Creative Quotations from . . .
Suzanne LaFollette
(1895?-1983) born on
US writer, editor. She wrote "Concerning Women," 1926; founding editor of "The National Review," 1955.
         
   
Click Here for an explanation of the five components of Creative Quotations
F
Until economic freedom is attained for everybody, there can be no real freedom for anybody.

R
Most people, no doubt, when they espouse human rights, make their own mental reservations about the proper application of the word "human."
A
There is nothing more innately human than the tendency to transmute what has become customary into what has been divinely ordained.
N
What its children become, that will the community become.
K
Laws are felt only when the individual comes into conflict with them.
 


Published Sources for the above Quotations:
F: In "Words of Women Quotations for Success," by Power Dynamics Publishing, 1997.
R: Concerning Women, "The Beginnings of Emancipation," 1926.
A: Concerning Women, "The Beginnings of Emancipation," 1926.
N: In "Words of Women Quotations for Success," by Power Dynamics Publishing, 1997.
K: Concerning Women, "The Beginnings of Emancipation," 1926.
 

copyright 1996-2020 by Baertracks at bemorecreative.com