Here are a few
politically incorrect quotations that I’ve collected that might not find
acceptance today among the liberal gate keepers. They might even make a
liberal's head explode.
President Harry S. Truman
President Harry S. Truman
“The most important
business in this Nation — or any other nation, for that matter — is raising and
training children. If those children have the proper environment at home, and
educationally, very, very few of them ever turn out wrong. I don't think we put
enough stress on the necessity of implanting in the child's mind the moral code
under which we live.
“The fundamental basis
of this Nation’s law was given to Moses on the Mount. The fundamental basis of
our Bill of Rights comes from the teachings which we get from Exodus and St.
Matthew, from Isaiah and St. Paul. I don’t think we emphasize that enough these
days.
“If we don’t have the proper fundamental moral background, we will
finally wind up with a totalitarian government which does not believe in rights
for anybody except the state.”[1]
Chief
Justice Earl Warren
“I believe no one can
read the history of our country without realizing that the Good Book and the
spirit of the Savior have from the beginning been our guiding geniuses. . . .
Whether we look to the first charter of Virginia. . . or to the Charter of New
England . . . or to the Charter of Massachusetts Bay . . . or to the
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut . . . the same objective is present: A Christian
land governed by Christian principles. . . .
“I believe the entire
Bill of Rights came into being because of the knowledge our forefathers had of
the Bible and their belief in it: freedom of belief, of expression, of
assembly, of petition, the dignity of the individual, the sanctity of the home,
equal justice under law, and the reservation of powers to the people. . . .
“I like to believe we are living today in the spirit of the
Christian religion. I like also to believe that as long as we do so, no great
harm can come to our country.”[2]
Ted
Koppel of Nightline
“What Moses brought down from Mt. Sinai were not the Ten
Suggestions. They are commandments. Are,
not were.
The sheer brilliance of the Ten Commandments is that they codify in a handful
of words acceptable human behavior, not just for then or now, but for all time.
Language evolves. Power shifts from one nation to another. Messages are
transmitted with the speed of light. Man erases one frontier after another. And
yet we and our behavior and the commandments governing that behavior remain the
same.”[3]
This isn't to say that
these men actually followed through consistently with their statements, but it
is interesting how even liberals realize that morality is neither arbitrary or
man-made.
Notes:
- Harry S. Truman: “Address Before the Attorney General’s Conference on Law Enforcement Problems” (February 15, 1950). [↩]
- “Breakfast in Washington,” Time, February 14, 1954, 49. Quoted in Jim Nelson Black, When Nations Die: Ten Warning Signs of a Culture in Crisis (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1994), 253. [↩]
- Ted Koppel, The Last Word, Commencement Address at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina (May 10, 1987). Quoted in Robert H. Bork, The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law (New York: The Free Press, 1989), 164. [↩]
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