"Peace without justice is tyranny"
About this Quote
White’s intent is less pacifist than prosecutorial. He’s warning that “peace” can be manufactured by those with power: a strike “settled” by starving workers into submission, a town “calm” because dissent has been policed, a nation “unified” because minorities have learned the cost of speaking. The subtext is editorial in the purest sense: don’t be seduced by order. Ask who benefits from it, who pays for it, and what violence is being redistributed into quieter forms - courts stacked, wages suppressed, votes denied, newspapers pressured into cheerleading.
Context matters because White wasn’t an ivory-tower moralist; he was a pragmatic public voice in an era when reform was constantly accused of “stirring things up.” The line functions as a rebuke to that rhetoric. It insists that agitation can be evidence of health, and that the real scandal isn’t unrest but a stable arrangement built on unaddressed wrongs. Peace, he implies, is not the goal; legitimacy is.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: To an Anxious Friend (William Allen White, 1922)
Evidence: Peace is good. But if you are interested in peace through force and without full discussion - that is to say, free utterance decently and in order - your interest in justice is slight. And peace without justice is tyranny, no matter how you may sugar-coat it with expediency.. This line appears in William Allen White’s editorial/letter 'To an Anxious Friend,' which (per multiple institutional references) was published in The Emporia Gazette on July 27, 1922. Later quotation sites typically shorten it to 'Peace without justice is tyranny.' Wikisource reproduces the full text; for strict 'first publication' verification, a scan/facsimile of the July 27, 1922 Emporia Gazette issue would be ideal, but the earliest attributable primary-work context is this 1922 Gazette publication. See corroboration of the publication date from the University of Kansas journalism school page and KU Memorial Unions page, which both state it was published July 27, 1922 in the Emporia Gazette. Other candidates (1) The Autobiography of William Allen White (William Allen White, 1990) compilation95.0% ... peace without justice is tyranny , no matter how you may sugar - coat it with expedience . This state today is in... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
White, William Allen. (2026, February 19). Peace without justice is tyranny. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-without-justice-is-tyranny-160239/
Chicago Style
White, William Allen. "Peace without justice is tyranny." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-without-justice-is-tyranny-160239/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Peace without justice is tyranny." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-without-justice-is-tyranny-160239/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.










