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" It is not difficult, for the sake of doing so muck good, to negotiate such a coalition. — Hence, it has not unfrequently happened, that the votes of whole masses of men have been bought and sold in the political shambles at a discount. At other times,... "
The Limitations of Human Responsibility - Page 110
by Francis Wayland - 1838 - 196 pages
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The New York Review, Volume 3

Francis Lister Hawks, Caleb Sprague Henry, Joseph Green Cogswell - Bibliography - 1838 - 524 pages
...association insured, by coalition with a political party. It is not difficult, for the sake of doing so muck good, to negotiate such a coalition. — Hence, it...nothing else. The history of the present age shows that it has all been not unfrequently carried into practice. For instance, what is a Trades' Union,...
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The New-York Review, Volume 3

1838 - 514 pages
...of the association can be kept up in no other manner, than by advancing from innocent to quesnonable measures, in order thus to arouse opposition, and...nothing else. The history of the present age shows that it has all been not unfrequently carried into practice. For instance, what is a Trades' Union,...
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The New-York Review, Volume 3

Caleb Sprague Henry, Joseph Green Cogswell - American periodicals - 1838 - 518 pages
...can be kept up in no other manner, than by advancing from innocent to questionable measures, in oider thus to arouse opposition, and bring small men and...prominent and distinct notoriety. In this manner, the primarv object of the association is lost sight of, and the thing itself becomes a mere system of machinery,...
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Philanthropic Foundations: New Scholarship, New Possibilities

Ellen Condliffe Lagemann - Social Science - 1999 - 518 pages
...ideas forged coalitions with political groups and, in doing so, became corrupted: in such situations, "the primary object of the association is lost sight...the advancement of turbulent and selfish agitators." Conjuring up apocalyptic visions of social catastrophe, Wayland asked, "what were the French Jacobin...
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