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Why should you give a fig about liberty quotes?
Have you ever spoken with someone who has just discovered a new television show, and they’re going absolutely bananas about how you need to watch it too? “Oh, I just know you’re going to love The Foolish Man and the German Shepherd Dog,” they’ll coo. “I know the title sounds a little weird, but it stars an actor I love, and there’s this one episode where the German Shepherd Dog gets jam on his necktie before a big job interview that will split you in half with laughter!” And you kind of have to smile and promise you’ll watch it, and ask them to please stop touching you.
Libertarians are the same way about liberty. “Don’t you love liberty?” they will ask you. “Well, how would you like more liberty? Imagine how much more liberty everyone could have if we only did X, Y and Z! I love liberty so much I’d squirt it on my waffles every morning if only it were viscous instead of an abstract concept!”
But in the libertarian’s defense, liberty really is that good.
To be sure, no libertarian who hasn’t had key parts of their brain deactivated with giant magnets will argue that liberty should extend to harming others. “My right to swing my fist ends where your nose begins” is one of the foundational rules of libertarianism. No, liberty is about living your life the way you would like to.
Liberty can be very productive. Write a book that challenges the status quo effectively enough and you can compel people to voluntarily change their lives for the better. Explore a taboo theme in a great movie, and you won’t have to worry about puritans manifesting themselves outside of your house in order to burn it down. Challenge an aspiring tyrant’s claims and woo away their supporters – you may just prevent an atrocity.
Liberty can also be thoroughly unproductive. You may only wish to wear khaki shorts on the beach, drink cinnamon schnapps, and play terrible ukulele songs. You will torture fellow beachgoers’ ears by doing this and possibly bother some seagulls, but you will be happy. And free. And hungover throughout half of your lifetime, in all fairness, but the other half should be pleasant enough.
Never accept limits to your liberty in consideration of greater protection. The people offering you that protection are by far the most dangerous thing you will ever encounter. And although liberty must be earned by the hardest of people making the greatest of sacrifices, it is as vulnerable as a Fabergé egg in a daycare for children with inner ear infections. Forfeit even the tiniest little piece of it, and the despots, the bureaucrats, and the sadists who infest government will inevitably clamor for the next. And the next. And the next.
Give a mouse a cookie and he will ask for a glass of milk. With that, here are some of our favorite quotes about liberty.
Quotes About Liberty

– Patrick Henry, Speech to the Second Virginia Convention, March 23, 1775

– George Orwell, Animal Farm (unused preface)

– Benjamin Franklin, Silence Dogood, the Busy‑Body, and Early Writings

– Robert G. Ingersoll, The Liberty Of Man, Woman And Child

– Henry David Thoreau

– Thomas Paine, The Crisis, no. 4, September 11, 1777

– George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman

– Benjamin Franklin, The New-England Courant, July 9, 1722

– John Stuart Mill, On Liberty

– Milton Friedman, An Open Letter To Bill Bennett

– H. L. Mencken, A Mencken Chrestomathy

– Edmund Burke, Letter to M. de Menonville, 1789

– Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist Papers

– John F. Kennedy, Inaugural Address, January 20, 1961

– Woodrow Wilson, Address to the New York Press Club, September 9, 1912

– Thomas Paine, Common Sense

– John Stuart Mill, On Liberty

– Louis D. Brandeis, Olmstead v. U.S., 277 U.S. 438 (1928) (dissenting)

– Captain America, The Amazing Spider-Man: Civil War

– Spider Jerusalem, Transmetropolitan

– Bob Marley

Though I know that when you’re dead you can’t
I’d rather be a free man in my grave
Than living as a puppet or a slave
– Jimmy Cliff, “The Harder They Come”
Famous Liberty Quotes

– The US Declaration of Independence

– John Philpot Curran

– Theodore Roosevelt

– Napoleon Bonaparte

– Alexander Hamilton, A Full Vindication of the Measures of Congress, December 15, 1774

– Benjamin Franklin, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Benjamin Franklin

– John Adams, Letter to Abigail Adams, July 17, 1775

– Abraham Lincoln, Complete Works – Volume XII

– Abraham Lincoln, Speech at Kalamazoo, Michigan, August 27th, 1856

– Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Archibald Stuart, December 23, 1971

– Nelson Mandela

– Ronald Reagan, Encroaching Control, March 30, 1961

– George Washington, Letter to James Madison, March 2, 1788

– Thomas Jefferson, Letter to William Stephens Smith, November 13,1787
Final Thoughts
We hope you enjoyed our collection of famous liberty quotes! Let it serve as a bellwether. If this page ever disappears, it means one of two things: (A) some terrifying despot has seized power and silenced all free speech, or (B) we couldn’t pay our website hosting service provider. Prevent (A) from happening by fighting tooth and nail against it; prevent (B) by ordering a T-shirt today!