776 Stupidest Things Ever Said (12 page)

BOOK: 776 Stupidest Things Ever Said
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Howard Cosell, sports commentator, commenting on a quarterback

On the Present:

Yesterday, you may remember, we made each other a promise. I now recall it, but you already sense all the trouble we will have in ordering all these presents, these past presents which consist of a promise, whose opening toward the present to come is not that of an expectation or an anticipation but that of a commitment.

Paul de Man, a noted scholar of the popular academic discipline of deconstructionism. From
Memoires for Paul de Man;
with translations and notes by Jonathan Culler.

On the Presidency:

The President is guilty of misdemeanors. It is inherent in the office.

Leonard Garment, special White House consultant, on then President Richard Nixon’s involvement in Watergate

On the Presidency:

Now I’m no cowboy. I pitch horseshoes for a living, but I don’t ride these broncos.

George Bush in Texas, explaining what his job as President entailed

On the Presidency:

I am now going over and sign, and as you can notice how cold it is, twelve pens there are too cold—they can only sign one letter, each pen. If my name came out to thirteen letters, I would have misspelled it.

President Ronald Reagan at the signing ceremony of a Social Security bill

On the Presidency:

I wouldn’t want anything to happen to the President of the United States, even though I might be in some kind of line of succession. It probably will never happen, but it’s nice to think about anyway.

Senator Warren Magnuson, upon becoming president pro tem of the Senate

On the Presidency, Reasons to Run:

Well, I’m—were I to make the announcement and to run, the reasons that I would run is because I have a great belief in this country, that it is—there’s more natural resources than any nation of the world, there’s the greatest educated population in the world, the greatest technology of any country in the world, and the greatest political system in the world….

Senator Edward Kennedy, during a November 4, 1979, on-air interview with Roger Mudd

On Press Agents, Good Advice From:

[You reporters] should have printed what he meant, not what he said.

Earl Bush, press aide to Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, Sr., scolding reporters

On Principles, Political:

I will talk to my stockbroker, and unless he gives me some good reason why I shouldn’t, I would be pleased to dispose of [my South African investments]. I am very much opposed to apartheid.

California State Senator Milton Marks, on his South African stockholdings; in the
Los Angeles Times

On Priorities:

Here at the ministry we have other, more urgent, situations to deal with.

Jorge Luna of the Peruvian Labor Ministry after hearing that gold miners in the jungle were enslaving thousands of children

On Problems:

Everyone wants to jump into my throat!

Michael Curtiz, Hollywood director, complaining to his assistant

On Problems, Big:

This problem is a two-headed sword: it could grow like a mushing room.

Gib Lewis, Speaker of the Texas House, quoted by Molly Ivins in the
New York Times Magazine

On Profits, How to Divide Equally:

The profits shall be equally divided and the residue goes to the governor.

Irish Bank Bill of 1808

On Promises:

I have not reneged on my promise. I have changed my mind.

New York gubernatorial candidate Pierre Rinfret, on why he released only one of the tax returns he had promised to show the public

On Publishing:

Send all the details. Never mind the facts.

telegram from the editor of the old
New York World
to his Washington correspondent

Q
On Qualifications:

After finding no qualified candidates for the position of principal, the school department is extremely pleased to announce the appointment of David Steele to the post.

Philip Streifer, superintendent of schools, Barrington, Rhode Island

On Qualifications for Holding Political Office:

Anyone can be elected governor. I’m proof of that.

Joe Frank Harris, two-term Georgia governor, talking about who might fill his shoes

On Questions:

If you ask me anything I don’t know, I’m not going to answer.

Yogi Berra to a radio broadcaster before an interview

On Questions:

Let me ask you a question, for your information.

attributed to Gregory Ratoff, 1930s and ’40s Hollywood director of films such as
Intermezzo

On Questions, Answering:

In a general way, we try to anticipate some of your questions so that I can respond “no comment” with some degree of knowledge.

William Baker, CIA spokesman, to the press

On Questions, Rhetorical:

Have we gone beyond the bounds of reasonable dishonesty?

CIA memo; introduced during the Westmoreland/CBS libel suit

On Quiet:

If you can’t keep quiet, shut up!

Gregory Ratoff, 1930s and ’40s Hollywood director of films such as
Intermezzo,
to his crew

On Quiet:

I want to hear it so quiet we can hear a mouse dropping.

Gregory Ratoff

On Quiet:

After being told the correct metaphor for quiet was a pin:

Exactly, like a mouse pin dropping.

Gregory Ratoff

On Quotes:

I really didn’t say everything I said.

Yogi Berra, in
The Sporting News,
discussing the sayings he has become famous for

On Quotes:

Don’t quote what he says. Say what he means!

campaign aide for Senator Barry Goldwater, then making a bid for the ’64 presidency, to reporters

R
On Race Relations:

Sure, I look like a white man. But my heart is as black as anyone’s here.

George Wallace, Alabama governor and then presidential candidate, during a campaign speech to a largely black audience

On Race Relations:

Why would we have different races if God meant us to be alike and associate with each other?

Lester Maddox, former governor of Georgia

On Radioactive Leaks, the Nonnews-Worthiness of:

The thing is this—we have incidents happening here all the time.

Department of Energy spokesman at Hanford, Washington, on why no announcement was made on a leak of radioactive material

On Rape:

I say this a lot, and I probably shouldn’t: the difference between rape and seduction is salesmanship.

Bill Carpenter, mayor of Independence, Missouri

On Rats:

I smell a rat, I see him floating in the air, but mark me, I shall nip him in the bud.

Sir Boyle Roche, eighteenth-century Member of Parliament from Tralee and famous word mangier

On Reading the Crowd:

They made an animal-type grunting sound when the National Guard was mentioned. There were some good-natured grunts. Let me admit theoretically that some people hissed.

David Beckwith, press secretary to Vice-President Dan Quayle, commenting on rumors that West Point cadets hissed at Quayle

On Ronald Reagan, Empathy of:

If I listened to him [Michael Dukakis] long enough I would be convinced that we’re in an economic downturn and people are homeless and going without food and medical attention and that we’ve got to do something about the unemployed.

President Ronald Reagan, during the presidential campaign, talking about Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis’s criticism of the Administration

On Ronald Reagan, Sense of Humor of:

My fellow Americans. I’ve signed legislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes.

President Ronald Reagan, before he was going to make a radio broadcast, unaware that the mike was already on

On Rebukes:

Sir, you have tasted two whole worms; you have hissed all my mystery lectures and been caught fighting a liar in the quad, you will leave Oxford by the next town drain.

Rev. William A. Spooner telling a student to leave his class for nonattendance and lighting fires; his classic spoonerism

On the Recession, Where to Find:

The recession has been in the back of my mind, but I’ve seen no sign of it whatsoever.

Auntie Pasta executive interviewed in
Gourmet News,
April 1991

On Record Executives, Great Decisions of:

You’ll never make it—four groups are out. Go back to Liverpool….

Decca Records executive to the Beatles in 1962

On Red Lights, Meaning of:

He can run any time he wants. I’m giving him the red light.

Yogi Berra, talking about new Yankee Rickey Henderson, known for his base-stealing ability

On Redundancy:

I’m for abolishing and doing away with redundancy.

J. Curtis McKay of the Wisconsin State Elections Board

On Reform, Political:

We must restore to Chicago all the good things it never had.

Richard Daley, mayor of Chicago

On Reform, Teamsters and:

To those who say it is time to reform this organization and that it’s time the officers stopped selling out its members, I say “Go to hell.”

Frank Fitzsimmons, Teamsters Union president

On Relatives:

This extraordinary man left no children behind him, except his brother, who was killed at the same time.

from a biography of French revolutionary leader Robespierre, in a nineteenth-century Irish paper

On Relatives:

Are you any relation to your brother Marv?

Leon Wood, New Jersey Nets guard, to Steve Albert, Nets TV commentator

On Relatives:

My dear Sandby. I’m glad to see you. Pray is it you or your brother?

Sir W. Caulfield, British literary figure, greeting a friend

On Religion, Newspapers and:

It isn’t like I came down from Mount Sinai with the tabloids.

Indianapolis Colts coach Ron Meyer

On Religion and Sports:

If Jesus were a football player, he’d play fair, he’d play clean, and he’d put the guy across the line on his butt.

Barry Rice, football player for evangelist Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University

On Religion and Sports:

If Christ were a ballplayer, he’d be the best there was. He’d take out the guy at second base, then he’d say, “I love you,” pick him up, slap him on the butt and come back to the dugout.

Brett Butler, Los Angeles Dodger

On Religion and Sports:

I can’t perceive God being on the mound in the ninth inning and saying [a loss] is the way it should be. I perceive Him as being an individual who would beat you any way He can as long as it’s within the rules.

Dick Balderson, general manager of the Seattle Mariners

On Religion and Sports:

If Jesus were on the field, he’d be pitching inside and breaking up double plays. He’d be high-fiving the other guys.

Tim Burke, Montreal Expos pitcher

On Repeating Yourself:

I have reiterated over again what I have said before.

Mayor Robert F. Wagner of New York

On Reputations:

His reputation preceded him before he got here.

Don Mattingly, New York Yankee, on Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden

On Retreat, Other Words for:

Should the Red hordes continue to pour across the Yalu, it might not only render impossible the resumption of our offensive, but conceivably could eventuate in a movement in retrograde.

General Douglas MacArthur in a press conference, commenting on the situation in Korea

On Revolutions, What to Do in:

I would take my own head by the hair, cut it off, and presenting it to the despot, would say to him, “Tyrant, behold the act of a free man.”

a perhaps overzealous French revolutionary speaking to mob in Paris in 1789, reported by Anglo-American revolutionary Thomas Paine

On the Rhythm Method According to Experts:

… the safe times [for sex] are the week before and the week of ovulation.

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, in
First Love: A Young People’s Guide to Sexual Information.
The typo (“safe” for “unsafe”) resulted in a huge book recall and the issuance of a new, corrected edition.

On Riding:

Now ride off in all directions.

Michael Curtiz, directing Gary Cooper on a horse

On Being Right:

You are partly one hundred percent right.

movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn

On Riots, Interesting Ways to Control:

… airplanes may be used for the purpose of keeping rioters off roofs by means of machine gun fire … infantry should and will invariably constitute
the major part of any command employed in suppressing domestic disorders … armored cars will be especially valuable in riot duty….

General Douglas MacArthur,
Military Aid in Disturbances
(1935), in which he also comes out against the use of blanks, as an “admission of weakness.” Shoot to kill, he urged. From George Seldes, famous muckraking journalist of the era.

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