Source: The Age of Reform: from Bryan to F.D.R. (1955), Chapter I, part I, p. 23
“America must be voluntarily chosen by its new citizens, or it will not represent their aspirations or satisfy their needs. The greater the freedom given for creative impulse and variation in expression, the richer will be the resultant American life. And in the future American ideals will have to be both more exalted and more practical than in the past, and its life will have to square more generally with them, because the lands from which these peoples come will be free from the yoke of oppression. Democracy being free for the world, they may then realize in many lands the dreams which to them once made America the only land where such dreams could come true.”
What is Americanization? (1919)
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Frances Kellor 37
American sociologist 1873–1952Related quotes

John: Act 3, Scene 2.
Days Without End (1933)
Context: I listen to people talking about this universal breakdown we are in and I marvel at their stupid cowardice. It is so obvious that they deliberately cheat themselves because their fear of change won't let them face the truth. They don't want to understand what has happened to them. All they want is to start the merry-go-round of blind greed all over again. They no longer know what they want this country to be, what they want it to become, where they want it to go. It has lost all meaning for them except as pig-wallow. And so their lives as citizens have no beginnings, no ends. They have lost the ideal of the Land of the Free. Freedom demands initiative, courage, the need to decide what life must mean to oneself. To them, that is terror. They explain away their spiritual cowardice by whining that the time for individualism is past, when it is their courage to possess their own souls which is dead — and stinking! No, they don't want to be free. Slavery means security — of a kind, the only kind they have courage for. It means they need not to think. They have only to obey orders from owners who are, in turn, their slaves!

April 21, 1971, NDP National Convention, Ottawa, Ontario.
Source: The End of the American Era (2002), Chapter four: "The Rise of Europe"

2010s, Speech at the Republican National Convention (July 20, 2016)

Five Essays on Liberty (2002), John Stuart Mill and the Ends of Life (1959)

Source: Reading Architectural History (2002), Ch. 3 : On classical ground : Histories of style

Source: American Constitutional Law (1978), Approaches to Constituitonal Analysis