John Quincy Adams Quotes on People (5 Quotes)


    The rich, the well-born, and the able, acquire an influence among the people that will soon be too much for simple honesty and plain sense, in a house of representatives. The most illustrious of them must, therefore, be separated from the mass, and placed by themselves in a senate this is, to all honest and useful intents, an ostracism.

    The proposition that the people are the best keepers of their own liberties is not true. They are the worst conceivable, they are no keepers at all they can neither judge, act, think, or will, as a political body.

    As to the history of the revolution, my ideas may be peculiar perhaps singular. What do we mean by the revolution The war That was no part of the revolution it was only an effect and consequence of it. The revolution was in the minds of the people, and this was effected from 1760 to 1775, in the course of fifteen years, before a drop of blood was shed at Lexington.

    Nip the shoots of arbitrary power in the bud, is the only maxim which can ever preserve the liberties of any people.

    You say that at the time of the Congress, in 1765, The great mass of the people were zealous in the cause of America. The great mass of the people is an expression that deserves analysis. New York and Pennsylvania were so nearly divided, if their propensity was not against us, that if New England on one side and Virginia on the other had not kept them in awe, they would have joined the British. Marshall, in his life of Washington, tells us, that the southern States were nearly equally divided. Look into the Journals of Congress, and you will see how seditious, how near rebellion were several counties of New York, and how much trouble we had to compose them. The last contest, in the town of Boston, in 1775, between whig and tory, was decided by five against two. Upon the whole, if we allow two thirds of the people to have been with us in the revolution, is not the allowance ample Are not two thirds of the nation now with the administration Divided we ever have been, and ever must be. Two thirds always had and will have more difficulty to struggle with the one third than with all our foreign enemies.



    More John Quincy Adams Quotations (Based on Topics)


    Man - Law & Regulation - Liberty & Freedom - America - Power - People - Mankind - Revolution - Time - Society & Civilization - Government - Danger & Risk - Wisdom & Knowledge - Mind - Nature - Christianity - Sense & Perception - Religions & Spirituality - War & Peace - View All John Quincy Adams Quotations

    Related Authors


    John F. Kennedy - Franklin D. Roosevelt - Abraham Lincoln - Woodrow Wilson - Ulysses S. Grant - Richard M. Nixon - Jimmy Carter - James Monroe - George H. W. Bush - Andrew Johnson


Authors (by First Name)

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Other Inspiring Sections