Charles Lindbergh — "The greatest challenge in life is to overcome your own fears."
The greatest challenge in life is to overcome your own fears.
The greatest challenge in life is to overcome your own fears.
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"We must guard against the dilution of our race by inferior strains."
"The future of our country depends on the character of our people, not on the size of our armies."
"The greatest adventure of all is to live a life that is true to yourself."
"We must not enter this war. It is a war for the Jews and the British."
"I have always been a loner. I prefer to be by myself, where I can think and dream."
American aviator who completed the first solo nonstop transatlantic flight (Spirit of St. Louis, May 1927) and later led the isolationist America First Committee against US entry into WWII. Closely associated with Amelia Earhart (aviation contemporary). For an intellectual contrast, see Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd US President — FDR's interventionist Lend-Lease policy and 1941 declaration of war ended Lindbergh's America First isolationism; FDR publicly questioned Lindbergh's loyalty in April 1941, leading Lindbergh to resign his Air Corps Reserve commission. The cleanest 'interventionist president vs celebrity-isolationist' pairing in 20th-century US politics.
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