Emmanuel Macron (1977) 25th President of the French Republic
Brexit: EU stands fully behind Ireland, says Barnier https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-47847700 BBC News (8 April 2019) <br class="br">2017, 2019
Emmanuel Macron (1977) 25th President of the French Republic
Brexit: EU stands fully behind Ireland, says Barnier https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-47847700 BBC News (8 April 2019) <br class="br">2017, 2019
Mark Steyn book America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It
Source: America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It (2006), Ch. 5, p. 98
Fritz Roethlisberger (1898–1974) American business theorist
Cited in: Urwick & Brech (1961: 177)
Management and the worker, 1939
Paul Fussell (1924–2012) Recipient of the Purple Heart medal
Humanities interview (1996)
Context: I was very interested in the Great War, as it was called then, because it was the initial twentieth-century shock to European culture. By the time we got to the Second World War, everybody was more or less used to Europe being badly treated and people being killed in multitudes. The Great War introduced those themes to Western culture, and therefore it was an immense intellectual and cultural and social shock.
Robert Sherwood, who used to write speeches for Franklin D. Roosevelt, once noted that the cynicism about the Second War began before the firing of the first shot. By that time, we didn't need to be told by people like Remarque and Siegfried Sassoon how nasty war was. We knew that already, and we just had to pursue it in a sort of controlled despair. It didn't have the ironic shock value of the Great War.
And I chose to write about Britain because America was in that war a very, very little time compared to the British — just a few months, actually. The British were in it for four years, and it virtually destroyed British society.
Pierre Trudeau (1919–2000) 15th Prime Minister of Canada
As quoted in Prime Ministers (2000) by Rennay Craats
Laura Riding Jackson (1901–1991) poet, critic, novelist, essayist and short story writer
"The Corpus", from Anarchism Is Not Enough (London: Jonathan Cape, 1928)