A Quote by Louis Freeh

The American people must be willing to give up a degree of personal privacy in exchange for safety and security. — © Louis Freeh
The American people must be willing to give up a degree of personal privacy in exchange for safety and security.
Anyone willing to give up liberty in exchange for security deserves neither.
To seek Truth is automatically a calling for the innate dissident and the subversive; how many are willing to give up safety and security for the perilous life of the spiritual revolutionary? How many are willing to truly learn that their own cherished concepts are wrong? Striking provocative or mysterious poses in the safety of Internet [social media] is far easier than taking the risks involved in the hard work of genuine initiation.
The president's priority is to protect the safety and security of the American people. That's the physical security of the American people as well as the prosperity of the American people.
It's dangerous when people are willing to give up their privacy.
I particularly recognize that reasonable people can disagree as to what that proper balance or blend is between privacy and security and safety.
People who are willing to give up freedom for the sake of short term security, deserve neither freedom nor security.
I can't say 'OK, let's begin to exchange and see where it goes.' We want to give a fight and give people a good show, but you have to play on a safety zone.
Anything can go away. There's no such thing as safety and security. You can do things that give you the illusion of safety and security, but there's really no such thing.
I believe that if you took privacy and you said, I'm willing to give up all of my privacy to be secure. So you weighted it as a zero. My own view is that encryption is a much better, much better world. And I'm not the only person that thinks that.
Human beings have a drive for security and safety, which is often what fuels the spiritual search. This very drive for security and safety is what causes so much misery and confusion. Freedom is a state of complete and absolute insecurity and not knowing. So, in seeking security and safety, you actually distance yourself from the freedom you want. There is no security in freedom, at least not in the sense that we normally think of security. This is, of course, why it is so free: there's nothing there to grab hold of.
[A new all-encompassing national identification system] contradicts some of our most sacrosanct American principles of personal liberty and expectations of privacy and is far in excess of what is needed to provide us with the security and protections we all want.
Privacy and security are those things you give up when you show the world what makes you extraordinary.
Let's put the safety and security of the American people first.
If we become a people who are willing to give up our money and our freedom in exchange for rhetoric and promises, then nothing can save us.
I have a personal belief that you never have to give up liberty for security. You can still provide security without sacrificing our Bill of Rights.
For me, privacy and security are really important. We think about it in terms of both: You can't have privacy without security.
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