The active man, the attacking, aggressive man is always a hundred degrees nearer to justice than the man who merely reacts
 Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morality (1887). copy citation

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Author Friedrich Nietzsche
Source On the Genealogy of Morality
Topic justice
Date 1887
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by Horace B. Samuel
Weblink https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Genealogy_of_Morals

Context

“is untroubled, why then we have a piece of perfection, a past master of the world—something, in fact, which it would not be wise to expect, and which should not at any rate be too easily believed. Speaking generally, there is no doubt but that even the justest individual only requires a little dose of hostility, malice, or innuendo to drive the blood into his brain and the fairness from it. The active man, the attacking, aggressive man is always a hundred degrees nearer to justice than the man who merely reacts; he certainly has no need to adopt the tactics, necessary in the case of the reacting man, of making false and biassed valuations of his object. It is, in point of fact, for this reason that the aggressive man has at all times enjoyed the stronger, bolder, more aristocratic, and also freer outlook, the better conscience.” source