The trial of Charles B. Reynolds for blasphemy (1887)
Context: Liberty is the condition of progress. Without Liberty, there remains only barbarism. Without Liberty, there can be no civilization.
If another man has not the right to think, you have not even the right to think that he thinks wrong. If every man has not the right to think, the people of New Jersey had no right to make a statute, or to adopt a constitution — no jury has the right to render a verdict, and no court to pass its sentence.
In other words, without liberty of thought, no human being has the right to form a judgment. It is impossible that there should be such a thing as real religion without liberty. Without liberty there can be no such thing as conscience, no such word as justice. All human actions — all good, all bad — have for a foundation the idea of human liberty, and without Liberty there can be no vice, and there can be no virtue.
Without Liberty there can be no worship, no blasphemy — no love, no hatred, no justice, no progress.
Take the word Liberty from human speech and all the other words become poor, withered, meaningless sounds — but with that word realized — with that word understood, the world becomes a paradise.
“Democracy is a freak condition in the world's history: civil liberties are not common liberties even today, and most people in the world have never possessed them.”
Source: The Great Seesaw: A New View of the Western World, 1750-2000 (1988)
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Geoffrey Blainey 72
Australian historian 1930Related quotes
The History of Freedom in Christianity (1877)
Life of Mahomet, Vol. IV (1861), p. 322 https://archive.org/stream/lifemahomet00muirgoog/lifemahomet00muirgoog#page/n342/mode/1up
Speech at New York Press Club (9 September 1912), in The papers of Woodrow Wilson, 25:124
1910s
“Liberty, not communism, is the most contagious force in the world.”
Speech at Columbia University (14 January 1954)
1950s
Source: Speech in Wycombe (30 October 1862), quoted in William Flavelle Monypenny and George Earle Buckle, The Life of Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield. Volume II. 1860–1881 (London: John Murray, 1929), p. 98.
2000s, 2008, Address to the United Nations General Assembly (September 2008)
Source: Power Kills: Democracy as a Method of Nonviolence(1997), p. 114
[The Goals Program. How to Stay Motivated, Volume III, chapter 5, Zig Ziglar]
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