5 Quotes & Sayings By Harold Edmund Stearns

Harold Edmund Stearns (1867-1946) was an American Minnesota politician, businessman, and philanthropist. He was a leader in the Republican Party in Minnesota, and also served as an Undersecretary of the Navy in the administration of President Warren G. Harding. He was a director at Wells Fargo & Company and a director at the Minneapolis Land and Improvement Company Read more

He served as president of the First National Bank of Minneapolis and was a trustee of the Park Board, Minneapolis Public Library Board, and others. He also held directorships at Northwestern National Life Insurance Company and the International Harvester Corporation.

1
We are homeless enough in this world under the best of circumstances without going to any special effort to test our capacity to be more so. Harold Edmund Stearns
2
Something must be radically wrong with a culture and a civilisation when its youth begins to desert it. Youth is the natural time for revolt, for experiment, for a generous idealism that is eager for action. Any civilisation which has the wisdom of self-preservation will allow a certain margin of freedom for the expression of this youthful mood. But the plain, unpalatable fact is that in America today that margin of freedom has been reduced to the vanishing point. Rebellious youth is not wanted here. In our environment there is nothing to challenge our young men; there is no flexibility, no colour, no possibility for adventure, no chance to shape events more generously than is permitted under the rules of highly organised looting. All our institutional life combines for the common purpose of blackjacking our youth into the acceptance of the status quo; and not acceptance of it merely, but rather its glorification. . Harold Edmund Stearns
3
The root of liberalism, in a word, is hatred of compulsion, for liberalism has the respect for the individual and his conscience and reason which the employment of coercion necessarily destroys. The liberal has faith in the individual — faith that he can be persuaded by rational means to beliefs compatible with social good. Harold Edmund Stearns
4
When distinction of any kind, even intellectual distinction, is somehow resented as a betrayal of the American spirit of equal opportunity for all, the result must be just this terror of individualistic impulses setting us apart, either above or below our neighbours; just this determination to obey without questioning and to subscribe with passion to the conventions and traditions. The dilemma becomes a very real one: How can this sense of democratic equality be made compatible with respect for exceptional personalities or great minds? How can democracy, as we understand it today, with its iron repression of the free spirit, its monotonous standardisation of everything, learn to cherish an intellectual aristocracy without which any nation runs the risk of becoming a civilisation of the commonplace and the second-rate? . Harold Edmund Stearns