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Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations. 1989.

 
NUMBER: 441
AUTHOR: Spiro Theodore Agnew (1918–96)
QUOTATION: Freedom of speech is useless without freedom of thought. And I fear that the politics of protest is shutting out the process of thought, so necessary to rational discussion. We are faced with the Ten Commandments of Protest:
Thou Shalt Not Allow Thy Opponent to Speak.
Thou Shalt Not Set Forth a Program of Thine Own.
Thou Shalt Not Trust Anybody Over Thirty.
Thou Shalt Not Honor Thy Father or Thy Mother.
Thou Shalt Not Heed the Lessons of History.
Thou Shalt Not Write Anything Longer than a Slogan.
Thou Shalt Not Present a Negotiable Demand.
Thou Shalt Not Accept Any Establishment Idea.
Thou Shalt Not Revere Any but Totalitarian Heroes.
Thou Shalt Not Ask Forgiveness for Thy Transgressions, Rather Thou Shalt Demand Amnesty for Them.
ATTRIBUTION: Vice President SPIRO T. AGNEW, speech to governors and their families, Washington, D.C., December 3, 1969.—Collected Speeches of Spiro Agnew, pp. 98–99 (1971).
SUBJECTS: Dissent