Memorable Political Quotes About Pendulum Swings

25 result(s) for Political Quotes About Pendulum Swings.
"The history of ideas is a history of guilty passions."
Émile M. Cioran
"The pendulum of the mind alternates between sense and nonsense, not between right and wrong."
Carl Jung
"Every reaction is always connected with action."
Ernest Renan
"Extremes, though contrary, have something in common; excess of cold converts to heat."
Edmund Burke
"The death of one era is the beginning of another."
Seneca
"Moderation in all things, including moderation."
Oscar Wilde
"Times of general calamity and confusion have ever been productive of the greatest geniuses."
Benjamin Franklin
Can't find the quotes you're looking for?
"The only thing constant is change."
Heraclitus
"History never looks like history when you are living through it."
John W. Gardner
"The extremes of fortune are never secure."
Tacitus
"Every revolution was first a thought in one man's mind."
Ralph Waldo Emerson
"The pendulum of opinion is always swinging from one extreme to the other."
Thomas Jefferson
"When things are at their worst, that's when you've got to be your best."
Theodore Roosevelt
"All great movements, it is written, go through three stages: ridicule, discussion, adoption."
John Stuart Mill
"After a storm comes a calm."
Matthew Henry
"The hottest fires make the strongest steel."
Richard M. Nixon
"The world is always in movement."
V. S. Naipaul
"Nothing is so permanent as a temporary government program."
Milton Friedman
"Every noble work is at first impossible."
Thomas Carlyle
"The only stable state is the one in which all men are equal before the law."
Aristotle
"One of the greatest dangers of today is not revolution but exhaustion."
Robert Kennedy
Can't find the quotes you're looking for?
"All extremes are error. The reverse of error is not truth, but error still. Truth lies between these extremes."
Thomas Carlyle
"There never was a good war or a bad peace."
Benjamin Franklin
"I have always believed that extremes was the only way to approach things."
John le Carré
"New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already common."
John Locke

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *