Statement of Congressman Ron Paul
United States House of Representatives
November 19, 2008
2008 Ron Paul 69:1
Madame Speaker, I rise to pay tribute to my friend Marshall Fritz who passed
away on Tuesday November 4 after a long battle with pancreatic cancer.
Marshall was a true champion of freedom whose impact on the cause of
liberty will be felt for years to come.
2008 Ron Paul 69:2
Marshall, with his booming voice and good humor, was the happy warrior of the
freedom movement, as well as the movement’s Will Rogers. Marshall never
met a fellow fighter for liberty, a single-issue ally, or a potential
convert he did not like — and to Marshall anyone who did not already
share his love of liberty was a potential convert.
2008 Ron Paul 69:3
Marshall was a model of an ideological/political entrepreneur. In 1984, Marshall
saw that the growth of the freedom movement was handicapped by the lack
of an organization to help activists better communicate the freedom
philosophy to the general public. While Marshall was not the first
person to have this realization, he was the first person to attempt to
remedy the situation by founding Advocates for Self-Government, an
organization designed to teach activists how to effectively communicate
their principles.
2008 Ron Paul 69:4
In the years since Marshall founded the Advocates for Self-Government, the
organization has helped countless libertarians by providing them with
the intellectual resources necessary to effectively battle for a free
society.
2008 Ron Paul 69:5
While serving as President of the Advocates, Marshall created the World’s
Smallest Political Quiz. The quiz graphs an individual’s political
philosophy based on responses to a series of ten questions that measure
one’s commitment to economic and personal liberty.
2008 Ron Paul 69:6
Under Marshall’s leadership, the Advocates undertook an aggressive program of
distributing the quiz. There is no doubt that this has been the
Advocate’s most successful and popular program. The quiz is responsible
for many American’s first contact with libertarian ideas. While
traveling around the country, I have often heard people say, I never
knew I was a libertarian until I took the quiz!
2008 Ron Paul 69:7
In 1990, Marshall stepped down as President of the Advocates to found the
Alliance for the Separation of School and State, an organization
focusing on the vital issue of parental control of education. Thanks in
large part to Marshalls work, the idea that parents, not the
government, should control education is no longer excluded from public
debate as a fringe notion. One of the features that most impresses me
about the Alliance is the way that Marshall brought libertarians,
conservatives, and liberals together to work for education freedom.
2008 Ron Paul 69:8
Anyone who knew Marshall and worked with him would not be surprised that he
was able to forge a coalition of people of diverse views. Marshall’s
focus was always on building alliances and trying to persuade those
with whom he disagreed, rather than on scoring debating points. While
he never compromised his principles and never hesitated to criticize
even his closet allies if they took what he considered an anti-liberty
position, Marshall never personalized disagreements and always treated
his opponents with courtesy and respect. I believe the freedom movement
would be more successful if more libertarians followed Marshalls
example of never turning policy disagreements into personal attacks.
2008 Ron Paul 69:9
All of us who care about building an effective freedom movement owe a debt
of gratitude to Marshall Fritz. I join Marshall’s family in mourning
his loss and I urge all of us who work or liberty to honor Marshall’s
memory by following the example he set.