Gilbert Keith Chesterton Quotes: Provocative Truths About Feminism
“Feminism is a muddled idea that women are free when they serve their employers but slaves when they help their husbands.”
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
“Feminism is a muddled idea that women are free when they serve their employers but slaves when they help their husbands.”
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
“The best way to keep a prisoner from escaping is to make sure he never knows he’s in prison.”
Fjodor Dostojewski
“Ordinary men and women are too small-minded to govern their own affairs, that order and progress can only come when individuals surrender their rights to an all-powerful sovereign.”
Barack Hussein Obama II
“A higher power is pushing me to a goal I don’t know. Until it is reached, I will be invulnerable, unshakeable. As soon as I’m no longer needed, one fly will be enough to knock me down.”
Napoleon Bonaparte
“We want a few mad people now. See where the sane ones have landed us!”
George Bernard Shaw
“What the government is good at is collecting taxes, taking away your freedoms and killing people. It’s not good at much else.”
Tom Clancy
“Indeed, freedom and the capacity for disobedience are inseparable; hence any social, political, and religious system which proclaims freedom, yet stamps out disobedience, cannot speak the truth.”
Erich Fromm
“If the government was replaced by the mafia we’d probably have half as much corruption and twice as much fun.”
Klaus Kinski
“When you pay the representatives of the people, you do not arouse in them an interest in performing their functions conscientiously; rather, you interest them only in continuing to secure for themselves the exercise of those functions.”
Benjamin Constant
“Controversy never convinced any man; men can be influenced by making them think for themselves, by seeming to doubt with them, by leading them as if by the hand, without their perceiving it. A good book lent to them, which they read at leisure, produces upon them surer effects, because they do not then blush to be subjugated by the superior reason of an antagonist.”
Voltaire
