“The great paradox of Australian history is that what started out as a colony populated by people whom Britain had thrown out proved to be so loyal to the British Empire for so long. America had begun as a combination of tobacco plantation and Puritan utopia, a creation of economic and religious liberty, and ended up as a rebel republic. Australia started out as a jail, the very negation of liberty. Yet the more reliable colonists turned out to be not the Pilgrims but the prisoners.”
Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World (2003)
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Niall Ferguson 24
British historian 1964Related quotes

“Regrets are idle; yet history is one long regret. Everything might have turned out so differently!”
Eighteenth Week.
My Summer in a Garden (1870)

From The League of Nations - A Practical Suggestion, 1918, pp. 37-38, as cited by W. K. Hancock in SMUTS 1: The Sanguine Years 1870-1919, p. 502

“What starts out here as a mass movement ends up as a racket, a cult, or a corporation.”
Frequently misquoted as "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket."
The Temper of Our Time (1967)
Context: Up to now, America has not been a good milieu for the rise of a mass movement. What starts out here as a mass movement ends up as a racket, a cult, or a corporation.

2015, Adios, America: The Left's Plan to Turn Our Country into a Third World Hellhole (2015)

“Britain is the only colony in the British Empire and it is up to us now to liberate ourselves.”
Speech to the Labour Party Conference in Blackpool (2 October 1972); Labour Party Annual Conference Report (1972), p. 103
1970s

Jim Bakker, quoted in Redeeming America: Piety and Politics in the New Christian Right by Michael Lienesch (UNC Press, 1993), p. 45
Misattributed