“As it developed in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the intellectual movement that went under the name of liberalism emphasized freedom as the ultimate goal and the individual as the ultimate entity in the society. It supported laissez faire at home as a means of reducing the role of the state in economic affairs and thereby enlarging the role of the individual; it supported free trade abroad as a means of linking the nations of the world together peacefully and democratically. In political matters, it supported the development of representative government and of parliamentary institutions, reduction in the arbitrary power of the state, and protection of the civil freedoms of individuals.”
Introduction, p. 5
Capitalism and Freedom (1962)
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Milton Friedman 158
American economist, statistician, and writer 1912–2006Related quotes

Source: The Political Doctrine of Fascism (1925), p. 112
Attributed to Ordway Tead in: Forbes (1950) The Forbes scrapbook of Thoughts on the business of life. p. 138.

Source: (1962), Ch. 1 The Relation Between Economic Freedom and Political Freedom, p. 12

Speech to the Federation of British Industries (13 April 1937), quoted in Service of Our Lives (1937), p. 115.
1937

1963, Third State of the Union Address

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