Free
Frédéric Bastiat

The Law

  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    try liberty—liberty, which is an act of faith in God and in His work
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    Whatever God does, is well done; do not pretend to know more than He; and as He has given organs to this frail creature, allow those organs to develop themselves, to strengthen themselves by exercise, use, experience, and libert
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    Cast your eye over the globe. Which are the happiest, the most moral, and the most peaceable nations? Those where the law interferes the least with private activity; where the Government is the least felt; where individuality has the most scope, and public opinion the most influence; where the machinery of the administration is the least important and the least complicated; where taxation is lightest and least unequal, popular discontent the least excited and the least justifiable; where the responsibility of individuals and classes is the most active, and where, consequently, if morals are not in a perfect state, at any rate they tend incessantly to correct themselves; where transactions, meetings, and associations are the least fettered; where labor, capital, and production suffer the least from artificial displacements; where mankind follows most completely its own natural course; where the thought of God prevails the most over the inventions of men; those, in short, who realize the most nearly this idea that within the limits of right, all should flow from the free, perfectible, and voluntary action of man; nothing be attempted by the law or by force, except the administration of universal justice.
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    I believe that my theory is correct; for whatever be the question upon which I am arguing, whether it be religious, philosophical, political, or economical; whether it affects well-being, morality, equality, right, justice, progress, responsibility, property, labor, exchange, capital, wages, taxes, population, credit, or Government; at whatever point of the scientific horizon I start from, I invariably come to the same thing—the solution of the social problem is in liberty.
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    if the law were to be made upon the principle of fraternity, if it were to be proclaimed that from it proceed all benefits and all evils—that it is responsible for every individual grievance and for every social inequality—then you open the door to an endless succession of complaints, irritations, troubles, and re‍
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    It is not true that the legislator has absolute power over our persons and property, since they pre-exist, and his work is only to secure them from injury.
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    have no hesitation in answering, Law is common force organized to prevent injustice;—in short, Law is Justice
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    the State considers that its mission is to enlighten, to develop, to enlarge, to strengthen, to spiritualize, and to sanctify the soul of the people
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    And if mankind is not competent to judge for itself, why do they talk so much about universal suffrage
  • Muchomachohas quoted3 years ago
    ove.

    You must observe that I am not contending against their right to invent social combinations, to propagate them, to recommend them, and to try them upon themselves, at their own expense and risk; but I do dispute their right to impose them upon us through the medium of the law, that is, by force and by public taxes
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