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Quotes about Morality

We need to teach our youth American values, kindness, honesty,respect.
— Donald Trump
God, the source of all knowledge, should never have been expelled from our children's classrooms.
— Ronald Reagan
Disgust at collective killing is of very recent date and should not be over-estimated. Today everyone takes part in public executions through the newspapers. Like everything else, however, it is more comfortable than it was. We sit peacefully at home and, out of a hundred details, can choose those to linger over which offer a special thrill. We only applaud when everything is over and there is no feeling of guilty connivance to spoil our pleasure.
— Elias Canetti
Indifference to me, is the epitome of all evil.
— Elie Wiesel
I am much more afraid of my good deeds that please me than of my bad deeds that repel me.
— Elie Wiesel
In those dark times, one rose to the very heights of humanity by simply remaining human.
— Elie Wiesel
Anything you want to say about God you better make sure you can say in front of a pit of burning babies.
— Elie Wiesel
But the forces of evil have not abdicated. The malevolent ghosts of hatred are resurgent with a fury and a boldness that are as astounding as they are nauseating: ethnic conflicts, religious riots, anti-Semitic incidents here, there, and everywhere. What is wrong with these morally degenerate people that they abuse their freedom, so recently won?
— Elie Wiesel
Look, whatever you do in life, remember, think higher and feel deeper. It cannot be bad if you do that.
— Elie Wiesel
You are the sum total of all that we have been," said the youngster who looked like my former self. "In a way we are the ones to execute John Dawson. Because you can't do it without us. Now, do you see?" I was beginning to understand. An act so absolute as that of killing involves not only the killer but, as well, those who have formed him. In murdering a man I was making them murderers.
— Elie Wiesel
Everything had been said. The pros and the cons. I would choose the living or the dead. Day or night.
— Elie Wiesel
Could men and women who consider it normal to assist the weak, to heal the sick, to protect small children, and to respect the wisdom of their elders understand what happened there? Would they be able to comprehend how, within that cursed universe, the masters tortured the weak and massacred the children, the sick, and the old?
— Elie Wiesel