Charles de Gaulle — "I have come to the conclusion that politics are too serious a matter to be left …"
I have come to the conclusion that politics are too serious a matter to be left to the politicians.
I have come to the conclusion that politics are too serious a matter to be left to the politicians.
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"Great men are like eagles, and build their nests on some lofty solitude."
"The true statesman is the one who is able to see beyond the immediate future."
"I am a man of action, not a man of words."
"Man's true nature is to be a beast."
"Faced with a choice between the United States and the Soviet Union, France chooses France."
French general and statesman who led the Free French Forces from London during WWII and founded France's Fifth Republic in 1958. Closely associated with Winston Churchill (wartime British ally and rival) and Konrad Adenauer (postwar German Chancellor and reconciliation partner). For an intellectual contrast, see Philippe Pétain, Marshal of France and Vichy collaborationist head of state — Pétain's June 1940 armistice with Nazi Germany was the surrender de Gaulle's London BBC broadcasts publicly rejected — postwar French identity is structured around which one was right, the surrender path or the resistance.
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