The conception of “a government of rules, and not of men” reveals a political viewpoint those times back to the early Greeks. But the expression itself was preserved in the past and excerpt volumes by John Adams. He employed it in one of his “Letters of Novanglus,” which squabbled that Great Britain's dealing of American migrants dishonored their constitutional rights under British regulation. In the 7th correspondence, he inscribed that “the British structure is much more like a democracy than a realm...a regime of laws, and not of men. It refers that no individual creates the laws or makes a ...