What I Saw in America (1922)
Context: The truth is that prohibitions might have done far less harm as prohibitions, if a vague association had not arisen, on some dark day of human unreason, between prohibition and progress. And it was the progress that did the harm, not the prohibition. Men can enjoy life under considerable limitations, if they can be sure of their limited enjoyments; but under Progressive Puritanism we can never be sure of anything. The curse of it is not limitation; it is unlimited limitation. The evil is not in the restriction; but in the fact that nothing can ever restrict the restriction. The prohibitions are bound to progress point by point; more and more human rights and pleasures must of necessity be taken away; for it is of the nature of this futurism that the latest fad is the faith of the future, and the most fantastic fad inevitably makes the pace. Thus the worst thing in the seventeenth-century aberration was not so much Puritanism as sectarianism. It searched for truth not by synthesis but by subdivision. It not only broke religion into small pieces, but it was bound to choose the smallest piece.
"Fads and Public Opinion"
“The intoxication of power rapidly sobers off in the knowledge of its restrictions and under the prompt reminder of an ever-present and not always considerate press, as well as the kindly suggestions that not infrequently come from Congress.”
Speech to the Lotus Club (16 November 1912).
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William Howard Taft 32
American politician, 27th President of the United States (i… 1857–1930Related quotes
Diary (1 March 1878)
Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1922 - 1926)
1920s, Second State of the Union Address (1924)
1910s, The Progressives, Past and Present (1910)
"The Bugbear of Relativism," p. 97
The Culture We Deserve (1989)
Context: The ever-present impulse is to push against restriction and, in so doing, to feel intolerably hemmed in. Thus in practice, every liberation increases the sense of oppression. Nor is the paradox merely in the mind: the laws enacted to secure the rights of every person and group, by creating protective boundaries, create new barriers.
1850s, Judge For Yourselves! 1851 (1876)
“But where knowledge of trickery is evenly distributed, honesty not infrequently prevails.”
"Nightmare Town" (Argosy All-Story Weekly, December 27, 1924)
Short Stories