The Invisible Bridge Quotes

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The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan by Rick Perlstein
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The Invisible Bridge Quotes Showing 1-30 of 39
“What does sincerity mean if it is chosen as deliberate strategy?”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Increasingly we confused the pursuit of happiness with the pursuit of pleasure.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Besides, he knew something that Chuck Percy, ABC News, the New Yorker, the New York Times, and even the President of the United States did not know: a new conservative-movement political machine was humming just beneath the Establishment’s radar in North Carolina, ready to rewire what people thought they knew about how American politics worked. THE”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“He talks to people's grievances, but he doesn't seem mad. – Elizabeth Drew”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“It was called A Ford, Not a Lincoln, and in it, Richard Reeves described him as “slow, plodding, pedestrian, unimaginative,” “inarticulate,” and “ignorant”—though you didn’t have to take Reeves’s word for it. He also quoted the president’s Grand Rapids pastor: “Gerald Ford is a normal, decent, God-fearing man, but you can say that about a lot of people.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Heroes can only thrive where ignorance reduces history to mythology. They. cannot survive the coldly critical temper of modern thought when it is functioning normally, nor can they be worshipped by a generation which has every facility for determining their foibles and analyzing their limitations.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“One does not hold a conversation with him. One holds a symposium. – Elizabeth Drew”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“To claim the mantle of purity is always a risky business. It just gives an excuse to be disillusioned once your ordinary humidity is exposed.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Conservatives felt victimized by a sort of radicalism that, because it graced Middle American classrooms, did not seem radical to most Americans at all.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Some days there were more police in schools than students. Rumors spread that armed black marauders would ride through their neighborhoods shooting whites at random; that blacks were carrying knives and razors to school to turn girls’ rooms into rape rooms. So whites started carrying them first.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Some in his community were suspicious, too—how convenient that people always managed to almost drown themselves whenever young Reagan was around, and how annoying that he never seemed to shut up about it.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“People want to believe. Ronald Reagan was able to make people believe.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“It was part of what made Reagan's national prospects seem grand. Because nostalgia was becoming a national cult.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“America the Innocent, always searching for the totems of a unity that it can never quite achieve--even, or especially, when its crises of disunity are most pressing. It is one of the structuring stories of our nation. The "return to normalcy" enjoined by Warren Harding after the Great War; the cult of suburban home and hearth after World War II; the union of hearts declaimed by Adams on Boston's Bunker Hill parade ground after the War Between the States.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“America had not yet become Reagan’s America. Not yet. Reagan’s America would embrace an almost official cult of optimism—the belief that America could do no wrong. Or, to put it another way, that if America did it, it was by definition not wrong. That would come later. But signs were already pointing in that direction.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Some people think an actor should keep his mouth shut. I think that is wrong. An actor should be careful to know that no group is using him for a selfish purpose, but if he sincerely believes in something he should use his voice.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Haldeman exposed the other side of the Silent Majority rhetorical coin: it welcomed division. It welcomed hate. For if the world was divided between good and evil, hating evil was the appropriate response. And what violations of procedural nicety weren’t permissible in order to vanquish evil?”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“world run according to the Gospel of Richard Nixon, where good guys were always good no matter what they actually did, bad guys were always and everywhere ontologically evil, and no one will be safe until “ ‘we’ crack down on ‘them,’ occasionally adopting their tactics.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“But if you admit to not having the answer to any of the problems facing the nation, why should anyone vote of your for President?” “I believe I am the best qualified to wing it.” But”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Failures as people: millions of Americans felt that this description fit them to a T. Seeking a solution, any solution, they eagerly forked over their cash to any huckster who promised release, the quicker and more effortlessly the better: therapies like “bioenergetics” (“The Revolutionary Therapy That Uses the Language of the Body to Heal the Problems of the Mind”); Primal Scream (which held that when patients shrieked in a therapist’s office, childhood trauma could be reexperienced, then released; John Lennon and James Earl Jones were fans); or Transcendental Meditation, which promised that deliverance could come if you merely closed your eyes and chanted a mantra (the “TM” organization sold personal mantras, each supposedly “unique,” to hundreds of thousands of devotees). Or “religions” like the Church Universal and Triumphant, or the Reverend Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church, or “Scientology”—this last one invented by a science fiction writer, reportedly on a bet. Devotees paid cash to be “audited” by practitioners who claimed the power—if, naturally, you paid for enough sessions—to remove “trauma patterns” accreted over the 75 million years that had passed since Xenu, tyrant of the Galactic Confederacy, deposited billions of people on earth next to volcanoes and detonated hydrogen bombs inside those volcanos, thus scattering harming “body thetans” to attach to the souls of the living, which once unlatched allowed practitioners to cross the “bridge to total freedom” and “unlimited creativity.” Another religion, the story had it, promised “perfect knowledge”—though its adherents’ public meeting was held up several hours because none of them knew how to run the movie projector. Gallup reported that six million Americans had tried TM, five million had twisted themselves into yoga poses, and two million had sampled some sort of Oriental religion. And hundreds of thousands of Americans in eleven cities had plunked down $250 for the privilege being screamed at as “assholes.” “est”—Erhard Seminars Training, named after the only-in-America hustler who invented it, Werner Erhard, originally Jack Rosenberg, a former used-car and encyclopedia salesman who had tried and failed to join the Marines (this was not incidental) at the age of seventeen, and experienced a spiritual rebirth one morning while driving across the Golden Gate Bridge (“I realized that I knew nothing. . . . In the next instant—after I realized that I knew nothing—I realized that I knew everything”)—promised “to transform one’s ability to experience living so that the situations one had been trying to change or had been putting up with, clear up just in the process of life itself,” all that in just sixty hours, courtesy of a for-profit corporation whose president had been general manager of the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of California and a former member of the Harvard Business School faculty. A”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Then, on April 7, the bishop for the diocese of the four counties surrounding San Diego, representing some 512,000 Catholics, an activist in the city’s nonsectarian Pro-Life League, announced priests would refuse Holy Communion to any Catholic who “admits publicly” to membership in the National Organization for Women or any other group advocating abortion: “The issue at stake is not only what we do to unborn children but what we do to ourselves by permitting them to be killed.” He called abortion a “serious moral crime” that “ignores God and his love.” NOW proclaimed this year’s Mother’s Day a “Mother’s Day of Outrage”—in response, it said, to the Roman Catholic hierarchy’s “attempt to undermine the right of women to control their own bodies.” The president of Catholics for Free Choice and the Southern California coordinator for NOW’s Human Reproduction Task Force, Jan Gleeson, recently returned from Southeast Asia as an Operation Babylift volunteer, clarified the feminist group’s position: “It opposes compulsory pregnancy and reaffirms a woman’s right to privacy to control her own body as basic to her spiritual, economic, and social well-being.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“God might choose his own time, but Reagan had a taste for coming to the rescue.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Do what you are doing. Monastic motto”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“An anti-politician is hardly an anti-politician once he starts winning and works to close the deal by working to sew up the Establishment.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Politics is motion." John Sears”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Chronicling the mid-1970s up session with Gerald Ford's clumsiness, the author quotes a medieval maxim that the king has two bodies. The head of state has a physical body like everyone else, but he also represents the body politic, either reflecting its majesty or its weakness.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Governing is not a hero's profession. It is a profession of compromises.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Congressmen had a use for their very own son of a bitch.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan
“Now even reformers needed political machines.”
Rick Perlstein, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan

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