I always thought that Grover Norquist had a - he really is a true ideologue, in every sense of the word.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It is true the orator may make a myriad replica of his own passion out of those who listen to him. But that does not prove he is right or they are not fools.
One of the great creative statesmen of our age was Franklin Roosevelt. He was creative precisely because he preferred experiment to ideology.
Henry David Thoreau was an oddball job quitter and ne'er-do-well who evolved into the bearded sage of literature, natural history, and civil liberties.
Washington's entire honesty of mind and his fearless look into the face of all facts are qualities which can never go out of fashion and which we should all do well to imitate.
Pol Pot - he rounded up anybody he thought was intellectual and had them executed. And how he told someone was intellectual or not was whether they wore glasses. If they're that clever, take them off when they see him coming!
The great man who gives a true transcript of his mind fascinates and instructs. Most writers suppress individuality. They wish to please the public.
Hank Cochran was a man of very few words, but certainly the words that he chose were the right ones to use.
Tom Hanks comes with a lot of credibility.
It really is true that an orator is simply a good man who speaks well.
Am I the only person covering politics who ever noticed that Newt Gingrich is actually a nincompoop?