From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989 Quotes
From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
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William J. Bennett719 ratings, 4.38 average rating, 59 reviews
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From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989 Quotes
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“Politics is the art of achieving the maximum amount of freedom for individuals that is consistent with the maintenance of social order,”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
“American soldiers were dying in frigid Korea. One of our greatest generals told us that the president and his team were not trying to win. And some strident voices were saying that that was because they didn't want to win,”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
“and line of cases. Justice Byron R. "Whizzer" White, a JFK appointee, dissented, calling Doe an act of "raw judicial power," as it took these decisions from the states and enshrined their determination in the Supreme Court's reasoning.”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
“Eisenhower has been much criticized for his failure publicly to endorse the Court's decision. But he felt that doing so would set an undesirable precedent. If a president endorsed decisions he agreed with, might he feel compelled to oppose decisions he did not agree with? And what would that do to the rule of law? "The Supreme Court has spoken and I am sworn to uphold ... the constitutional processes.... I will obey."3”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
“I thank you very sincerely for your letter and your offer to transport me towards freedom. I cannot, alas, leave [Cambodia] in such a cowardly fashion. As for you, and in particular your great country, I never believed for a moment that you would . . . [abandon] a people which have chosen liberty. You have refused us your protection, and we can do nothing about it. You leave, and my wish is that you and your country will find happiness under the sky. [If I die here] I have committed only this mistake of believing you.8 When the Communist Khmer Rouge seized Phnom Penh, they shot Matak in the stomach. Unattended, it took him three days to die.9”
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
“I thank you very sincerely for your letter and your offer to transport me towards freedom. I cannot, alas, leave [Cambodia] in such a cowardly fashion. As for you, and in particular your great country, I never believed for a moment that you would . . . [abandon] a people which have chosen liberty. You have refused us your protection, and we can do nothing about it. You leave, and my wish is that you and your country will find happiness under the sky. [If I die here] I have committed only this mistake of believing you.8”
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
“Margaret Sanger, a public health nurse who challenged laws against distributing birth control information, embraced eugenics. Sanger founded Planned Parenthood, ostensibly to encourage poor immigrants and other Americans to limit the number of children they bore.”
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
“And yet we are a resilient people, caretakers of a blessed nation. It has become a commonplace that we always rise to the occasion in this country. That is still true. And we surprise ourselves, never knowing with exact certainty from whence our next leader or hero will come—good reason to respect and defend one another as Americans, as fellow countrymen dedicated to a great proposition.
Allow me a few simple illustrations. If you were sitting in a saloon in 1860, and someone told you that while he did not know who would win that year's presidential election, the next elected president after him was right then a little known leather tanner in Galena, Illinois, he would be laughed out of the saloon. But then came Ulysses S. Grant. If you were sitting at Franklin D. Roosevelt's inauguration, in 1933, and someone told you the next president was a little-known judge in Jackson County, Missouri, he would have been made to look the fool. But then came Harry S. Truman. If you were a political consultant in California in 1950 watching the bitter Senate race between Richard Nixon and Helen Gahagan Douglas (where Nixon labeled Douglas "the pink lady"), and you said that actor Ronald Reagan (who was then campaigning for Douglas) would someday be a Republican president and would crush the Soviet Union, your career would have been over.”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
Allow me a few simple illustrations. If you were sitting in a saloon in 1860, and someone told you that while he did not know who would win that year's presidential election, the next elected president after him was right then a little known leather tanner in Galena, Illinois, he would be laughed out of the saloon. But then came Ulysses S. Grant. If you were sitting at Franklin D. Roosevelt's inauguration, in 1933, and someone told you the next president was a little-known judge in Jackson County, Missouri, he would have been made to look the fool. But then came Harry S. Truman. If you were a political consultant in California in 1950 watching the bitter Senate race between Richard Nixon and Helen Gahagan Douglas (where Nixon labeled Douglas "the pink lady"), and you said that actor Ronald Reagan (who was then campaigning for Douglas) would someday be a Republican president and would crush the Soviet Union, your career would have been over.”
― From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom 1914-1989
“Hayek was never a popular author to the extent that everyone was reading him at the corner newsstand. But the Austrian refugee showed how the roots of Hitler’s tyranny and the bases of Marxist collectivism were one and the same. His work had a profound influence on a generation of freedom loving young conservatives. Even”
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
“Mao would hardly be deterred by the universal condemnation of the civilized world. He saw Stalin as his model. In the agrarian reforms, Stalin had killed seven million; Mao himself killed an estimated forty million Chinese in his reforms.49”
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
― America: The Last Best Hope (Volume II): From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom
