Reported in Didi Kirsten Tatlow, "A System Afraid of Its Own History", The New York Times (September 16, 2010).
“We also have no history of colonialism. So we have all of the things that many people admire about the great powers but none of the things that threaten or bother them.”
At Press Conference at Pittsburgh, September 2009.
2009
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Stephen Harper 70
22nd Prime Minister of Canada 1959Related quotes

Part III, Chapter VI
Les voix du silence [Voices of Silence] (1951)

As quoted in Attorney General and Rebel With a Cause, Dies at 93, By Douglas Martin, New York Times, (10 April 2021)

Nobel Prize acceptance speech (1962)
Context: We have usurped many of the powers we once ascribed to God.
Fearful and unprepared, we have assumed lordship over the life or death of the whole world — of all living things.
The danger and the glory and the choice rest finally in man. The test of his perfectibility is at hand.
Having taken Godlike power, we must seek in ourselves for the responsibility and the wisdom we once prayed some deity might have.
Man himself has become our greatest hazard and our only hope.
So that today, St. John the apostle may well be paraphrased: In the end is the Word, and the Word is Man — and the Word is with Men.

“That’s the thing when people leave us too suddenly, isn’t it? We always have so many questions.”
Source: The First Phone Call from Heaven

Arnold, in The Circle: A Comedy in Three Acts (1921), p. 58-59
Plays

Letter to George Washington (August 1778)