The Administrative Threat Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Administrative Threat (Encounter Intelligence Book 3) The Administrative Threat by Philip Hamburger
117 ratings, 3.99 average rating, 14 reviews
Open Preview
The Administrative Threat Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“The central historical understanding of speech and press rights was as a freedom from licensing – from the requirement of having to get prior administrative permission. And when such rights were threatened by postpublication prosecutions, they were recognized to be dependent on the right to a jury trial.”
Philip Hamburger, The Administrative Threat
“The people could still have their republic, but much legislative power would be shifted out of an elected body and into the hands of the right sort of people. Rather than narrowly a matter of racism, this has been a transfer of legislative power to the knowledge class – meaning not a class defined in Marxist or other economic terms but those persons whose identity or sense of selfworth centers on their knowledge. More than merely the intelligentsia, this class includes all who are more attached to the authority of knowledge than to the authority of local political communities. Which is not to say that they have been particularly knowledgeable, but that their sense of affinity with cosmopolitan knowledge, rather than local connectedness, has been the foundation of their influence and identity.”
Philip Hamburger, The Administrative Threat