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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)
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Freedom certainly cannot exist under a system where the citizens are stripped of individuality and pressed into the classless society by a despotic state, where men and women are compelled to exist as faceless worker bees. That is slavery!
Neither can freedom long survive in a society where the rights of the individual are fanatically promoted regardless of what happens to society itself. The rights of the individual, the ideal, the virtue, when pressed to the extreme, like other virtues, will presently become a vice. Without some balance, activists, lawyers, legislators, judges, and courts who think they are protecting individual freedom are in fact fabricating a new and subtle and sinister kind of dictatorship.
Source: Elder Boyd K. Packer Address given 25 June 1989 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Freedom, Loss of; Virtue
The burning of the flag is an act which in itself becomes symbolic. It symbolizes the rejection of the Pledge of Allegiance. The Bill of Rights guarantees freedom of speech. Speech is made up of spoken or printed words. Words are words are words. Acts are acts are acts.
The willful destruction of the flag which belongs to all of us is the act of an extremist. A court decision legalizing the destruction of it to protect the rights of one protester is equally extreme.
Source: Elder Boyd K. Packer Address given 25 June 1989 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Freedom of Speech
There must be enough of us who have faith enough and who are moral enough to desire that which is right. Virtues, like love and liberty and patriotism, do not exist in general, they exist in particular. If morality exists at all, it exists in the individual heart and mind of the ordinary citizen. Such virtues cannot be isolated in any other place; not in the rocks or in the water, not in trees or air, not in animals or birds. If it exists at all, it exists in the human heart. Morality flourishes when the rank and file are free. It flourishes where a conscience is clear, where men have faith in God and are obedient to the restraints He has set upon human conduct.
Source: Elder Boyd K. Packer Address given 25 June 1989 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Morality; Virtue
I always consider the settlement of America with reverence and wonder, as the opening of a grand scene and design in providence, for the illumination of the ignorant and the emancipation of the slavish part of mankind all over the earth.
Source: John Adams
Topics: America, Heritage
But we who love the word of God need not depend on the dictionary alone for our understanding of the concept of freedom. We can study the scriptures to gain spiritual insight. In analyzing the standard works in the English language, I find that the word freedom appears in thirty-three verses of holy scripture. Twenty-seven of those thirty-three verses are in the Book of Mormon. To me, it is quite remarkable that the number of verses with the terms freedom or liberty in the Book of Mormon is nearly double that of the other books of scripture combined!
Source: Elder Russell M. Nelson Address given 1 July 1990 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Freedom
Democracy alone cannot promise perfect freedom, but its freedoms promise opportunity. And those freedoms legitimize the privilege of an individuals pursuit of happiness.
Yet freedom does nothing to guide that search. It is much easier to advocate freedom than it is to determine what to do with it. That is one of the challenges facing newly liberated countries.
Indeed, Fourth of July celebrations will be different this year. Throughout our lifetimes, many have understood freedom solely in terms of an ideological struggle. We have been taught to contrast freedom to bondage, liberty to totalitarianism, capitalism to communism, or democracy to despotism.
Now as communism has collapsed in some nations, and as new democracies have arisen, the tempo in the battle of ideology winds down. President Havel described 1989s revolutionary changes in Europe as those which will enable us to escape from the rather antiquated straitjacket of this bi-polar view of the world (Address to joint session of the United States Congress, February 21, 1990).
The remarkable crumbling of communism now brings us to a new era of freedom without the foe to which we have been accustomed virtually all of our lives. But as the zealous fervor for communism wanes, so might the zealous fervor for democracy also fade. That risk is real.
Source: Elder Russell M. Nelson Address given 1 July 1990 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Communism; Democracy
Indeed, the root of freedom is responsibility. The stem of freedom is discipline. The flower of freedom is vigilance.
Responsibility, discipline, and vigilance can be dispensed neither from the U.S. Treasury nor from private donations. This perception was shared by the Deputy Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia, with whom my associates and I spoke earlier this year. When we asked what specific aid could be rendered to Czechoslovakias new democratic government, he replied: We dont need material goods or technology. We need a new spirit. We need moral values. We need the Judeo-Christian ethic back in our curriculum. Please help us to make this a time of spiritual renewal for our nation.
In April of this year we met with the Minister of Education in the Republic of Estonia. We asked him a similar question. He replied that the Estonian economy is changing rapidly. He noted an urgent need to educate his people differently. He said: There is much work to be done in rewriting our text books. We have the hope that religion can be taught in all of the schools and that the spirit of Christianity can be woven within the fabric of our curriculum.
As he made those remarks I thought of the irony that strong forces in these United States are trying to eradicate all evidences of religion or piety from our public schools. Meanwhile, citizens in these European nations that have been so deprived of religious influence now feel the detrimental impact of that loss.
Source: Elder Russell M. Nelson Address given 1 July 1990 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Freedom; Responsibility
He [George Washington] was, indeed, in every sense of the words, a wise, a good, and a great man . . . . It may truly be said, that never did nature and fortune combine more perfectly to make a man great, and to place him in the same constellation with whatever worthies have merited from man an everlasting remembrance. For his was the singular destiny and merit, of leading the armies of his country successfully through an arduous war, for the establishment of its independence, new in its forms and principles, until it had settled down into a quiet and orderly train; and of scrupulously obeying the laws through the whole of his career, civil and military, of which the history of the world furnishes no other example.
Source: Thomas Jefferson Personal letter to Dr. Walter Jones Monticello, January 2, 1814.
Topics: America, Heritage
Alexander Hamilton and others gave three reasons why the Bill of Rights was not necessary. First: the Constitution is a declaration of rights from beginning to end; nearly three hundred rights are pinpointed in the document itself. Second: under our limited form of government, with only twenty specific, enumerated powers granted to the federal government, there is absolutely no authority included to regulate or invade a citizens freedom of religion, freedom of press, freedom of assembly, or freedom of petition. Third: there was a danger in making a list of individual rights, because under the law any right accidentally left off of the list might be presumed to be forfeited.
In spite of all this, however, the people insisted on a Bill of Rights. They feared from the bitter experiences of the past that the courts or government executives might somehow twist the meaning of certain words of the Constitution so as to deprive them of their rights, precisely as King George and his officers had done.
That is why George Mason, a leading patriot from Virginia, declared that he would rather have his right hand chopped off than to sign the Constitution without a Bill of Rights. It was on December 15, 1791, that the Bill of Rights was ratified, marking the first ten amendments to the Constitution.
Source: Elder L. Tom Perry Address given 23 June 1991 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Bill of Rights
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