| |
|
All quotes
Topics:
America (5)
America, Destiny (15)
America, Example (2)
America, Faith in (2)
America, Future (7)
America, Heritage (49)
America, History (40)
America, a Choice Land (4)
Bill of Rights (6)
Book of Mormon (2)
Capitalism (7)
Central Planning (3)
Change (3)
Character (8)
Charity (4)
Checks and Balances (3)
Christianity (27)
Citizenship (36)
Citizenship, Dissent (2)
Civil War (2)
Class Warfare (2)
Communism (23)
Compromise (1)
Compulsion (1)
Conspiracy (2)
Cooperation (2)
Culture (4)
Debt (15)
Democracy (14)
Dictatorships (4)
Draft (1)
Duty (6)
Economics (52)
Education (61)
Equality (3)
False Concepts (1)
Family (1)
Fear (3)
Federalist Papers (75)
Force (7)
Free Agency (41)
Free Market (5)
Freedom (23)
Freedom of Speech (1)
Freedom, History (1)
Freedom, Loss of (54)
Freedom, Price of (1)
Freedom, Religious (16)
Freedom, Restoration of (2)
Freedom, Threats to (6)
Government (21)
Government, Benefits of (1)
Government, Dictatorship (2)
Government, Domestic Policy (2)
Government, Downfall (12)
Government, Forms of (8)
Government, Good (11)
Government, Ideal (9)
Government, Limited (12)
Government, Loss of Freedom (16)
Government, Oppression (2)
Government, Power (12)
Government, Purpose (2)
Government, Spending (14)
Government, Threats to (4)
Government, Tyranny (7)
Government, Vertical Separation (7)
Government, Wealth Transfer (11)
Heavenly Interest in Human Events (33)
Honesty (10)
Income Tax (2)
Individual, Improvement (4)
Involuntary Servitude (1)
Justice (1)
Kings (3)
Labor (2)
Law (48)
Law, Respect For (15)
Leadership (5)
Legal Plunder (12)
Liberals (1)
Liberty (11)
Life (2)
Loyalty (1)
Mass Media (2)
Morality (55)
Obedience (3)
Paganism (1)
Patriotism (4)
Peace (8)
Politics (42)
Politics, International (14)
Power (5)
Praxeology (5)
Principles (6)
Private Property (5)
Progress (4)
Prohibition (7)
Prosperity (3)
Public Duty (3)
Republic (7)
Responsibility (82)
Right to Life (1)
Righteousness (5)
Rights (35)
Rights, Self Defense (8)
Secret Combinations (1)
Security (3)
Self Control (3)
Self-Reliance (2)
Selfishness (4)
Slavery (3)
Social Programs (2)
Socialism (25)
Society (6)
Sovereignty (1)
Statesmanship (3)
Taxes (17)
Term Limits (1)
Tolerance (2)
Tyranny (1)
US Constitution (32)
US Constitution, Amendments (5)
US Constitution, Defend (11)
US Constitution, Inspired (20)
US Constitution, Threats to (5)
Uncategorized (211)
Unions (3)
United Nations (1)
United Order (7)
Virtue (25)
Voting (26)
War (16)
War, Revolutionary War (3)
Welfare (35)
Wickedness (1)
|
Topic: Government, Matches 21 quotes.
It is now no more that toleration is spoken of as if it was by the indulgence of one class of the people that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights. For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that those who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens in giving it, on all occasions, their effectual support.
Source: George Washington on Religious Toleration A letter to the congregation of Touro Synagogue Newport, Rhode Island, 1790
Topics: Government
And if a kingdom be divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand.
Source: Mark 3:24
Topics: Government
The Meaning of the Term Government
There are, though, reasons for regretting that we in America ever adopted the word government. We borrowed an old-world term with all its connotations of to govern, to rule, in an overriding sense. Government with the aim of directing, controlling, steering is not what we really intended. We didnt mean that our agency of common defense should govern us any more than we intend the factory guard to be the companys general manager.
Actually, in spite of the original intent, government in the old-world sense is what we now have. Our federal agency and many of the state, district, and community agencies have far exceeded the bounds of protecting the life and property of all citizens equally, and invoking a common justice under law. They do far more than merely suppress and penalize fraud, violence, misrepresentation, and predatory practices. Today our federal agency and many of the others are the citizens general managers-and autocratic ones at that!
It is not government as general manager of Americas citizenry that is here defended. Rather, the aim is to present and defend an agency of limited scope, not unlike what the Founding Fathers originally intendedexcept for the slavery and tariff features, they being infractions or compromises of the original intentions.
Source: Leonard E. Read GovernmentAn Ideal Concept, pp. 13-14.
Topics: Government; Government, Limited
Direction through Aggression
This growing belief in the use of aggressive police action as a means to direct the creative activities of a people in society, and the consequent and corresponding loss in the belief that free men can direct their own creative activities, are understandable. The reason is this: When the state preempts any activitythat is, makes of it a state monopoly, such as carrying the mailscitizens cease their thinking on how the activity could be carried on as a private venture. Why waste time thinking about the impossible? With this absence of ideas as to how an affair could be conducted privately, there soon follows the belief that the activity cannot be conducted unless the state conducts it.
If, for example, the federal government had decreed at its inception that all boys and girls should be provided with shoes and stockings from birth to adulthood, and the practice of this subsidy had been going on for the last 165 years, one who challenged it today would be asked: Oh! So you favor forcing boys and girls to go barefooted in the winter?
Source: Leonard E. Read
Topics: Government; Government, Limited
Enemy Or Servant?
Government as an agency of societyif well-conceived, properly limited, and soundly organizedis a cooperative arm of society. It is but another item in the division of labor. Its true interest lies in protecting the society that created it.
Government is composed of persons, as is society. Organize the persons in government in such a manner that they can readily realize that they will fare ill if the society which hires them disintegrates or that they will fare well if the society prospers, and society will have a good and faithful servant. But organize the persons in government in such a manner that they get the idea that society is only a host to be exploited, and society will have a bad and parasitical servant.
One of the requirements for promoting cooperation between two or more personsor between society and governmentis that their interests in the project in question be recognized as in accord; that the self-interests of all parties be understood by the parties themselves to be in harmony. But let the idea prevail that the self-interest of one is served at the expense of the other, and the two will not cooperate; instead, each will work against the true interest of the other.
Source: Leonard E. Read
Topics: Cooperation; Government
Government of the People
In every government on earth is some trace of human weakness, some germ of corruption and degeneracy, which cunning will discover, and weakness insensibly open, cultivate and improve. Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves therefore are its only safe depositories. And to render even them safe, their minds must be improved to a certain degree. The influence over government must be shared among all the people. If every individual which composes their mass participates of the ultimate authority, the government will be safe.
Source: Thomas Jefferson
Topics: Government
(These paragraphs are not sequential in the original essay. I selected specific ones to include here for brevity.)
The Founding Fathers saw no reason to assume that a majority of citizens should have the final and deciding word on what bills should be enacted into law; decisions of such depth and complexity could not be left to the ever-changing whims of a majority. No one imagines that a majority of passengers should control a plane. No one assumes that, by majority vote, the patients, nurses, elevator boys and cooks and ambulance drivers and interns and telephone operators and students and scrubwomen in a hospital should control the hospital. Would you ever ride on a train if all the passengers stepped into booths and elected the train crews by majority vote, as intelligently as you elect the men whose names appear in lists before you in a voting booth? Then why is it taken for granted that every person is endowed on his 21st birthday with a God-given right and ability to elect the men who decide questions of political philosophy and international diplomacy?
The federal government has also assumed enormous powers through a distortion of the phrase the general welfare. In the first Congress, in 1789, a bill was introduced to pay a bounty to fishermen at Cape Cod, as well as a subsidy to certain farmers. James Madison said: If Congress can employ money indefinitely to the general welfare, they may take the care of religion into their own hands; they may appoint teachers in every state, county, and parish, and pay them out of the public treasury: they may take into their own hands the education of children, establishing in like manner schools throughout the Union: they may seek the provision of the poor . . . [all of which] would subvert the very foundations, and transmute the very nature of the limited government established by the people of America.
In a democracy, all such processes are easily sanctioned by popular outcries: Hes a profiteertake it away from him. Hes getting too muchgive it to us. People who havent succeeded, or werent willing to make the sacrifices he made, will do all they can to take it away from him after he has succeeded. A democracy easily becomes dominated by the morality of envy. A fickle mob, unaware of the facts of basic economics, but easily swayed by demagogues demanding as their right the fruits of the labor of others, can easily bring about the passage of laws which will inhibit production, destroy the free market, and in the end lead to such shortages and bottlenecks in production that they result, just as Plato said, in riots, calls for law and order, and dictatorship.
Only a republic, in which the powers of the government are constitutionally limited, can avoid this fate. That is why the Founding Fathers were careful to create this nation as a republic, so that each person could determine his own destiny and not have it determined by others, whether by the tyranny of one (dictatorship) or of a few (oligarchy), or of many (democracy). It is the blessing of a free people, not that they live under democratic government, but that they do not.. [Richard Taylor, the Basis of Political Authority, the Monist, Vol. 66 No. 4 (Oct. 1983), p. 471. See also Richard Taylor, Freedom, Anarchy, and the Law (Prentice-Hall, 1973).]
If the return to a republic is not achieved, Alexis de Tocquevilles prediction of a century and a half ago may yet come true: that the American government will become for its citizens
an immense and tutelary power, which takes upon itself alone to secure their gratifications, and to watch over their fate . . . For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness: it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritanceswhat remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living? . . . The will of man is not shattered, but softened, bent, and guided; men are seldom forced by it to act, but they are constantly restrained from acting; such a power does not destroy, but it prevents existence; it does not tyrannize, but it compresses, enervates, extinguishes, and stupefies a people, till each nation is reduced to nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals, of which the government is the shepherd.. [Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, pp. 579-80 of the edition edited by Henry Steele Commager, 1946.]
Source: John Hospers Freedom and Democracy, p337-8
Topics: Democracy; Government; Republic
And to the Republic on Which it Stands
In the Constitution the Lord set out wise principles for the governing of this great nation. He stated in a revelation to the Prophet Joseph Smith that he brought forth the Constitution of the United States through men whom he raised up for that very purpose. Under it, a great representative form of government was set up, a republican form of government. If the principles set out in the Constitution of the United States were followed by all men who exercise authority in governments, we would have peace in the earth. This is true because by the inspiration of heaven that Constitution made provision for the best form of political government ever devised for the use of man.
Source: Marion G. Romney General Conference, October 1947
Topics: Government
Life is a continuous series of conflicts and compromises; and, generally speaking, the cooperative actions growing out of such conflicts and compromises are sounder than if each one of us were able to carry out his own ideas, in his own way and without regard for anyone else.
But from the viewpoint of the individual, it sometimes appears that the efforts of others are unnecessary obstacles to his own direct action in achieving his own personal desires. Thus, it occurs to him that maybe there should be some centralized control or overriding authority to govern all human energies as a unit. This concept has a strong appeal because lurking beneath it is the alluring assumption that the right kind of authority would direct the affairs of all mankind in harmony with the individuals own personal viewsthus relieving him of the trouble and responsibility of making his own ideas work.
Source: Henry Grady Weaver The Mainspring of Human Progress, p. 17-18
Topics: Government
| |
|