51 Quotes & Sayings By Rick Perlstein

Rick Perlstein is a journalist, author, and historian who has written widely on the topics of politics and media. He is best known for his American Century series, which details the history of American political and cultural thought from the World War I era to the present. First published in 1989 as The Invisible Government, his previous books include Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America, The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan, Christmas in America: A History, and The Invisible Heart: Bob Dylan's Biography. He has also written for Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, Esquire, Harper's Magazine, The Nation, The New York Times Magazine, The New Republic, Mother Jones, Texas Monthly, GQ, Vogue Magazine , Publisher's Weekly , Washingtonian , Smithsonian , GQ Men of the Year , Time , Esquire 50 Most Influential Americans of All Time , Details , Newsweek , Los Angeles Times Book Review , San Francisco Chronicle Book Review

College was at the heart of his sentimental imagination.
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College was at the heart of his sentimental imagination. Rick Perlstein
Stories are
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Stories are "how we organize the chaos of experience into the order we require just a carry-on." Joan Gideon Rick Perlstein
Presidents are also always storytellers, purveyors of useful national mythologies.
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Presidents are also always storytellers, purveyors of useful national mythologies. Rick Perlstein
Politics is motion.
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Politics is motion." John Sears Rick Perlstein
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What does sincerity mean if it is chosen as deliberate strategy? Rick Perlstein
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Governing is not a hero's profession. It is a profession of compromises. Rick Perlstein
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An anti-politician is hardly an anti-politician once he starts winning and works to close the deal by working to sew up the Establishment. Rick Perlstein
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He talks to people's grievances, but he doesn't seem mad. — Elizabeth Drew Rick Perlstein
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Chronicling the mid-1970s up session with Gerald Ford's clumsiness, the author quotes a medieval maxim that the king has two bodies. The head of state has a physical body like everyone else, but he also represents the body politic, either reflecting its majesty or its weakness. Rick Perlstein
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Now even reformers needed political machines. Rick Perlstein
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Almost alone among successful politicians, he took slights personally. Rick Perlstein
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Richard Nixon was a serial collector of resentments. Rick Perlstein
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A candidate with no experience they would package as a citizen politician, a lifetime hack as an elder statesman. Rick Perlstein
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Violent crimes had increased from 120 per 100, 000 in 1962 180 per 100, 000 by 1964. Rick Perlstein
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For the first time on Planet Earth (in 1964 America), a nation was made up of more college students than farmers. An unheard-of 42% of high school graduates sought higher education. Rick Perlstein
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Teddy White lamented that TV might spell the death of serious politics: to give a thoughtful response to serious questions, politician needed a good thirty seconds to ponder, but television allowed only five seconds of silence at best. DDB (ad men) found nothing to lament and the fact. They were convinced you could learn everything you needed to KNOW about a product, which in this case happens to be a human being, in half a minute — the speed not of thought but of emotion. Rick Perlstein
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Rebelling against the status quo was one of the definitions of conservatism. Rick Perlstein
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I think the people from Mississippi ought to come to Chicago to learn how to hate." Martin Luther King, Jr. after the violent reception he received in Chicago in 1966. Rick Perlstein
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(President) Lyndon Johnson still snapped between exultation and insecurity. Rick Perlstein
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Goldwater had never even considered a non- Arizonan. Like a man on his deathbed, he wanted to be surrounded only by friends. Rick Perlstein
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A confused and weak man hides his weakness and uncertainty with fiery speeches. Rick Perlstein
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Richard Nixon's conversation was "loaded with so many stories of all the foreign dignitaries he'd called upon in his career that he sounded like a guy who had pinioned his neighbors into watching his vacation slides. Rick Perlstein
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One of the ladies asked about that awful Bobby Kennedy, and Goldwater responded by speaking about the attorney general with touching affection. (Mary) McGrory recalled how Jack Kennedy behaved at a similar stage in his campaign: spouting statistics, attacking carefully chosen enemies and puffing all the right friends, quoting dead Greeks, never cracking a joke lest he remind the voters how young he was. Rick Perlstein
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To claim the mantle of purity is always a risky business. It just gives an excuse to be disillusioned once your ordinary humidity is exposed. Rick Perlstein
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Goldwater hardly ever mentioned a statistic. He hardly ever used it EXAMPLE. He presumed you already knew what he meant. Reagan SHOWED you. Rick Perlstein
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In politics, if you're explaining, you're loosing. Rick Perlstein
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Do what you are doing. Monastic motto Rick Perlstein
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Increasingly we confused the pursuit of happiness with the pursuit of pleasure. Rick Perlstein
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Goldwater's approach to any political problem invariably derived from the evidence of his own eyes. Rick Perlstein
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Ronald Reagan was just as angry. But he made you want to stand right alongside him and shake your fist at the same things he was shaking his fist at. Rick Perlstein
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Chits knew no ideology. Rick Perlstein
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Television was suppressing their freedom not to know. Rick Perlstein
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Fifties advertising was a dogmatic art, to the point of pretending to be a science. Rick Perlstein
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He fetishized limits. Rick Perlstein
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The task of defending capitalism was still important to leave to the capitalists. Rick Perlstein
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One does not hold a conversation with him. One holds a symposium. — Elizabeth Drew Rick Perlstein
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The head of Goldwater's California operation "what was so uncomfortable around people that he worked up a routine to deal with employees with whom he was forced to share an elevator: "Taken your vacation yet?" he would ask when they entered; answer took just long enough to deliver him to his fourth-floor office. Rick Perlstein
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Polls could be self-fulfilling prophecies, shaping reality as much as they described it. Rick Perlstein
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There's no question that Kennedy was an utter failure as a passer of laws during his proverbial thousand days. Rick Perlstein
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Computers have cut-and-paste functions. So does right-wing historical memory. Rick Perlstein
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Lyndon B. Johnson thought he'd have the boys home from Vietnam by Christmas - for four Christmases in a row (he never shifted course, and lost his presidency for it). Rick Perlstein
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Liberals tend to stress how marvelous education is, in and of itself, and also adore it as a vessel for genuine equality. (That's me, by the way: Hell, I think we should be spending $50 billion a year to make college education free). Rick Perlstein
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Everyone on the Left has a favorite story that allows them to kind of excuse Reagan, explain away Reagan, say he was dumb, but unless we reckon with that kind of emotional intelligence and his ability to kind of speak to the aspirations of the American people, the less liberals are going to be able to understand the soul of his appeal. Rick Perlstein
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Whatever you think about his intelligence, what's unquestionable is that Reagan had extraordinary emotional intelligence. He could sense the temperature of a room, and tell them a story and make them feel good. And that's more fun, right? It's more fun to feel good than feel bad. That's part of our human state. Rick Perlstein
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Reagan's emotional intelligence, his ability to suss out people's longings and to channel them for political purposes, was better than just about any human being that ever lived. Rick Perlstein
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Prediction is structurally inseparable from the business of punditry: It creates the essential image of indefatigable authority that is punditry's very architecture; it flows from that calcified image, and it provides the substance for the story that keeps getting told about the inevitability of American progress. Rick Perlstein
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Leaders are for calling people to their better angels, for helping guide them to a kind of sterner, more mature sense of what we need to do. To me, Reagan's brand of leadership was what I call 'a liturgy of absolution.' He absolved Americans almost in a priestly role to contend with sin. Who wouldn't want that? Rick Perlstein
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In Ronald Reagan's chaotic childhood, the imagination was armor. There is nothing unusual about that; transcending the doubts, hesitations, and fears swirling around you by casting yourself internally as the hero of your own adventure story is a characteristic psychic defense mechanism of the Boy Who Disappears. Rick Perlstein
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History does not repeat itself. Nor does it unfold in cycles. The real future is contingent, rich beyond imagining, a perennial gobsmack, tragic and glorious in equal measure; the pundits' future, spun of 'conventional wisdom, ' is only a sucker punch to that common-sense fact. Rick Perlstein
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Look at liberty's greatest historic advances: ending slavery. Giving women the vote. Outlawing legal segregation. Each and every time, the people at the forefront of advancing those reforms - often putting their lives on the line - called themselves liberals. Rick Perlstein