiktok if they feel they are spying for China.

Rich
Rich
10 months ago

Good article Mr. Charles. If we all lived according to the Bibles instruction with respect for God, there wouldn’t need to be this discussion. Obviously when we throw God and His word out of society, anything goes. Now in America, we need to define the two tiered justice system that has been implemented by a very unjust and corrupt government. If we can’t relearn to respect one another I don’t see a future for America.

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