"I believe that government is the servant of the people and not their master"
About this Quote
A Rockefeller insisting that government should be a servant, not a master, is the kind of civic piety that doubles as reputation management. On its face, the line flatters democratic instincts: power is legitimate only when it’s accountable, constrained, and oriented toward ordinary lives rather than its own perpetuation. It’s a clean inversion that turns an abstract theory of the state into an everyday workplace metaphor: the public is the boss; officials are employees. That clarity is the rhetorical trick. It sounds obvious because it’s framed as a moral baseline, not a contested ideology.
The subtext, though, is where the quote earns its edge. Coming from one of the most recognizable names in American capital, “servant government” can mean two things at once: a defense of civil liberties and a warning label on regulation. The phrase “not their master” hints at an overreaching state, but leaves unspoken the other classic problem in a market society: private power becoming the master through monopoly, captured agencies, or policy written by and for insiders. When a titan of finance praises limited, service-oriented government, it invites skepticism about which people are being served, and by what mechanisms.
Context matters: Rockefeller’s career ran through the New Deal’s long shadow, Cold War technocracy, and an era when global business increasingly shaped public policy. The quote reads as an attempt to claim democratic virtue while keeping the state in a managerial role: competent enough to stabilize the system, restrained enough not to rearrange it. That tension is precisely why it works - it sells humility from a position of immense influence.
The subtext, though, is where the quote earns its edge. Coming from one of the most recognizable names in American capital, “servant government” can mean two things at once: a defense of civil liberties and a warning label on regulation. The phrase “not their master” hints at an overreaching state, but leaves unspoken the other classic problem in a market society: private power becoming the master through monopoly, captured agencies, or policy written by and for insiders. When a titan of finance praises limited, service-oriented government, it invites skepticism about which people are being served, and by what mechanisms.
Context matters: Rockefeller’s career ran through the New Deal’s long shadow, Cold War technocracy, and an era when global business increasingly shaped public policy. The quote reads as an attempt to claim democratic virtue while keeping the state in a managerial role: competent enough to stabilize the system, restrained enough not to rearrange it. That tension is precisely why it works - it sells humility from a position of immense influence.
Quote Details
| Topic | Servant Leadership |
|---|
More Quotes by David
Add to List







