Archive for the ‘Quotes’ Category

Informed Comment: Obama Scores against McCain

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Informed Comment: Obama Scores against McCain

‘ MR. RUSSERT: . . . do you reserve a right as American president to go back into Iraq, once you have withdrawn, with sizable troops in order to quell any kind of insurrection or civil war? SEN. OBAMA: . . . Now, I always reserve the right for the president — as commander in chief, I will always reserve the right to make sure that we are looking out for American interests. And if al Qaeda is forming a base in Iraq, then we will have to act in a way that secures the American homeland and our interests abroad. So that is true, I think, not just in Iraq, but that’s true in other places. That’s part of my argument with respect to Pakistan. . .’

Note that Obama was simply responding to Russert’s hypothetical, which assumed that the US was already out of Iraq but that in the aftermath, there was “insurrection” or “civil war.” The world that Russert imagined was presumably one in which Iraq had firmed up enough for the US to get out, but then at some later time it developed substantial civil unrest. Russert was presumably attempting to find out if the Democratic candidates were adopting an isolationist position, of getting out and staying out. Obama implied that no, if al-Qaeda came back to Iraq and formed a new base years from now, he would “act” in such a way as to “secure American interests.” He is not an isolationist. Note that he was not specific about how exactly he would act.

good and evil

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

The mere ability to choose between good and evil is the lowest limit of freedom, and the only thing that is free about it is the fact that we can still choose good.

To the extent that you are free to choose evil, you are not free. An evil choice destroys freedom.

We can never choose evil as evil: only as an apparent good. But when we decide to do something that seems to us to be good when it is not really so, we are doing something that we do not really want to do, and therefore we are not really free.

~ Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation, ch. 27 (1961).

[From No Comment]

William Penn on Government

Monday, September 10th, 2007

Taken from Penn’s Preface to the Frame of Government of Pennsylvania, 1682: ((Reprinted in Kermit Hall, Major Problems in American Constitutional History: Documents and Essays, 2 vols., Vol. I: The Colonial Era Through Reconstruction, (Lexington, Mass.: D.C. Heath, 1992), 38-40.))

“Any government is free to the people under it (whatever be the frame) where the laws rule, and the people are a party to those laws, and more than this is tyranny, oligarchy, or confusion.”

“Governments, like clocks, go from the motion men give them; and as governments are made and moved by men, so by them they are ruined too.”

“Let men be good, and the government cannot be bad; if it be ill, they will cure it. But, if men be bad, let the government be never so good, they will endeavor to warp and spoil it to their turn.”

“It is true, good laws have some awe upon ill ministers, but that is where they have not power to escape or abolish them, and the people are generally wise and good: but a loose and depraved people (which is the question) love laws and an administration like themselves.”

Essential backpacking items

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

What are the three most essential backpacking items?

“Toys, water, and food. Without water and food, you’ll die. If you don’t bring toys, all you’ll have to play with is rocks and sticks.” –A. M. Frick (age 5) ((http://www.theplacewithnoname.com/hiking/sections/gear/gear.htm))

Human institutions

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

“Human institutions inevitably gather around themselves burning idealists seeking to attract unprincipled practices, even when they are producing humanitarian results; dignified conservatives willing to defend the worst social abuses because even human suffering is preferable to the adoption of unsound principles; stern realists intent in showing that society is a sham; and devoted scholars busy painting a rational, logical, and moral paradise for the comfort of those struggling in an irrational world.”

Thurman Arnold, Symbols of Government (1935), 10 as quoted in Howard Gillman, The Constitution Besieged (Durham: Duke University Press, 1993), 265 note 3.

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Joseph Epstein on Lust

Tuesday, March 15th, 2005

“Beyond a certain age–and I fear I have reached it–too great an interest in lust appears unseemly, not to say obscene, in a man.”

Joseph Epstein on why he forwent writing about lust for the Oxford University Press series of books on the seven deadly sins. Epstein settled on Envy.

H.L.A. Hart, The Concept of Law

Tuesday, January 11th, 2005

Today must be the day for quotes I find amusing for I have just found another one in Hart’s The Concept of Law:

“Yet these seemingly paradoxical utterances [about what law is] were not made by visionaries or philosophers professionally concerned to doubt the plainest deliverances of common sense.” Emphasis added.

It captures in an amusing way what I view as one of the failings of some modern philosophy, namely, a lack of common sense and connection to reality.

Grant Gilmore, The Ages of American Law

Tuesday, January 11th, 2005

“My description of American law before the Civil War sounded like a romp though the Garden of Eden. Wherever we went we paused to admire the happy sight of great judges deciding great cases greatly . . . .”

I love that line.