Patrick Henry could have lived comfortably under British rule. As a successful lawyer and plantation owner, he had much to lose and little to gain from revolution. But Henry believed that some principles transcend personal comfort.
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" he asked. For Henry, living without liberty wasn't really living at all. He was willing to risk everything—his fortune, his family, his life—for what he believed was right.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we believe that how we do business matters as much as what we achieve. We serve {CITY} according to our values, not just our interests. Some things aren't negotiable.
America's 250th reminds us that principles make the person—and the nation.
#USA250 #Values #Principles #{CITY}
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" he asked. For Henry, living without liberty wasn't really living at all. He was willing to risk everything—his fortune, his family, his life—for what he believed was right.
At {BUSINESS_NAME}, we believe that how we do business matters as much as what we achieve. We serve {CITY} according to our values, not just our interests. Some things aren't negotiable.
America's 250th reminds us that principles make the person—and the nation.
#USA250 #Values #Principles #{CITY}
Historical Event
Patrick Henry's 'Give Me Liberty' Speech, March 23, 1775
Story Angle
The Values-Driven Leader - Principles Over Comfort