Dwight Eisenhower — "I'd rather be a good golf player than a good President."
I'd rather be a good golf player than a good President.
I'd rather be a good golf player than a good President.
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"Plans are useless, but planning is indispensable."
"There is no glory in battle save in the fulfillment of duty."
"Some of our people have been so indoctrinated that they can't think for themselves. They just follow the party line."
"The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without."
"I'm not a man who believes in wasting words. I get straight to the point."
Five-star Allied Supreme Commander in WWII Europe and 34th US President (1953-1961), whose January 1961 farewell address coined 'military-industrial complex.' Closely associated with George C. Marshall (his Army mentor and the Marshall Plan author) and Douglas MacArthur (Pacific Theater rival). For an intellectual contrast, see Joseph McCarthy, Wisconsin Republican senator (1947-1957) — Eisenhower privately despised McCarthy's Communist witch-hunt tactics but publicly tolerated him until McCarthy attacked the US Army in 1954; Ike's quiet engineering of the Army-McCarthy hearings undid McCarthy and ended the worst phase of McCarthyism. The establishment-Republican vs anti-establishment-Republican fault line that still defines the GOP.
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