Becoming Madam Secretary Quotes
Becoming Madam Secretary
by
Stephanie Dray28,314 ratings, 4.45 average rating, 3,289 reviews
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Becoming Madam Secretary Quotes
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“Why economics?" I echoed gamely. "Because many people in America believe poverty is a moral problem having to do with sloth or some other sin we an blame on individuals. But I believe poverty in American is an economic problem that can be solved.. and I intend to solve it.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Churchill once said that meeting Franklin Roosevelt was like opening your first bottle of champagne, and that knowing him was like drinking it.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“this gives us hope that some of the things which may be suggested today, which may be regarded as controversial, will be accepted as part of the ordinary life of Americans in ten or twenty years. That’s what progress is.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“You’ve been the first to do so many things so that other women could follow in your footsteps.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“If we don’t keep chasing the future, we’ll think too much about the past.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Are you sure you want these things done? Because you won't want me for secretary of labor if you don't. I'd be an embarrassment to you, because when I start on a thing, I round up cohorts. I whip up public demand. You wouldn't want me if you didn't want that.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“We’ve got to give our people a reason to believe in our democratic system so they’ll stand up for it. If we want to keep our American way of life”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“As my grandmother always said, When in doubt, do what’s right.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“I hadn’t been able to imagine that my storied ancestors wanted to bequeath me a country in which poverty and suffering were tolerated.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“if Americans wanted to keep their freedom, they ought to don liberty caps like the Founding Fathers and resist the concentration of wealth into too few hands. Or we’d reap the economic whirlwind…”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“The delegates fought, ballot after ballot, over an inclusive future or one that embraced bigotry and clutched its collective pearls at alcohol and racy books. I was particularly appalled when William Jennings Bryan, who had run three times under the party’s banner, shouted up at the immigrants in the galleries, “You do not represent the future of America!”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“After all, what was the point of keeping America standing if she didn’t stand for something?”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Miss Perkins, sometimes there's a man—or a woman— who is made for a moment. I happen to think you were made for this one.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Fortunately for Frank, he still did have two perfectly good legs. Eleonor's. And it was Eleanor, as a literal stand-in for her husband, who led the convention in chants and cheers.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“My family built this country with muddy hands and a spark of madness.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“He was a shameless political animal, happy to let underlings execute plans, take credit for them if they succeeded, or pretend he had nothing to do with them if they flopped.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Section 24 was the nickname for agents working under a section of the immigration law that empowered the secretary of labor to deport people. A power that’d been sorely abused. New York policemen had long warned about Section 24 agents behaving like gangsters, roughing people up and raiding private homes and dance halls looking for immigrants to blackmail with threats of deportation if they didn’t pay protection money.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“This job was going to be a little more perilous than I supposed. And from that day on, I carried a copy of my insurance policies and my last will in my handbag so that if anything did happen to me, I wouldn't cause anyone any fuss.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“If we don’t lend a hand to millions of folks out there who’ve lost everything, they’ll be sitting ducks for nationalist demagogues. Just look at what happened in Italy and Germany. It’s going to come to blows one day. We’ve got to give our people a reason to believe in our democratic system so they’ll stand up for it. If we want to keep our American way of life alive and well, we need to give our folks some security and a democracy worth fighting for.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“the battle for democracy is never done. And ours is worth fighting for.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“That man talks like a natural-born dictator, and the president is enabling him.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“the American experiment has repeatedly proved that people fleeing tyranny make grateful citizens—decent, hardworking, and productive. We’ve reaped tangible benefits by taking in scientists, artists, inventors, and entrepreneurs.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“I thought it laughable that he could convince the German people to vote away their own rights and let him do as he pleased. I’m not laughing now.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“These veterans fought for their country, and now they’re out of work with nowhere else to go, and they’re being shot at by their own government.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“What had begun as a recession followed by a stock market crash was now a severe economic depression. Hoover said it would all be over in sixty days.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“The president of the United States has deceived people about employment. It is worse, not better. It’s a cruel deceit because people will believe it.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“apathy was an actual danger to a nation that boasted of being a government both for the people and by the people.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“many people in America believe poverty is a moral problem having to do with sloth or some other sin we can blame on individuals. But I believe poverty in America is an economic problem that can be solved…”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“Social Security—which was expanded again and again to cover more Americans of every race and creed—is now so much a part of American psychology that I truly believe no politician, political party, or political group can possibly destroy it and maintain a democratic system. I suppose I should also be grateful that the reforms I fought for are bricks so firmly embedded in the edifice of our national life that Americans now take them for granted.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
“I also wish to take this opportunity to remind you that the American experiment has repeatedly proved that people fleeing tyranny make grateful citizens—decent, hardworking, and productive. We’ve reaped tangible benefits by taking in scientists, artists, inventors, and entrepreneurs.”
― Becoming Madam Secretary
― Becoming Madam Secretary
