Archive

Quotes

Television has made dictatorship impossible, but democracy unbearable.

—Shimon Peres, 1995

Treaties, you see, are like girls and roses: they last while they last.

—Charles de Gaulle, 1963

What experience and history teach is this—that nations and governments have never learned anything from history or acted upon any lessons they might have drawn from it.

—Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 1830

The poor have sometimes objected to being governed badly; the rich have always objected to being governed at all.

—G.K. Chesterton, 1908

Politics is the art of the possible.

—Otto von Bismarck, 1867

I’m president of the United States, and I’m not going to eat any more broccoli!

—George H. W. Bush, 1990

Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of the people are right more than half of the time.

—E.B. White, 1944

I work for a government I despise for ends I think criminal.

—John Maynard Keynes, 1917

You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose.

—Mario Cuomo, 1985

In politics, what begins in fear usually ends in folly.

—Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1830

Why has the government been instituted at all? Because the passions of men will not conform to the dictates of reason and justice without constraint.

—Alexander Hamilton, 1787

The best of all rulers is but a shadowy presence to his subjects.

—Laozi

On the loftiest throne in the world, we still sit only on our own rump.

—Michel de Montaigne, 1580