"When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions"
About this Quote
As a historian of Black life writing in the Jim Crow era, Woodson isn’t talking about abstract “mind control.” He’s indicting an American machinery that used schooling, media, and respectable opinion to manufacture consent and resignation. The quote sits in the gravitational field of The Mis-Education of the Negro (1933), where he argues that education can become a pipeline for hierarchy: train people to see their culture as inferior, to believe their aspirations are illegitimate, and they’ll police their own possibilities. The violence can recede because the worldview remains.
The subtext is a warning to reformers who treat oppression as mainly legal or economic. Change the laws, and you still may have a population trained to expect less, fear ambition, or mistrust collective action. Woodson’s real target is internalized limitation: once people accept the premises of their subordination, “actions” become predictable - and safely nonthreatening.
What makes the sentence work is its ruthless inversion of responsibility. It places the burden on the architects of ideology, not the “behavior” of the oppressed, and it reframes freedom as cognitive sovereignty: control your thinking, or someone else will quietly cash the dividends.
Quote Details
| Topic | Free Will & Fate |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Mis-Education of the Negro (Carter G. Woodson, 1933)
Evidence: The problem of holding the Negro down, therefore, is easily solved. When you control a man’s thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his “proper place” and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit. His education makes it necessary. (Preface (page number not given in the online excerpt)). This is a primary-source excerpt of Woodson’s own text presented by the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. The page explicitly attributes the passage to Woodson’s “Preface” to The Mis-Education of the Negro (Washington, DC: Associated Publishers, 1933). The commonly-circulated short form (“When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions”) is a direct sentence from this Preface, often quoted without the surrounding paragraph. If you need the exact original pagination, it will depend on the specific 1933 printing/edition (and later reprints differ); you’d need to consult a scan of the 1933 Associated Publishers edition to cite a definitive page number. Other candidates (1) An Unbroken Educational Apartheid Legacy (David E. Morgan Ph.D., 2015) compilation95.0% ... Carter G. Woodson , in the Mis - Education of the Negro , " When you control a man's thinking you do not have to ... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Woodson, Carter G. (2026, February 8). When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-control-a-mans-thinking-you-do-not-have-154685/
Chicago Style
Woodson, Carter G. "When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-control-a-mans-thinking-you-do-not-have-154685/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When you control a man's thinking you do not have to worry about his actions." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-control-a-mans-thinking-you-do-not-have-154685/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.









