"If human nature is so evil that it is necessary to prohibit people's freedom, is it possible that the nature of these organizations that prohibit people's freedom is good? Is it true that legislators and the people they appoint Are the officials not human beings? Or do they believe they are on a purer land than the rest of mankind? "-The Law "When the law requires citizens to sacrifice their own interests for the benefit of the public?" - The Law , human nature will not disappear because of this. Then everyone will try to contribute less than others and take more than others. In this way, are those who gain the most benefits from the struggle obviously the unlucky ones? No, those people are the most powerful and scheming ones." - The Law "Life, mobility, productivity - in other words, individuality, freedom, and property - this is what makes people human. Despite the treacherous and cunning politicians, these three gifts from God are above and superior to all human laws. Life, liberty, and property do not exist because humans make laws. On the contrary, life, liberty, and property do not exist because humans make laws. Liberty, and property existed before man first made laws.”—The Law “Government is the plot of a majestic novel in which everyone’s act of survival is at the expense of everyone else.”—Government “Society. Doctrine, like other ancient ideas, confuses the difference between government and society. Because of this confusion, socialists smear us as opposing everyone** whenever we oppose something the government does. * Matters of collaboration. When we oppose the government's compulsory education system, then socialists will say that we are opposed to all education. When we oppose the government's establishment of a state religion, socialists will say that we have no faith at all. They say we are against equality when we oppose government-enforced equality, and the list goes on and on, just as socialism accuses us of opposing food because we oppose state-grown grains.” —The Law "No matter what issue we are discussing - whether it is religion, philosophy, politics, or economics; whether it is about prosperity, morality, equality, right, justice, progress, responsibility, cooperation, property, labor, trade, Capital, wages, taxes, population, finance, or government—no matter which scientific method I study, I come to the conclusion that the answer to all problems of human interaction is freedom.”—The Law “ Try to imagine that the forced control of labor does not violate freedom, and the forced transfer of wealth does not violate property. If you can resolve these contradictions, you will find that the law cannot be violated without violating justice. Regulating labor and industry ”—The Law