Lyndon Baines Johnson, often referred to by his initials LBJ, was an American politician who served as the 36th president of the United States from 1963 to 1969. He became president after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, under whom he had served as the 37th vice president from 1961 to 1963.
Lyndon B. Johnson Quotes
1. “Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or lose.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
2. “Doing the right thing is not the problem. Knowing what the right thing is, that’s the challenge.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
3. “If you’re not listening, you’re not learning.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
4. “Nothing comes free. Nothing. Not even good, especially not good.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
5. “There are no problems we cannot solve together, and very few that we can solve by ourselves.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
6. “Education is the key to opportunity in our society, and the equality of educational opportunity must be the birthright of every citizen.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
7. “Education is not a problem. Education is an opportunity.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
8. “Come now. let us reason together.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
9. “Peace is a journey of a thousand miles and it must be taken one step at a time.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
10. “Light at the end of the tunnel? We don’t even have a tunnel; we don’t even know where the tunnel is.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
11. “The noblest search is the search for excellence.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
12. “You aren’t learning anything when you’re talking.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
13. “I’ll tell you what’s at the bottom of it. If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
14. “I’m gonna hunker down like a jack rabbit in a dust storm.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
15. “If we are to live together in peace, we must come to know each other better.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
16. “Until justice is blind to color, until education is unaware of race, until opportunity is unconcerned with the color of men’s skins, emancipation will be a proclamation but not a fact.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
17. “Control of space means control of the world.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
18. “Books and ideas are the most effective weapons against intolerance and ignorance.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
19. “We must open the doors of opportunity. But we must also equip our people to walk through those doors.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
20. “At the desk where I sit, I have learned one great truth. The answer for all our national problems – the answer for all the problems of the world – come to a single word. That word is “education.””
— Lyndon B. Johnson
21. “If we quit Vietnam, tomorrow we’ll be fighting in Hawaii, and next week we’ll have to fight in San Francisco.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
22. “If future generations are to remember us more with gratitude than sorrow, we must achieve more than just the miracles of technology. We must also leave them a glimpse of the world as it was created, not just as it looked when we got through with it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
23. “Voting is the first duty of democracy.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
24. “Art is a nation’s most precious heritage. For it is in our works of art that we reveal to ourselves and to others the inner vision which guides us as a nation. And where there is no vision, the people perish.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
25. “Republicans simply don’t know how to manage the economy.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
26. “I want real loyalty. I want someone who will kiss my ass in Macy’s window, and say it smells like roses.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
27. “A President’s hardest task is not to do what is right, but to know what is right.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
28. “If one morning I walked on top of the water across the Potomac River, the headline that afternoon would read: ‘President Can’t Swim.’”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
29. “Success only feeds the appetite of aggression.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
30. “The best fertilizer for a piece of land is the footprints of its owner.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
31. “I have learned that only two things are necessary to keep one’s wife happy. First, let her think she’s having her own way. And second, let her have it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
32. “This right to vote is the basic right without which all others are meaningless. It gives people, people as individuals, control over their own destinies.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
33. “Doing what’s right isn’t the problem. It is knowing what’s right.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
34. “In a nation of millions and a world of billions, the individual is still the first and basic agent of change.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
35. “If government is to serve any purpose it is to do for others what they are unable to do for themselves.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
36. “The test before us as a people is not whether our commitments match our will and our courage; but whether we have the will and courage to match our commitments.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
37. “I am a freeman, an American, a United States Senator, and a Democrat, in that order.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
38. “The land flourished because it was fed from so many sources – because it was nourished by so many cultures and traditions and peoples.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
39. “The classroom – not the trench – is the frontier of freedom now and forevermore.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
40. “We can draw lessons from the past, but we cannot live in it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
41. “For this is what America is all about. It is the uncrossed desert and the unclimbed ridge. It is the star that is not reached and the harvest that is sleeping in the unplowed ground.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
42. “All I have I would have given gladly not to be standing here today.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
43. “Life is never easy. There is work to be done and obligations to be met – obligations to truth, to justice, and to liberty.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
44. “Education will not cure all the problems of society, but without it no cure for any problem is possible.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
45. “At times history and fate meet at a single time in a single place to shape a turning point in man’s unending search for freedom.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
46. “We did not choose to be the guardians of the gate, but there is no one else.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
47. “I will do my best. That is all I can do. I ask for your help – and God’s.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
48. “Organized crime constitutes nothing less than a guerilla war against society.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
49. “To sustain an environment suitable for man, we must fight on a thousand battlegrounds. Despite all of our wealth and knowledge, we cannot create a redwood forest, a wild river, or a gleaming seashore.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
50. “Throughout my entire public career I have followed the personal philosophy that I am a free man, an American, a public servant, and a member of my party, in that order always and only.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
51. “The fact that a man is a newspaper reporter is evidence of some flaw of character.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
52. “Let us close the springs of racial poison. Let us pray for wise and understanding hearts. Let us lay aside irrelevant differences and make our nation whole.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
53. “The separation of church and state is a source of strength, but the conscience of our nation does not call for separation between men of state and faith in the Supreme Being.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
54. “There’s something special for everyone to do. Remember, no experience is a bad experience unless you gain nothing from it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
55. “The thing I would like to do most is to find somehow to bring peace to the world. It has eluded me.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
56. “Power is where power goes.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
57. “If we must disagree, let’s disagree without being disagreeable.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
58. “We are not about to send American boys 9 or 10 thousand miles away from home to do what Asian boys ought to be doing for themselves.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
59. “This is a moment that I deeply wish my parents could have lived to share. My father would have enjoyed what you have so generously said of me-and my mother would have believed it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
60. “Every man has a right to a Saturday night bath.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
61. “The American West is just arriving at the threshold of its greatness and growth. Where the West of yesterday is glamorized in our fiction, the future of the American West now is both fabulous and factual.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
62. “Above the pyramid on the great seal of the United States it says in Latin: “God has favored our undertaking.” God will not favor everything that we do. It is rather our duty to divine His will.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
63. “A man without a vote is man without protection.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
64. “The family is the corner stone of our society.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
65. “In modern warfare there are no victors; there are only survivors.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
66. “There’s America, there’s the South, and then there’s Mississippi.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
67. “Poverty has many roots, but the tap root is ignorance.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
68. “It is a truism that education is no longer a luxury. Education in this day and age is a necessity.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
69. “Never miss an opportunity to say a word of congratulation upon anyone’s achievement.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
70. “In the years since then, those four freedoms – freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear – have stood as a summary of our aspirations for the American Republic and for the world.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
71. “No national sovereignty rules in outer space. Those who venture there go as envoys of the entire human race. Their quest, therefore, must be for all mankind, and what they find should belong to all mankind.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
72. “The great society is a place where men are more concerned with the quality of their goods than with the quantity of their goods.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
73. “Every child must be encouraged to get as much education as he has the ability to take. We want this not only for his sake – but for the nation’s sake.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
74. “I’m the only president you’ve got.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
75. “When the burdens of the presidency seem unusually heavy, I always remind myself it could be worse. I could be a mayor.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
76. “We must change to master change.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
77. “For the primary and secondary school years, we will aid public schools serving low-income families and assist students in both public and private schools.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
78. “The Great Society is a place where every child can find knowledge to enrich his mind and enlarge his talents.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
79. “What convinces is conviction.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
80. “A clear stream, a long horizon, a forest wilderness and open sky – these are man’s most ancient possessions. In a modern society, they are his most priceless.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
81. “Greater love hath no man than to attend the Episcopal Church with his wife.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
82. “Of those to whom much is given, much is asked.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
83. “I’d rather give my life than be afraid to give it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
84. “America has not always been kind to its artists and scholars. Somehow the scientists always seem to get the penthouse while the arts and humanities get the basement.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
85. “I am a compromiser and maneuverer. I try to get something. That’s the way our system works.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
86. “Once we considered education a public expense; we know now that it is a public investment.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
87. “New laboratories and centers will help our schools lift their standards of excellence and explore new methods of teaching. These centers will provide special training for those who need and deserve special treatment.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
88. “War is always the same. It is young men dying in the fullness of their promise. It is trying to kill a man that you do not even know well enough to hate. Therefore, to know war is to know that there is still madness in the world.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
89. “It is the excitement of becoming – always becoming, trying, probing, falling, resting, and trying again- but always trying and always gaining.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
90. “Every citizen, regardless of his race, creed, or color, is entitled to equal justice.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
91. “I will not seek, and I will not accept the nomination of my party for another term as your president.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
92. “Not merely a nation but a nation of nations.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
93. “Democracy is a constant tension between truth and half-truth and, in the arsenal of truth, there is no greater weapon than fact.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
94. “Democrats legislate; Republicans investigate.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
95. “As we maintain the vigil of peace, we must remember that justice is a vigil, too-a vigil we must keep in our own streets and schools and among the lives of all our people-so that those who died here on their native soil shall not have died in vain.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
96. “I feel like I just grabbed a big juicy worm with a right sharp hook in the middle of it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
97. “I am going to build the kind of nation that President Roosevelt hoped for, President Truman worked for, and President Kennedy died for.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
98. “Every gift contains a danger. Whatever gift we have we are compelled to express. And if the expression of that gift is blocked, distorted, or merely allowed to languish, then the gift turns against us, and we suffer.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
99. “Boys, it is just like the Alamo. Somebody should have by God helped those Texans. I’m going to Vietnam.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
100. “I do not find it easy to send the flower of our youth, our finest young men, into battle.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
101. “The guns and the bombs, the rockets and the warships, are all symbols of human failure.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
102. “The hungry world cannot be fed until and unless the growth of its resources and the growth of its population come into balance. Each man and woman-and each nation-must make decisions of conscience and policy in the face of this great problem.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
103. “While you’re saving your face, you’re losing your ass.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
104. “A compassionate government keeps faith with the trust of the people and cherishes the future of their children. Through compassion for the plight of one individual, government fulfills its purpose as the servant of all the people.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
105. “No member of our generation who wasn’t a Communist or a dropout in the thirties is worth a damn.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
106. “President Can’t Swim.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
107. “The fifth freedom is freedom from ignorance.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
108. “The vote is the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
109. “The crotch, down where your nuts hang, is always a little too tight.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
110. “One hundred years ago, the slave was freed. One hundred years later, the Negro remains in bondage to the color of his skin.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
111. “We don’t propose to sit here in our rocking chair with our hands folded and let the Communists set up any government in the Western Hemisphere.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
112. “I’m tired. I’m tired of feeling rejected by the American people. I’m tired of waking up in the middle of the night worrying about the war.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
113. “This is not a jungle war, but a struggle for freedom on every front of human activity.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
114. “We believe, that is, you and I, that education is not an expense. We believe it is an investment.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
115. “To hunger for use and to go unused is the worst hunger of all.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
116. “If two men agree on everything, you may be sure that one of them is doing the thinking.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
117. “Reporters are like puppets. They simply respond to the pull of the most powerful strings.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
118. “The CIA is made up of boys whose families sent them to Princeton but wouldn’t let them into the family brokerage business.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
119. “If you have a mother-in-law with only one eye and she has it in the center of her forehead, don’t keep her in the living room.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
120. “We live in a world that has narrowed into a neighborhood before it has broadened into a brotherhood.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
121. “Effective law enforcement and social justice must be pursued together, as the foundation of our efforts against crime.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
122. “The American city should be a collection of communities where every member has a right to belong. It should be a place where every man feels safe on his streets and in the house of his friends.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
123. “Any man who’s not willing to take half a loaf in a negotiation, well, that man never went to bed hungry.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
124. “He’s a nice guy, but he played too much football with his helmet off.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
125. “Conservation is ethically sound. It is rooted in our love of the land, our respect for the rights of others, our devotion to the rule of law.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
126. “Every citizen will be able, in his productive years when he is earning, to insure himself against the ravages of illness in his old age.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
127. “The atomic bomb certainly is the most powerful of all weapons, but it is conclusively powerful and effective only in the hands of the nation which controls the sky.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
128. “This nation, this generation, in this hour has man’s first chance to build a Great Society, a place where the meaning of man’s life matches the marvels of man’s labor.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
129. “Poverty must not be a bar to learning and learning must offer an escape from poverty.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
130. “The presidency has made every man who occupied it, no matter how small, bigger than he was; and no matter how big, not big enough for its demands.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
131. “If we fail now, then we will have forgotten in abundance what we learned in hardship: that democracy rests on faith; freedom asks more than it gives; and the judgment of God is harshest on those who are most favored.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
132. “There are two kinds of speeches: the Mother Hubbard speech, which, like the garment, covers everything but touches nothing, and the French bathing suit speech, which covers only the essential points.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
133. “Our purpose in Vietnam is to prevent the success of aggression. It is not conquest, it is not empire, it is not foreign bases, it is not domination. It is, simply put, just to prevent the forceful conquest of South Vietnam by North Vietnam.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
134. “We have talked long enough in this country about equal rights. It is time now to write the next chapter – and to write it in the books of law.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
135. “We come to reason, not to dominate. We do not seek to have our way, but to find a common way.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
136. “When I was a boy we didn’t wake up with Vietnam and have Cyprus for lunch and the Congo for dinner.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
137. “Lincoln was right about not fooling all the people all the time. But Republicans haven’t given up trying.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
138. “Jerry Ford is so dumb he can’t fart and chew gum at the same time.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
139. “The poor suffer twice at the rioter’s hands. First, his destructive fury scars their neighborhood; second, the atmosphere of accommodation and consent is changed to one of hostility and resentment.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
140. “I know – from personal experience – that abiding values and abundant visions are learned in the homes of our people.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
141. “Evil acts of the past are never rectified by evil acts of the present.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
142. “The future holds little hope for any government where the present holds no hope for the people.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
143. “Our objective in South Vietnam has never been the annihilation of the enemy. It has been to bring about a recognition in Hanoi that its objective – taking over the South by force – could not be achieved.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
144. “Peace does not come just because we wish for it. Peace must be fought for. It must be built stone by stone.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
145. “Justice requires us to remember that when any citizen denies his fellow, saying, ‘His color is not mine,’ or ‘His beliefs are strange and different,’ in that moment he betrays America, though his forebears created this nation.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
146. “The job, of course, will never be finished. For a nation, as for an individual, education is a perpetually unfinished journey, a continuing process of discovery.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
147. “If we become tow people-the suburban affluent and the urban poor, each filled with mistrust and fear of the other-then we shall effectively cripple each generation to come.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
148. “Men who have worked together to reach the stars are not likely to descend together into the depths of war and desolation.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
149. “For the individual, education is the path to achievement and fulfillment; for the nation, it is a path to a society that is not only free but civilized; and for the world, it is the path to peace – for it is education that places reason over force.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
150. “This administration here and now declares unconditional war on poverty.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
151. “I believe in the American tradition of separation of church and state which is expressed in the First Amendment to the Constitution. By my office – and by personal conviction – I am sworn to uphold that tradition.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
152. “Today our problem is not making miracles, but managing them.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
153. “When the family collapses, it is the children that are usually damaged. When it happens on a massive scale, the community itself is crippled.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
154. “Victory is no longer a truth. It is only a word to describe who is left alive in the ruins.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
155. “The law cannot save those who deny it but neither can the law serve any who do not use it. The history of injustice and inequality is a history of disuse of the law.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
156. “We can and should have an abundance of trails for walking, cycling, and horseback riding, in and close to our cities. In the backcountry we need to copy the great Appalachian Trail in all parts of America.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
157. “I hear the headlines on the radio, see them on TV and read them in the paper. When I hear from the men out there, I sometimes don’t believe they are talking about the same situation.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
158. “We preach the virtues of democracy abroad. We must practice its duties here at home. Voting is the first duty of democracy.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
159. “You do not examine legislation in the light of the benefits it will convey if properly administered, but in the light of the wrongs it would do and the harms it would cause if improperly administered.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
160. “You know, doing what is right is easy. The problem is knowing what is right.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
161. “It is the genius of our Constitution that under its shelter of enduring institutions and rooted principles there is ample room for the rich fertility of American political invention.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
162. “Law is the great civilizing machinery. It liberates the desire to build and subdues the desire to destroy.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
163. “The Russians feared Ike. They didn’t fear me.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
164. “It is important that the United States remain a two-party system. I’m a fellow who likes small parties and the Republican Party can’t be too small to suit me.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
165. “You never want to give a man a present when he’s feeling good. You want to do it when he’s down.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
166. “If there is one word that describes our form of society in America, it may be the word-voluntary.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
167. “They call upon us to supply American boys to do the job that Asian boys should do.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
168. “In 1790, the nation which had fought a revolution against taxation without representation discovered that some of its citizens weren’t much happier about taxation with representation.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
169. “In this age when there can be no losers in peace and no victors in war; we must recognize the obligation to match national strength with national restraint.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
170. “All that Hubert needs over there is a gal to answer the phone and a pencil with an eraser on it.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
171. “If the American people don’t love me, their descendants will.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
172. “Our partnership has been built on four pillars The first pillar is peace. The second pillar is freedom. The third pillar is respect. The fourth pillar is cooperation.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
173. “Heck by the time a man scratches his behind, clears his throat, and tells me how smart he is, we’ve already wasted fifteen minutes.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
174. “I am persuaded that the people of the world have no grievances, one against the other. The hopes and desires of a man who tills the soil are about the same whether he lives on the banks of the Colorado or on the banks of the Danube.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
175. “For the first time in our history it is possible to conquer poverty.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
176. “You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
177. “Extremism is the pursuit of the presidency is an unpardonable vice. Moderation in the affairs of the nation is the highest virtue.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
178. “When I was young, poverty was so common that we didn’t know it had a name.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
179. “So, I would appeal to my fellow Americans by saying, the only real road to progress for free people is through the process of law and that is the road that America will travel.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
180. “Let no one ever think for a moment that national debate means national division.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
181. “Every American citizen must have an equal right to vote. There is no reason which can excuse the denial of that right. There is no duty which weighs more heavily on us than the duty we have to ensure that right.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
182. “I don’t believe I’ll ever get credit for anything I do in foreign affairs, no matter how successful it is, because I didn’t go to Harvard.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
183. “I am concerned about the whole man. I am concerned about what the people, using their government as an instrument and a tool, can do toward building the whole man, which will mean a better society and a better world.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
184. “Just like the Alamo, somebody damn well needed to go to their aid. Well, by God, I’m going to Viet Nam’s aid!”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
185. “I believe, with abiding conviction, that this people-nurtured by their deep faith, tutored by their hard lessons, moved by their high aspirations-have the will to meet the trials that these times impose.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
186. “The Secretary of Labor is in charge of finding you a job, the Secretary of the Treasury is in charge of taking half the money you make away from you, and the Attorney General is in charge of suing you for the other half.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
187. “Our society is illuminated by the spiritual insights of the Hebrew prophets. America and Israel have a common love of human freedom, and they have a common faith in a democratic way of life.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
188. “You know there is no one in the world I would rather sleep with than Yuki.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
189. “If you’re I politics and you can’t tell when you walk into a room who’s for you and who’s against you, then you’re in the wrong line of work.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
190. “In the Great Society, work shall be an outlet for mans interests and desires. Each individual shall have full opportunity to use his capacities in employment which satisfies personally and contributes generally to the quality of the Nations life.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
191. “There is but one way for a president to deal with Congress, and that is continuously, incessantly, and without interruption. If it is really going to work, the relationship has got to be almost incestuous.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
192. “True poverty does not come from God.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
193. “Every President wants to do right.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
194. “Emancipation was a proclamation, but not a fact.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
195. “The final conquest of poverty is within our grasp.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
196. “For the college years we will provide scholarships to high school students of the greatest promise and greatest need and guarantee low-interest loans to students continuing their college studies.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
197. “There is nothing that exasperates people more than a display of superior ability or brilliance in conversation. They seem pleased at the time, but their envy makes them curse the conversationalist in their heart.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
198. “As man draws nearer to the stars, why should he not also draw nearer to his neighbor?”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
199. “We will not have served the water needs of Americans if we meet only the requirements of today’s population. A prudent nation must look ahead and plan for tomorrow.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson
200. “It’s the price of leadership to do the thing you believe has to be done at the time it must be done.”
— Lyndon B. Johnson