Garet Garrett was a trailblazing American journalist renowned for his incisive commentary and unyielding commitment to individual liberty and limited government. As a prolific writer for publications such as The Saturday Evening Post and The New York Times, Garrett fearlessly challenged the status quo, exposing the dangers of unchecked government power and advocating for the principles of free-market capitalism and individual sovereignty.

"If you put a ten dollar bill under the rug instead of spending it, that is capital formation. It represents ten dollars' worth of something that might have been immediately consumed, but wasn't."



"To the revolutionary mind the American vista must have been almost as incredible as Genghis Khan's first view of China - so rich, so soft, so unaware."



"The spectacle of a great, solvent government paying a fictitious price for gold it did not want and did not need and doing it on purpose to debase the value of its own paper currency was one to astonish the world."



"There was endless controversy as to whether the acts of the New Deal did actually move recovery or retard it, and nothing final could ever come of that bitter debate because it is forever impossible to prove what might have happened in place of what did."



"The New Deal's enmity for that system of free and competitive private enterprise which we call capitalism was fundamental."



"Formerly government was the responsibility of people; now people were the responsibility of government."



"This is the problem for which revolutionary theory has yet to find the right solution, if there is one. The difficulty is that the economic interests of the two classes are antagonistic."



"If the great Government of the United States were a private corporation no bank would take its name on a piece of paper, because it has cynically repudiated the words engraved upon its bonds."



"Lenin, the greatest theorist of them all, did not know what he was going to do after he had got the power."

