
“Anyone who works is a fool. I don't work; I merely inflict myself upon the public.”
Films and Filming vol. 8 (1961)
Source: Ways of Seeing
“Anyone who works is a fool. I don't work; I merely inflict myself upon the public.”
Films and Filming vol. 8 (1961)
Letter to his son, George Mason V. (8 January 1783)
“The caterpillar does all the work, but the butterfly gets all the publicity.”
“All our anxieties relate to time.”
"Sanctifying the Moment" in Lift Up Your Heart (1950)
Context: All our anxieties relate to time. … The major problems of psychiatry revolve around an analysis of the despair, pessimism, melancholy, and complexes that are the inheritances of what has been or with the fears, anxieties, worries, that are the imaginings of what will be.
Grosjean v. American Press Co. (1936)
Speech https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1935/oct/24/international-situation in the House of Commons (24 October 1935)
The 1930s
1900s, A Square Deal (1903)
Context: The welfare of each of us is dependent fundamentally upon the welfare of all of us, and therefore in public life that man is the best representative of each of us who seeks to do good to each by doing good to all; in other words, whose endeavor it is not to represent any special class and promote merely that class's selfish interests, but to represent all true and honest men of all sections and all classes and to work for their interests by working for our common country. We can keep our government on a sane and healthy basis, we can make and keep our social system what it should be, only on condition of judging each man, not as a member of a class, but on his worth as a man. It is an infamous thing in our American life, and fundamentally treacherous to our institutions, to apply to any man any test save that of his personal worth, or to draw between two sets of men any distinction save the distinction of conduct, the distinction that marks off those who do well and wisely from those who do ill and foolishly.
“Prosperity cannot be restored by raids upon the public Treasury.”
Hoover Off the Record (1934)