A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right.
Thomas PaineRead
It has been the political career of this man to begin with hypocrisy, proceed with arrogance, and finish with contempt
Interpretation
The quote criticizes a politician's insincerity and disregard for others throughout his career.
Thomas Paine's quote highlights the negative trajectory of a political career marked by deception, arrogance, and a lack of respect for constituents. It suggests that effective leadership requires sincerity and respect, and that a failure to embody these values leads to a toxic legacy that harms both the politician and society at large.
In practice
This quote can be used during a political debate to illustrate the shortcomings of a rival candidate.
A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial appearance of being right.
That God cannot lie, is no advantage to your argument, because it is no proof that priests can not, or that the Bible does not.
I consider the war of America against Britain as the country's war, the public's war, or the war of the people in their own behalf, for the security of their natural rights, and the protection of their own property.
Had the news of salvation by Jesus Christ been inscribed on the face of the sun and the moon, in characters that all nations would have understood, the whole earth had known it in twenty-four hours, and all nations would have believed it; whereas, though it is now almost two thousand years since, as they tell us, Christ came upon earth, not a twentieth part of the people of the earth know anything of it, and among those who do, the wiser part do not believe it.
The end of all political associations is the preservation of the natural and imprescriptible rights of man; and these rights are liberty, property, security, and resistance of oppression.
To reason with goverments, as they have existed for ages, is to argue with brutes. It is only from the nations themselves that reforms can be expected
Economic libertarians and Christian evangelicals, united by their common enemy, are strange bedfellows in today's Republican party, just as the two Georges - the archconservative Wallace and the uberliberal McGovern - found themselves in the same Democratic Party in 1972.
If Obama's enormous symbolic power draws primarily from being the country's first black president, it also draws from his membership in hip-hop's foundational generation.
Fear obscures reason, intensifies emotions, and makes it easier for demagogic politicians to mobilize the public on behalf of the policies they want to pursue.
When all the objectives of government include the achievement of equality - other than equality before the law - that government poses a threat to liberty.
There is a tendency in all parties, when they have been for a long time in possession of power, to augment it.
We can either be governed by fear - fear of immigrants, fear of Muslims, call the press the enemy of the people, tear kids away from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border - or we can be governed by our ambitions and our aspirations and our desire to make the most out of all of us. And that's America at its best.
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