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Leadership Quote by James Madison

"As a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights"

About this Quote

Madison lands a lawyer’s punchline with a philosopher’s fuse: if property is sacred because it’s “yours,” then rights should be treated as something you own just as fiercely. The rhetorical sleight of hand matters. In a young republic obsessed with land, debt, and inheritance, “property” was the most legible moral language available. Madison borrows that prestige and transfers it to liberties that can’t be fenced, sold, or seized without consequences. He’s not sentimentalizing rights; he’s monetizing their moral force.

The intent is both principled and tactical. Principled, because Madison’s broader project was to make individual liberty durable against majorities, factions, and temporary panics. Tactical, because the era’s political class was already fluent in the idea that government exists to secure property. By reframing rights as property, Madison makes it harder for lawmakers to treat speech, conscience, due process, and political participation as optional “privileges” granted by the state. If rights are property, then violating them isn’t just wrong - it’s theft.

The subtext carries an anxiety: rights are fragile precisely because they’re intangible. A farm can be defended with a deed and a fence; liberty needs a constitutional architecture and public habits. This line comes out of the Founding moment’s hard lesson that paper declarations aren’t self-enforcing. Madison is trying to smuggle a radical demand - respect rights as inviolable - inside the era’s most conservative obsession: protecting what people can call their own.

Quote Details

TopicHuman Rights
Source
Verified source: Property (For the National Gazette) (James Madison, 1792)
Text match: 99.38%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
In a word, as a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights. (pp. 266–268 (in The Papers of James Madison, vol. 14)). This sentence appears in James Madison’s essay titled “Property,” written for the National Gazette and dated March 27, 1792. The Founders Online entry notes the essay’s printed appearance in the National Gazette on March 29, 1792, and provides the authoritative documentary edition location: The Papers of James Madison, vol. 14 (University Press of Virginia, 1983), pp. 266–268. This is a primary-source Madison text (an essay/newspaper article), not a later quotation compilation.
Other candidates (1)
The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism (Ronald Hamowy, 2008) compilation99.2%
... as a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights.” Madis...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Madison, James. (2026, February 15). As a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-a-man-is-said-to-have-a-right-to-his-property-31805/

Chicago Style
Madison, James. "As a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-a-man-is-said-to-have-a-right-to-his-property-31805/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"As a man is said to have a right to his property, he may be equally said to have a property in his rights." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/as-a-man-is-said-to-have-a-right-to-his-property-31805/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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James Madison

James Madison (March 16, 1751 - June 28, 1836) was a President from USA.

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