“After last night's debate, the reputation of Messieurs Lincoln and Douglas is secure.”
On the televised debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon (26 September 1960)
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Edward R. Murrow 67
Television journalist 1908–1965Related quotes

2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates

Brooks D. Simpson. "What Lincoln Said at Charleston: In Context, Part Two" https://cwcrossroads.wordpress.com/2011/02/11/what-lincoln-said-at-charleston-in-context-part-two/ (11 February 2011), Crossroads, WordPress
2010s

2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates

2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates

“Before the first before and after the last after, there is night waiting.”
Before and After http://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poem/21375/Before_and_After
From the poems written in English

Remember, the supremacy clause in Article VI of the Constitution says that this Constitution, and the laws and treaties made in pursuance thereof, are the supreme law of land—anything in any law or a constitution of any state to the contrary not withstanding.
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates

2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The South was a Closed Society
Context: DiLorenzo thinks that slavery was not the real issue in the Civil War, that it was the Whig economic program. Banks, tariffs, internal improvements, and what he calls corporate welfare. And he thinks that the slavery question was really only a sham that was not the real question; it was not the real issue. That's very strange for anybody reading the Lincoln-Douglas debates, since the subject of tariffs was never mentioned. The only time the word is used, I think, is when Douglas says that the tariff was one of the questions that the two parties used to discuss. But the only subject discussed in the Lincoln-Douglas debates was slavery in the territories.
“America represented to my father, as Lincoln put it, "the last, best hope of earth."”
I would like to be able to say that this made my father a remarkable man for his time and his circumstances. For, in many ways, he truly was a wonder. But this is not one of those ways. Among the Hungarians I knew—aside from those who were true believers in the Communists—this was the common sense of the subject. It was self-evident to them.
"Born American, But in the Wrong Place" (2006)