"Power over a man's subsistence is power over his will"
About this Quote
The context is the early American argument over what kind of national government could survive without becoming a new tyranny. Hamilton, writing in the Federalist era and shaped by the chaos of weak central authority under the Articles of Confederation, understood that power doesn’t only arrive in uniforms. It arrives through payrolls, contracts, debt, taxes, and the quiet leverage of dependency. A government that can starve you, or an employer monopoly that can, doesn’t need to jail you to steer you.
The subtext is a warning aimed at citizens as much as politicians: be suspicious of any system that makes livelihood conditional on obedience. Hamilton is also making a case for structural safeguards - stable revenue, accountable institutions, checks on arbitrary authority - because he knows persuasion is not the only tool rulers use. It’s a line that keeps echoing because modern “subsistence” isn’t just bread. It’s healthcare, housing, visas, algorithms deciding gig work, and the fine print that turns economic precarity into political compliance.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Federalist Papers: No. 79 (The Judiciary Continued) (Alexander Hamilton, 1788)
Evidence: In the general course of human nature, A POWER OVER A MAN's SUBSISTENCE AMOUNTS TO A POWER OVER HIS WILL. (Federalist No. 79). This line appears in Alexander Hamilton’s Federalist No. 79 (signed 'Publius'), in the opening paragraph discussing why judges need a fixed provision for their support to preserve judicial independence. The wording most commonly circulated today (“Power over a man's subsistence is power over his will”) is a shortened/paraphrased form; Hamilton’s original sentence includes 'In the general course of human nature' and uses 'amounts to'. The Federalist essays were first published as newspaper essays in New York; No. 79 is commonly dated May 28, 1788 in standard Federalist chronologies. A scanned later book edition also contains the same sentence on its printed page 491 in the 1818 compilation, but that is not the first publication. Other candidates (1) Government Instituted Slavery Using Franchises, Form #05.030 (Sovereignty Education and Defense Min..., 2020) compilation95.0% ... power over a man's subsistence is power over his will. This means that judges cannot be subject to enforcement by... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hamilton, Alexander. (2026, February 27). Power over a man's subsistence is power over his will. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-over-a-mans-subsistence-is-power-over-his-25683/
Chicago Style
Hamilton, Alexander. "Power over a man's subsistence is power over his will." FixQuotes. February 27, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-over-a-mans-subsistence-is-power-over-his-25683/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Power over a man's subsistence is power over his will." FixQuotes, 27 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-over-a-mans-subsistence-is-power-over-his-25683/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.












