The intellectual heritage of classical liberalism and freedom is rich with brilliant authors, artists, economists, philosophers and thinkers. Freedom Fighters is a collection of some of the best and brightest contributors to our understanding of liberty.
Freedom Fighters
Liberty is not a means to a higher political end. It is itself the highest political end.
-- Lord Acton, The History of Freedom and Other Essays
Lord Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton (18341902)
Acton Institute
Lord Acton on Liberty and Government
by Gary M. Galles
Ludwig von Mises Institute
The Acton-Lee Correspondence
LewRockwell.com
The History of Freedom in Antiquity
by ... [click for more]
Let us contemplate our forefathers, and posterity, and resolve to maintain the rights bequeathed to us from the former, for the sake of the latter. The necessity of the times, more than ever, calls for our utmost circumspection, deliberation, fortitude and perseverance. Let us remember that "if we suffer tamely a lawless attack upon our liberty, we encourage it, ... [click for more]
The Constitution is undoubtedly a precious thing but it is an idea not a fact, the seed not the tree of liberty. Liberty acquires body and life through the law, that is by the actions and executions of laws that establish what the Constitution only states or declares.
-- Juan Bautista Alberdi
Juan Baustista Alberdi
by Colombia Encyclopedia
Bartleby.com
Juan ... [click for more]
Between the middle of 1922 and April 1928, without need, without justification, lightheartedly, irresponsibly, we expanded bank credit by more than twice as much (as during WWI), and in the years which followed we paid a terrible price.
-- Benjamin M. Anderson, Economics and the Public Welfare
Who Is Benjamin Anderson?
by Mark Thornton
Ludwig von Mises Institute
Monetary ... [click for more]
Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place.
-- Frederic Bastiat
Liberty's Greatest Advocate
by Walter E. Williams
George Mason University
Frederic Bastiat
Foundation for Economic Education
Frederic Bastiat
Institute for Humane ... [click for more]
Those rights, then, which God and nature have established, and are therefore called natural rights, such as life and liberty, need not the aid of human laws to be more effectually invested in every man than they are; neither do they receive any additional strength when declared by the municipal laws to be inviolate. On the contrary, no human ... [click for more]
Professor Mazrui regards income differences as a reflection of unjust privileges and exploitation. Poor individuals, groups, and societies are underprivileged and deprived. Like others who write in this vein he fails to ask how external forces, especially Western contacts, could possibly have caused the poverty of the poorest, most backward groups in Africa (pygmies, aborigines, desert people) when these ... [click for more]
A greater result is obtained by producing goods in round-about ways than by producing them directly . . . . That round-about methods lead to greater results than direct methods is one of the most important and fundamental propositions in the whole theory of production.
-- Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
Biography of Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
by Roger W. Garrison
Ludwig von Mises ... [click for more]
The libertarian movement is too decentralized, and libertarians themselves too ornery, for all of us to choose one path. But if we let a hundred flowers bloom, some of those blossoms may well to bring us closer to liberty.
-- R.W. Bradford, Cutting the Gordian Knot
Adios, Spike
by Paul Rako
Liberty
A Life in Liberty
Liberty
Liberty Magazine ... [click for more]
Force is no remedy
-- John Bright, pertaining to troubles in Ireland
John Bright Short Biography
Spartacus Educational
John Bright Short Biography
Web of English History
John Bright Biography
1911 Encyclopedia
John Bright: Voice of Victorian Liberalism
by Nicholas Elliott
Foundation for Economic Education
[click for more]
I am deeply concerned about the apparent apathy of citizens everywhere, about the absence of outrage at the sometimes petty intrusions of governments into our lives, about the failure to appreciate developing crises in welfare democracies. Most fundamentally, I am disturbed by an apparent public failure to appreciate and to understand the relationships between the constitutional structure that defines ... [click for more]
...a state may not, under the guise of protecting the public, arbitrarily interfere with private business or prohibit lawful occupations or impose unreasonable and unnecessary restrictions upon them.
-- Supreme Court Justice Pierce Butler, Jay Burns Baking Co. v. Bryan
Pierce Butler Short Biography
Oyez.com
Timeline of the Justices: Pierce Butler (1923-1929)
Supreme Court Historical Society
Pierce ... [click for more]
When Political Economy had nothing to recommend it to public notice but its own proper and intrinsic evidence, no man professed himself a political economist who had not conscientiously studied and mastered its elementary principles; and no one who acknowledged himself a political economist discussed an economic problem without constant reference to the recognised axioms of the science. But ... [click for more]
Suppose the Butchers on one side and the Buyers on the other. The price of Meat will be settled after some altercations, and a pound of Beef will be in value to a piece of silver pretty nearly as the whole Beef offered for sale in the Market is to all the silver brought there to buy Beef.
This proportion ... [click for more]
The proliferation of bureaucrats and its invariable accompaniment, much heavier tax levies on the productive part of the population, are the recognizable signs, not of a great, but of a decaying society. Historians know that both phenomena were especially marked in the declining eras of the Roman Empire in the West and of its successor state, the Eastern or ... [click for more]
Libertarians themselves should take heart. Our hope lies, as strange as it may seem, not with any remnants from an illusory golden age of individualism, which never existed, but with tomorrow. Our day has not come and gone. It has never existed at all. It is our task to see that it will exist in the future. The choice ... [click for more]
If we assume that the individual has an indisputable right to life, we must concede that he has a similar right to the enjoyment of the products of his labor. This we call a property right. The absolute right to property follows from the original right to life because one without the other is meaningless; the means to life ... [click for more]
The people of the two nations must be brought into mutual dependence by the supply of each other's wants. There is no other way of counteracting the antagonism of language and race. It is God's own method of producing an entente cordiale, and no other plan is worth a farthing.
-- Richard Cobden, Letter to M. ... [click for more]
Reason is the life of the law; nay, the common law itself is nothing less than reason.
-- Edward Coke, First Institute
Edward Coke
Wikipedia
Sir Edward Coke: English Lawyer and Parliamentarian
LaughterGeneaology.com
The Classical Law of Tort
by Amanda J. Owens and
Charles K. Rowley
Locke Institute
Debates about the Petition of Right
by Edward Coke
Online Library of Liberty
[click for more]
First ask yourselves, Gentlemen, what an Englishman, a French-man, and a citizen of the United States of America understand today by the word 'liberty'. For each of them it is the right to be subjected only to the laws, and to be neither arrested, detained, put to death or maltreated in any way by the arbitrary will of one ... [click for more]
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