Does anybody know where McCulloch wrote:
"But whenever property is secure, industry free, and the public burdens
moderate, the happiness or misery of the labouring classes depends
almost wholly on themselves. Government has there done for them all that
it should, and all in truth that it can do. It has given them security
and freedom. But the use or abuse of these inestimable advantages is
their own affair. They may be either provident or improvident,
industrious or idle; and being free to choose, they are alone
responsible for the consequences of their choice."
Thanks.
Michael Perelman