Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
History is full of surprises.
Righteousness is easy in retrospect.
Honest history is the weapon of freedom.
All wars are popular for the first 30 days.
History is, indeed, an argument without end.
History, in the end, becomes a form of irony.
Clarity in language depends on clarity in thought.
Brave men earn the right to shape their own destiny.
Self-righteousness in retrospect is easy--also cheap.
Few secret undertakings ever did any nation any good.
For history is to the nation as memory is to the individual.
Politics in a democracy is, at the end, an educational process.
The passion for tidiness is the historian's occupational disease.
Anti-intellectualism has long been the anti-Semitism of the businessman.
The use of history as therapy means the corruption of history as history.
The very discovery of the New world was the by-product of a dietary quest.
In Defense of the World Order . . . U.S. soldiers would have to kill and die.
Every President reconstructs the Presidency to meet his own psychological needs.
There is far less to the Presidency, in terms of essential activity, than meets the eye.
Television has spread the habit of instant reaction and stimulated the hope of instant results.
The first rule of democracy is to distrust all leaders who begin to believe their own publicity.
I don't think I have made as much of my life as I should have. I should have written more books.
Science and technology revolutionize our lives, but memory, tradition and myth frame our response.
The genius of impeachment lay in the fact that it could punish the man without punishing the office.
We are not going to achieve a new world order without paying for it in blood as well as in words and money.
There is no more dangerous thing for a democracy than a foreign policy based on presidential preventive war.
Troubles impending always seem worse than troubles surmounted, but this does not prove that they really are.
Almost all important questions are important precisely because they are not susceptible to quantitative answer.
People who claw their way to the top are not likely to find very much wrong with the system that enabled them to rise.
Santayana's aphorism must be reversed: too often it is those who can remember the past who are condemned to repeat it.
Those who are convinced they have a monopoly on The Truth always feel that they are only saving the world when they slaughter the heretics.
What higher obligation does a President have than to explain his intentions to the people and persuade them that the direction he wishes to go is right?
What we need is a rebirth of satire, of dissent, of irreverence, of an uncompromising insistence that phoniness is phony and platitudes are platitudinous.
Expelled from individual consciousness by the rush of change, history finds its revenge by stamping the collective unconsciousness with habits and values.
For most Americans the Constitution had become a hazy document, cited like the Bible on ceremonial occasions but forgotten in the daily transactions of life.
Economists are about as useful as astrologers in predicting the future (and, like astrologers, they never let failure on one occasion diminish certitude on the next).
The basic human rights documents-the American Declaration of Independence and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man-were written by political, not by religious, leaders.
Liberalism regards all absolutes with profound skepticism, including both moral imperatives and final solutions... Insistence upon any particular solution is the mark of an ideologue.
Man generally is entangled in insoluble problems; history is consequently a tragedy in which we are all involved, whose keynote is anxiety and frustration, not progress and fulfilment.
Excellence is the eternal quest. We achieve it by living up to our highest intellectual standards and our finest moral intuitions. In seeking excellence, take life seriously-but never yourself!
Problems will always torment us because all important problems are insoluble: that is why they are important. The good comes from the continuing struggle to try and solve them, not from the vain hope of their solution.
The broad liberal objective is a balanced and flexible "mixed economy," thus seeking to occupy that middle ground between capitalism and socialism whose viability has so long been denied by both capitalists and socialists.
If we are to survive, we must have ideas, vision, and courage. These things are rarely produced by committees. Everything that matters in our intellectual and moral life begins with an individual confronting his own mind and conscience in a room by himself.
The only President who clearly died of overwork was Polk, and that was a long time ago. Hoover, who worked intensely and humorlessly as President, lived for more than thirty years after the White House; Truman, who worked intensely and gaily, lived for twenty
In view of the tide of religiosity engulfing a once secular republic it is refreshing to be reminded by Freethinkers that free thought and skepticism are robustly in the American tradition. After all the Founding Fathers began by omitting God from the American Constitution.
I trust that a graduate student some day will write a doctoral essay on the influence of the Munich analogy on the subsequent history of the twentieth century. Perhaps in the end he will conclude that the multitude of errors committed in the name of Munich may exceed the original error of 1938.
The military struggle may frankly be regarded for what it actually was, namely a war for independence, an armed attempt to imposethe views of the revolutionists upon the British government and large sections of the colonial population at whatever cost to freedom of opinion or the sanctity of life and property.
It is useful to remember that history is to the nation as memory is to the individual. As a person deprived of memory becomes disorientated and lost, not knowing where they have been or where they are going , so a nation denied a conception of the past will be disabled in dealing with its present and its future.
Total separation of church and state was considered the best safeguard for the health of each. As [Andrew] Jackson explained, in refusing to name a fast day, he feared to 'disturb the security which religion now enjoys in this country, in its complete separation from the political concerns of the General Government.'
Science and Technology revolutionize our lives, but memory, tradition and myth frame our response. Expelled from individual consciousness by the rush of change, history finds its revenge by stamping the collective unconscious with habits, values, expectations, dreams. The dialectic between past and future will continue to form our lives.