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Peace is a journey of a thousand miles and it must be taken one step at a time.
Lyndon B. Johnson
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Interpretation

What this quote means

Achieving peace requires patience and gradual progress.

The quote by Lyndon B. Johnson emphasizes that peace is not an instantaneous state but a long-term goal that one must pursue steadily and persistently. Each small step contributes to the larger journey towards achieving peace, encouraging individuals to embrace the process and not rush towards the destination.

Themes

PeaceJourneyStepsPatienceProgress

In practice

Example use cases

This quote can inspire a team working on a long-term project to stay focused on incremental progress.

More from Lyndon B. Johnson

You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, "you are free to compete with all the others," and still justly believe that you have been completely fair. We seek not just legal equity but human ability, not just equality as a right and a theory but equality as a fact and equality as a result.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead
We do this in order to slow down aggression. We do this to increase the confidence of the brave people of South Vietnam who have bravely born this brutal battle for so many years with so many casualties. And we do this to convince the leaders of North Vietnam-and all who seek to share their conquest-of a simple fact: We will not be defeated. We will not grow tired. We will not withdraw either openly or under the cloak of a meaningless agreement.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead
So far are we generally from thinking what we often say of the shortness of life, that at the time when it is necessarily shortest we form projects which we delay to execute, indulge such expectations as nothing but along train of events can gratify, and suffer those passions to gain upon us which are only excusable in the prime of life.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead
You do not examine legislation in the light of the benefits it will convey if properly administered, but in the light of the wrongs it would do and the harms it would cause if improperly administered.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead
If government is to serve any purpose it is to do for others what they are unable to do for themselves.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead
I seldom think of politics more than eighteen hours a day.
Lyndon B. JohnsonRead

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Peace, like charity, begins at home.
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Peace is a question of will. All conflicts can be settled, and there are no excuses for allowing them to become eternal.
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The world cannot live at peace without the United Nations. For this reason: it creates a reasonable guarantee that all this change in the world, these tremendous political and economic developments, can be channelized, kept orderly. The United Nations is a mold that keeps the hot metal from spilling over.
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By its existence, the Peace Movement denies that governments know best; it stands for a different order of priorities: the human race comes first.
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The quest for a war-free world has a basic purpose: survival. But if in the process we learn how to achieve it by love rather than by fear, by kindness rather than by compulsion; if in the process we learn to combine the essential with the enjoyable, the expedient with the benevolent, the practical with the beautiful, this will be an extra incentive to embark on this great task.
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I dream of an Africa which is in peace with itself.
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