We can build a collective civic space large enough for all our …

We can build a collective civic space large enough for all our separate identities, that we can be e pluribus unum- out of one, many. Al Gore
Quoted in Investors Business Daily,10/25/1996. E Pluribus Unum is the motto on the Great Seal of the United States of America, and is Latin for ‘out of many, one,’ not ‘out of one, many.’

She supposed it was one way to find money for the poor. …

She supposed it was one way to find money for the poor. Simply rob anyone who was not poor. Of course, that would just make everyone poor in the end, but it might work for a time. … People who claimed they were collecting money to help others often had a way of letting a good bit stick in their own pockets, or else they liked the power that spreading it about gave them, liked it far to much. She had better feeling for the man who freely gave one cooper from his own purse than for the fellow who wrested a gold crown from someone else’s. Robert Jordan
The Fires of Heaven, 1993

Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the …

Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state; Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country. Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution…

Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Dec. 10, 1948) Approved by the United Nations with the nations of the Soviet bloc, Saudi Arabia, & South Africa abstaining.

Government’s power to solve problems comes from its ability to reassign …

Government’s power to solve problems comes from its ability to reassign resources, whether by taxing, spending, regulation or simply passing laws. But that very ability energizes countless investors and entrepreneurs and ordinary Americans to go digging for gold by lobbying government. In time, a whole industry – large, sophisticated, professionalized, and to a considerable extent self serving – emerges and then assumes a life of its own. This industry is a drain on the productive economy, and there appears to be no natural limit to its growth. As it grows, the steady accumulation of subsidies and benefits, each defended in perpetuiry by a professional interest group, calcifies government. Jonathan Rauch
Demosclerosis: The Silent Killer of American Government