A Force So Swift Quotes
A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
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A Force So Swift Quotes
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“But Acheson said nothing about Taiwan—or even Korea. “We can help,” he concluded, “only where we are wanted and only where the conditions of help are really sensible and possible.”
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
“He explained by quoting a favorite classical Greek definition of happiness: “the exercise of vital powers along lines of excellence, in a life affording them scope.” Public service, he wrote, provided an antidote to the “flatness of life.”
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
“His father, Acheson later recalled, believed that a great deal in life “could not be affected or mitigated, and, hence, must be borne. Borne without complaint, because complaints were a bore and nuisance to others and undermined the serenity essential to endurance.”
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
“A bad temper in a man is preferable to a man without a temper,” Madame Chiang had once explained to her sisters.”
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
― A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China, 1949
