Archive

Quotes

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

—Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1830

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

—G.K. Chesterton, 1908

The U.S. presidency is a Tudor monarchy plus telephones.

—Anthony Burgess, 1972

I am invariably of the politics of the people at whose table I sit, or beneath whose roof I sleep.

—George Borrow, 1843

Every communist must grasp the truth: “Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.”

—Mao Zedong, 1938

O citizens, first acquire wealth; you can practice virtue afterward.

—Horace, c. 8 BC

Television has made dictatorship impossible, but democracy unbearable.

—Shimon Peres, 1995

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

—E.B. White, 1944

No human life, not even the life of a hermit, is possible without a world which directly or indirectly testifies to the presence of other human beings.

—Hannah Arendt, 1958

The vice presidency isn’t worth a pitcher of warm piss.

—John Nance Garner, c. 1967

The more corrupt the republic, the more numerous the laws.

—Tacitus, c. 117

All the ills of democracy can be cured by more democracy.

—Al Smith, 1933

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