Quote of the Day
Authors Categories Blog Quote Maker Videos
 

Jeffrey Rosen Quotes: [Louis] Brandeis had a very distinctive vision of political economy that he persuaded Woodrow Wilson to adopt in the 1912 election and that he largely enacted from the bench.
         

[Louis] Brandeis had a very distinctive vision of political economy that he persuaded Woodrow Wilson to adopt in the 1912 election and that he largely enacted from the bench.


Jeffrey Rosen
Check all other quotes by Jeffrey Rosen

Want to display this quote image on your website or blog? Simply copy and paste the below code on your website/blog.

Embed:

Format of this image is jpg. The width and height of image are 1200 and 630, repectively. This image is available for free to download.





Citation

Use the citation below to add this quote to your bibliography:


Styles:

×

MLA Style Citation


"Jeffrey Rosen Quotes." Quoteslyfe.com, 2024. Sun. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.quoteslyfe.com/quote/Louis-Brandeis-had-a-very-distinctive-vision-704907>.





Check out


Other quotes of Jeffrey Rosen


Privacy is not for the passive.

Privacy is not for the passive.



I was very much influenced by a great book by the scholar Neil Richards called Intellectual Privacy, that [Louis] Brandeis changed his mind on the proper balance between dignity and free speech.

I was very much influenced by a great book by the scholar Neil Richards called Intellectual Privacy, that [Louis] Brandeis changed his mind on the proper balance between dignity and free speech.



We need to protect the same amount of cognitive liberty in an age where you can invade people's thoughts without physically intruding into their homes than you did at the time of the framing.

We need to protect the same amount of cognitive liberty in an age where you can invade people's thoughts without physically intruding into their homes than you did at the time of the framing.



[Louis] Brandeis improves the prose. He simplifies it and perfects the balance of the sentence so it becomes even more memorable and aphoristic.

[Louis] Brandeis improves the prose. He simplifies it and perfects the balance of the sentence so it becomes even more memorable and aphoristic.



[Louis] Brandeis is writing directly to us. His clear voice comes through a century and he's speaking to us and he's galvanizing us and he's persuading us. And that's why I love to read the prose.

[Louis] Brandeis is writing directly to us. His clear voice comes through a century and he's speaking to us and he's galvanizing us and he's persuading us. And that's why I love to read the prose.



[Louis Brandeis] believes in natural rights of speech and liberty and the right to pursue happiness.

[Louis Brandeis] believes in natural rights of speech and liberty and the right to pursue happiness.



[Oliver Wendell] Holmes never believed in the truth and morality of the laws he was upholding. He said, "I loathe the thick-fingered clowns we call the people."

[Oliver Wendell] Holmes never believed in the truth and morality of the laws he was upholding. He said, "I loathe the thick-fingered clowns we call the people."



I think the answer has to do with the fact that [Louis D.] Brandeis was a consistent critic of bigness in business and in government.

I think the answer has to do with the fact that [Louis D.] Brandeis was a consistent critic of bigness in business and in government.



[Louis] Brandeis is often painted as an acolyte of judicial restraint, or the view that judges should uphold laws whether or not they like them.

[Louis] Brandeis is often painted as an acolyte of judicial restraint, or the view that judges should uphold laws whether or not they like them.



Do you think Bernie Sanders, for example, is citing Theodore Roosevelt as the progenitor of his critique of the banks when actually Roosevelt wanted to keep the banks together and regulate them.

Do you think Bernie Sanders, for example, is citing Theodore Roosevelt as the progenitor of his critique of the banks when actually Roosevelt wanted to keep the banks together and regulate them.





Other quotes you may like


Woe be to him that reads but one book.

Woe be to him that reads but one book.




I had no idea how free we were. That's how free I was.

I had no idea how free we were. That's how free I was.



I love the free spirit in London.

I love the free spirit in London.



I get pretty impatient with people who are able-bodied but are somehow paralyzed for other reasons.

I get pretty impatient with people who are able-bodied but are somehow paralyzed for other reasons.



Give up being right. Instead radiate peace, harmony, love, and laughter from your heart.

Give up being right. Instead radiate peace, harmony, love, and laughter from your heart.



It's not my fault that people are perverts.

It's not my fault that people are perverts.



It is good fiction, so largely ignored now, that brings us so much closer to the real facts.

It is good fiction, so largely ignored now, that brings us so much closer to the real facts.



On set, the playground for the character, how much it takes varies. Is it like ballet, is it like jazz? The content always lends itself to the form, and it's really not mathematics.

On set, the playground for the character, how much it takes varies. Is it like ballet, is it like jazz? The content always lends itself to the form, and it's really not mathematics.



There is a certain pleasure in weeping.

There is a certain pleasure in weeping.




Quote Description


This page presents the quote "[Louis] Brandeis had a very distinctive vision of political economy that he persuaded Woodrow Wilson to adopt in the 1912 election and that he largely enacted from the bench.". Author of this quote is Jeffrey Rosen. This quote is about wilson, election, vision, benches, political, economy, distinctive,.