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Leadership Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"He that's secure is not safe"

About this Quote

Security is a mood; safety is a condition. Franklin’s line weaponizes that gap. “He that’s secure” isn’t protected, he’s satisfied - the person who feels settled enough to stop checking the locks, to stop questioning his own advantage, to stop imagining how quickly the world can turn. Franklin, a professional improver and professional skeptic, distrusts comfort because comfort dulls the senses that keep you alive.

The phrasing is doing quiet work. “Secure” sounds like a virtue in modern life - stable job, stable borders, stable investments. Franklin flips it into a liability: emotional certainty masquerading as prudence. “Not safe” lands like a cold audit. It isn’t a warning about paranoia; it’s a warning about complacency, the self-soothing story we tell ourselves when things have gone well for long enough.

Context matters: Franklin lived in a century of fragile institutions, contested empires, epidemics, fires, and a revolution that depended on constant vigilance and improvisation. For an architect of American civic life, the most dangerous citizen isn’t the reckless one; it’s the one who assumes the experiment has become permanent. Read politically, it’s an argument against triumphalism: nations that feel “secure” stop investing in resilience and start confusing momentum for immunity. Read personally, it’s the Protestant work ethic with teeth - not hustle culture, but a discipline of attention. Franklin’s subtext is almost managerial: risk doesn’t disappear because you’ve stopped noticing it.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Poor Richard Improved (Benjamin Franklin, 1748)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
He that's secure is not safe. (Page 50 (in the Jon Craft “Rocket Edition” HTML transcription)). This line appears in Benjamin Franklin’s own almanac series under his pseudonym “Richard Saunders” (Poor Richard). In the Jon Craft “Rocket Edition” HTML transcription hosted on paperzz, it occurs in the section labeled “Poor Richard Improved 1748,” where it is printed immediately after “Suspicion may be no Fault, but shewing it may be a great one.” and before “The second Vice is Lying; the first is Running in Debt.” (shown around lines 1658–1663, with the quote at line 1659; the page marker nearby is “Page 50”). This is a PRIMARY-source work by Franklin (almanac text), but the specific page numbering is from the later transcription rather than a photographed 1748 printing. I did not locate, within this search session, an accessible scan/facsimile of the 1748 almanac page itself from a major library repository to confirm original pagination of the 1748 printed booklet.
Other candidates (1)
Stagecraft Fundamentals (Rita Kogler Carver, 2013) compilation95.0%
... He that's secure is not safe. —Benjamin Franklin Let's change our discussion now to reaching higher places. To do...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Franklin, Benjamin. (2026, February 16). He that's secure is not safe. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-thats-secure-is-not-safe-25494/

Chicago Style
Franklin, Benjamin. "He that's secure is not safe." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-thats-secure-is-not-safe-25494/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He that's secure is not safe." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-thats-secure-is-not-safe-25494/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

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Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 - April 17, 1790) was a Politician from USA.

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