Liberty And War Quotes
Collection of top 42 famous quotes about Liberty And War
Liberty And War Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Liberty And War quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
In a free society, how can you commit a crime against yourself?
— Jesse Ventura
There ought to be at least as much common sense about living and dying as there is about going to the grocery store and buying a loaf of bread.
— Dalton Trumbo
The cry has been that when war is declared, all opposition should be hushed. A sentiment more unworthy of a free country could hardly be propagated.
— William Ellery Channing
There are plenty of laws to protect guys' money even in war time but there's nothing on the books says a man's life's his own.
— Dalton Trumbo
Labor in the white skin can never free itself as long as labor in the black skin is branded.
— Karl Marx
The war is against children, and all the other wars are just a shadow of the war on children.
— Stefan Molyneux
A standing army is a standing menace to liberty.
— Voltairine De Cleyre
The Statue of Liberty's gender changed nothing. It was the same here as anywhere: men and their wars.
— Jeffrey Eugenides
Just as war is the natural consequence of monopoly, peace is the natural consequence of liberty.
— Gustave De Molinari
We have a solution for war. It is to expand the sphere of liberty.
— Rudolph Rummel
Ever wonder why the media never refers to 18 or 19 year old American soldiers as "armed teens"?
— Stefan Molyneux
Politics is an endless, borderless war against individual liberty.
— Jakub Bozydar Wisniewski
History is the same story with different costumes.
— Stefan Molyneux
They told me if I voted for Goldwater, he would get us into a war in Vietnam. Well, I voted for Goldwater and that's what happened.
— William F. Buckley Jr.
We cannot simply suspend or restrict civil liberties until the War on Terror is over, because the War on Terror is unlikely ever to be truly over.
— Gerald Bard Tjoflat
War and Authority are companions; Peace and Liberty are companions.
— Benjamin Tucker
Let us show that, if the people abandon the republicans, the republicans do not abandon the people.
— Victor Hugo
In our time, the symbol of state intrusion into the private life is the mandatory urine test.
— Christopher Hitchens
Remember our war hysteria, when we called sauerkraut 'Liberty cabbage' and somebody actually proposed calling German measles 'Liberty measles'?
— Sinclair Lewis
Oh Liberty! Liberty! What crimes are committed in your name!
— Madame Roland
That liberty is a great thing we may know from our own feelings, and we may likewise judge so from the conduct of the white-people, in the late war.
— Jupiter Hammon
The military state is the final form to which every planned economy tends rapidly.
— Isabel Paterson
Aggressors cannot wage total war without introducing Socialism.
— Ludwig Von Mises
Of all the enemies to public liberty, war is perhaps the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other.
— James Madison
It is in war that the State really comes into its own: swelling in power, in number, in pride, in absolute dominion over the economy and the society.
— Murray N. Rothbard
If ever there was a holy war, it was that which saved our liberties and gave us independence.
— Thomas Jefferson
When you're in this type of conflict, when you're at war, civil liberties are treated differently.
— Trent Lott
The adjacent shores resounded with the alternate shouts of the sons of liberty and the groans of their parting spirits.
— William Apess
Philadelphia fans would boo funerals, an Easter egg hunt, a parade of armless war vets and the Liberty Bell.
— Bo Belinsky
We all declare for liberty, but in using the same word we do not all mean the same thing.
— Abraham Lincoln
A day will come when there will be no battlefields, but markets opening to commerce and minds opening to ideas.
— Victor Hugo
I believe that the heaviest blow ever dealt at liberty's head will be dealt by this nation in the ultimate failure of its example to the earth.
— Charles Dickens
Whither shall I flee? To no country on earth that I know of where there is as much liberty as yet remains to me even in Virginia.
— Robert E.Lee