Harry Truman — "The greatest danger to American democracy is the apathy of the American people."
The greatest danger to American democracy is the apathy of the American people.
The greatest danger to American democracy is the apathy of the American people.
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"I don't give a damn about the Republicans or the Democrats. I'm interested in the United States of America."
"The greatest prison where most people live is the fear of what other people think."
"Whenever you have an efficient government, you have a dictatorship."
"Republicans are just like a bunch of old women. They can't make up their minds."
"It's an awful thing to be a President. You can't just go out and buy a new suit without someone saying you're extravagant."
33rd US President who ended WWII (atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki), founded NATO and the Marshall Plan, and integrated the US military. Closely associated with Franklin D. Roosevelt (his predecessor) and Dwight D. Eisenhower (his successor). For an intellectual contrast, see Henry A. Wallace, FDR's progressive Vice President (1941-1945) — Wallace was the VP Truman replaced on the 1944 ticket; Wallace's 1948 Progressive Party campaign attacked Truman from the left for starting the Cold War — the moral road not taken at the dawn of the atomic age.
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