Justice: Law and Maximum Liberty Essay

Submitted By erfesto
Words: 335
Pages: 2

Liberty, Equality, and Distributive Justice
Sir Isaiah Berlin said "If you have maximum liberty, then the strong can destroy the weak, and if you have absolute equality, you cannot have absolute liberty, because you have to coerce the powerful... if they are not to devour the poor and meek... Total liberty can be dreadful, total equality can be equally frightful." This quote Berlin paints his point of view of liberty, equality, and justice. He specified that humanity can’t have both total equality and liberty working together. Implying, that both of these are conflicting each other due to the nature of their laws.
If humanity was able to reach maximum liberty it would contribute further supremacy to the strong, upper-class citizens, to rule over the feeble, lower-class citizens. As the consequence of maximum liberty is humanity would be far from equality. For example a person that is rich would be wearing expensive clothes, driving nice sport cars and the person that is poor would be struggling to pay the monthly bills and support their family. The wealthy would be able to afford a good lawyer when in trouble with the law and will a good chance of “getting out of it” but a poor person in the same situtiattion would not be able to afford a good lawyer and would face the maximum pushiment for the crime.
If humanity was able to reach total equality, it would make it a sad world to live. Yes, its happy idea knowing that everyone is equal but think about it imagine going to