Theodore Roosevelt — "I have always been a great believer in the power of the individual."
I have always been a great believer in the power of the individual.
I have always been a great believer in the power of the individual.
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"When you are in a fight, fight as if you are the only one who can win."
"I am a strong believer in the doctrine of 'the big stick in foreign policy.'"
"I am not a man of words; I am a man of deeds."
"A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country is good enough to be given a square deal afterward."
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the ar…"
26th US President (1901-1909), Progressive trust-buster, conservation pioneer, and the youngest person to assume the presidency (after McKinley's assassination). Closely associated with William Howard Taft (his hand-picked successor and later 1912 election rival) and Gifford Pinchot (his Forest Service chief and conservation co-architect). For an intellectual contrast, see J.P. Morgan, financier and architect of Northern Securities (1837-1913) — TR's 1902 antitrust suit against Morgan's Northern Securities railroad combination was the founding act of progressive antitrust enforcement. Their famous 1902 White House meeting — where Morgan reportedly said 'send your man to my man' and TR refused — is the canonical moment of presidential authority asserting over private financial power.
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