Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Enforcement. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Enforcement Quotes And Sayings by 90 Authors including Elliot Richardson,Marcus Tullius Cicero,Petra Hermans,Sunday Adelaja,Erwin Mcmanus for you to enjoy and share.
Though every legal task demands this skill, it is especially important in the effort to frame public policy in a way that is properly responsive to human needs and predicaments. The question is always: How will the general rule work in practice?
Care must be taken that the punishment does not exceed the offence.
Jurisdictie Prudentia :
Important : Legislation and Jurisdiction :
Justice conform : "Prudentia".
Petra Cecilia Maria Hermans
Babaji
September 20, 2016
Discipline is a demand of life.
Behind real freedom, there lies discipline.
We have to administer the law whether we like it or no.
You can put handcuffs on people who push the envelope. When they break the law, they deserve to have handcuffs.
The enforcement is the flip side to the growth. And that's OK.
Legislation may at times be disobeyed, but never law, for the breaking brings swift punishment of its own.
greater authority.
As society changes, laws have to change to protect citizens along the way. Sometimes you have to try new and different and creative ways to solve problems. You have to take some risks.
The police must obey the law while enforcing the law.
Discipline is not a restriction but an aid to freedom.
If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law.
Freedom of action is disguised as a freedom of discipline.
If I should object to force I will be arrested. If I object to arrest I will be clubbed. If I defend myself against clubbing I will be shot. These procedures are known as The Rule of Law.
Whether one is dealing with the state, the Mafia, parents, pimps, police, or husbands, the heavy price of institutionalised protection is always a measure of dependence and agreement to abide by the protector's rules
All this talk: the state should do this or that, ultimately means: the police should force consumers to behave otherwise than they would behave spontaneously.
Let the punishment match the offense.
The police must secure the willing cooperation of the public in voluntary observance of the law in order to secure and maintain public respect.
Regulations are just guidelines.
Acknowledge your will and speak to us all, "This alone is what I will to be!" Hang your own penal code up above you: we want to be its enforcers!
No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets.
This wasn't about an infraction, but dictating a philosophy of life: certain types of people must be overseen.
Let the punishment be proportionate to the offense.
My job is to enforce the laws of Florida.
Discipline is something we despise for the moment ... We all look for a place to run, an excuse with which to stall. No one enjoys it. Yet those of us who have endured it know that the fruit it produces and the pain from which it ultimately spares us makes it worth the agony.
Out there, in no man's territory, there is no law as you know.
Therefore you should create your own laws and enforce them.
If not, prepare to be hunted or ... subject to the laws of strangers.
You could adjust the punishment to fit the infraction. Even a small fine would be enough to bring an errant government to heel.
Reality discipline steers a course between an authoritarian style and a permissive style, giving kids some choices but also holding them accountable.
No sanction can stand against ignited minds.
People hand over the power to you withimmense faith. It's your job to ensure tough implementation of laws.
The size of your organization is directly related to your ability to enforce the rules.
Discipline is just doing the same thing the right way whether anyone's watching or not.
The limit of the law is the limit of enforcement - the real limit of organized society.
The permissiveness of society must be balanced with authoritativeness.
Discipline is required in all human endeavours.
Rules, whether they govern sexual morality or financial probity, regardless of whether they are justifiable or undesirable, always provoke bold recalcitrants to devise clever, defiant ways to breach them.
Discipline is a bridge built through everyday action.
Without discipline, there can be no freedom.
Do not sanction an absurdity.
Always we must bear in mind that law has to be substituted for power, that care must be taken to serve the interests of law.
Law without penalty is only advise.
In order that punishment should not be an act of violence perpetrated by one or many upon a private citizen, it is essential that it should be public, speedy, necessary, the minimum possible in the given circumstances, proportionate to the crime, and determined by the law.
The laws are the sole guardians of right, and when the magistrate dares not act, every person is insecure.
Fines are preferable to imprisonment and other types of punishment because they are more efficient. With a fine, the punishment to offenders is also revenue to the State.
When you break rules, break 'em good and hard
What you permit becomes your weapon
Send me to jail in 48 hours if I am corrupt.
Reasonable orders are easy enough to obey; it is capricious, bureaucratic or plain idiotic demands that form the habit of discipline.
Discipline is needed in our lifestyle.
What happens when I break one of your fuckin' rules?
We cannot afford to have any large section of the business world in doubt whether they have broken the laws or not, and we cannot let the laws become a dead letter through vagueness. In this view it is clear that an administrative commission can render invaluable service.
The message has to be sent that if you commit a crime there has to be punishment.
Discipline is creating the situation.
They say I am a regulator and I think it is just an effort not to comply with the decree. I do not do anything except what the decree requires me to do.
Rules too soft are seldomly followed; rules too harsh are seldomly executed.
Rules are for the stupid, the clueless, those who cannot be trusted to do the right thing.
You cannot police me, so get off my areola
Once you adopt and communicate a quality policy, stick with it, live it, and protect it. You get only one chance!
Policy is the people you work with.
Laws control the lesser man. Right conduct controls the greater.
Order always requires a subtle balance of restraint, force, and legitimacy.
People do not exist to follow rules. Rules exist to protect the people.
If you want the law to leave you alone, keep your hair trimmed and your boots shined.
This is about unenforceable registration of weapons that violates the rights of people to own firearms.
Different people regard rules differently, no matter what those rules happen to be. Mutinous characters like me always resent constraints, even perfectly sensible ones, but there are some who welcome their existence and enforcement because it makes them feel safer. Protected.
Nobody has a more sacred obligation to obey the law than those who make the law.
Despite the best of intentions, people create rules variously and often in reaction to behaviors deemed unacceptable to the larger goals of the group. That is why we often find ourselves revising the rules when new conditions reveal their loopholes.
I always say you could publish rules in a newspaper and no one would follow them. The key is consistency and discipline.
I don't make the laws, I just enforce them."
"Then remind me to introduce a new set of laws, since the ones we have clearly assume a level of common sense that's lacking.
A rule should suit the purpose.
Here the great art lies, to discern in what the law is to be to restraint and punishment, and in what things persuasion only is to work.
The laws receive their force and authority from an oath of fidelity, either tacit or expressed, which living subjects have sworn to their sovereign, in order to restrain the intestine fermentation of the private interest of individuals.
Discipline means protection from one's own wanton interest.
break the rules pay the price
Laws too gentle are seldom obeyed; too severe, seldom executed.
When people in authority want the rest of us to behave, it matters - first and foremost - how they behave.
To make punishments efficacious, two things are necessary. They must never be disproportioned to the offence, and they must be certain.
Mandatory sentencing guidelines have become as complicated and detailed as the IRS code!
The highest duty is to respect authority.
What you cannot enforce, do not command!
Nothing so upholds the laws as the punishment of persons whose rank is as great as their crime.
Nearly every aspect of life was subject to some measure of legal restraint. At a local level, you could be fined for letting your ducks wander in the road, for misappropriating town gravel, for having a guest in your house without a permit from the local bailiff.
We now have so many regulations that everyone is guilty of some violation.
You have to make the rules, not follow them
I sometimes wish that people would put a little more emphasis upon the observance of the law than they do upon its enforcement.
As New York's chief law enforcement officer, I have taken a hard line against those in state government who abuse the law they have sworn to uphold.
Rules help us live our lives
when we lose the will to do it on our own
Discipline must come through liberty ... We do not consider an individual disciplined only when he has been rendered as artificially silent as a mute and as immovable as a paralytic. He is an individual annihilated, not disciplined.
What is new in our time is the increased power of the authorities to enforce their prejudices.
Legalism always breeds compliance over purpose.
My job is to persuade people to toe the line and play within the laws of the game.
I am compliance itself - when I am not thwarted; - no one more easily led - when I have my own way.
The more we allow aspects of our everyday existence to fall under the purview of bureaucratic regulations, the more everyone concerned colludes to downplay the fact (perfectly obvious to those actually running the system) that all of it ultimately depends on the threat of physical harm.
Regulation is useful and proper, when aimed at the prevention of fraud or contrivance, manifestly injurious to other kinds of production, or to the public safety, and not at prescribing the nature of the products and the methods of fabrication.
The law often permits what honor prohibits.
The rule of law in place of force, always basic to my thinking, now takes on a new relevance in a world where, if war is to go, only law can replace it.
Penalties serve to deter those who are not inclined to commit any crimes.
...when these matters are discussed by practical people, the standard of justice depends on the equality of power to compel...