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Stewart Udall Quotes

American soldier, Birth: 31-1-1920, Death: 20-3-2010 Stewart Udall Quotes
1.
Mining is like a search-and-destroy mission.
Stewart Udall

2.
We have, I fear, confused power with greatness.
Stewart Udall

3.
Plans to protect air and water, wilderness and wildlife are in fact plans to protect man.
Stewart Udall

4.
The auto industry must acknowledge that a rational transportation policy should seek a balance between individual convenience, the efficient use of limited resources, and urban-living values that protect spaciousness, natural beauty, and human-scale mobility.
Stewart Udall

5.
Over the long haul of life on the planet, it is the ecologists, and not the bookkeepers of business, who are the ultimate accountants.
Stewart Udall

Similar Authors: Francois de La Rochefoucauld Horace Zig Ziglar Al Gore J. D. Salinger Robert Jordan Andy Rooney Evelyn Waugh Paul Simon Philip Sidney Lloyd Alexander Harry Browne Andre Maurois Erich Maria Remarque Evo Morales
6.
The national parklands have a major role in providing superlative opportunities for outdoor recreation, but they have other people serving values. They can provide an experience in conservation education for the young people of the country; they can enrich our literary and artistic consciousness; they can help create social values; contribute to our civic consciousness; remind us of our debt to the land of our fathers.
Stewart Udall

7.
Cherish sunsets, wild creatures, and wild places. Have a love affair with the wonder and beauty of the earth!
Stewart Udall

8.
America today stands poised on a pinnacle of wealth and power, yet we live in a land of vanishing beauty, of increasing ugliness, of shrinking open space, and of an over-all environment that is diminished daily by pollution and noise and blight.
Stewart Udall

Quote Topics by Stewart Udall: Land Men Energy People President Earth Giving Nature Use America Population Government Environment National Parks Stories Administration School Sacrifice Insightful Principles Peace With God United States Running Two Children Wild Places Contempt Lying Book Quality
9.
The National Park Service today exemplifies one of the highest traditions of public service.
Stewart Udall

10.
A land ethic for tomorrow should...stress the oneness of our resources and the live-and-help-live logic of the great chain of life.
Stewart Udall

11.
Admittedly, we must move ahead with the development of our land resources. Likewise, our technology must be refined. But in the long run life will succeed only in a life-giving environment, and we can no longer afford unnecessary sacrifices of living space and natural landscape to 'progress.'
Stewart Udall

12.
Wilderness, like the national park system, was an American idea.
Stewart Udall

13.
It induced us to conduct government according to lies. It distorted justice. It undermined American morality.
Stewart Udall

14.
If, in our haste to 'progress,' the economics of ecology are disregarded by citizens and policy makers alike, the result will be an ugly America. We cannot afford an America where expedience tramples upon esthetics and development decisions are made with an eye only on the present.
Stewart Udall

15.
If you want inner peace, find it in solitude, not speed, and if you would find yourself, look to the land from which you came and to which you go.
Stewart Udall

16.
Gross National Product is our Holy Grail.
Stewart Udall

17.
It gives me satisfaction to help people.
Stewart Udall

18.
The real story of the settlement of the West was work, not conquest
Stewart Udall

19.
Nuclear energy people perceive the greenhouse effect as a fresh wind blowing at their back.
Stewart Udall

20.
It is obvious that the best qualities in man must atrophy in a standing-room-only environment.
Stewart Udall

21.
Each generation has its own rendezvous with the land, for despite our fee titles and claims of ownership, we are all brief tenants on this planet. By choice, or by default, we will carve out a land legacy for our heirs.
Stewart Udall

22.
The most common trait of all primitive peoples is a reverence for the life-giving earth, and the Native American shared this elemental ethic: The land was alive to his loving touch, and he, its son, was brother to all creatures.
Stewart Udall

23.
The most common trait of all primitive peoples is a reverence for the life-giving earth.
Stewart Udall

24.
Where nature is concerned, familiarity breeds love and knowledge, not contempt.
Stewart Udall

25.
I like the story about Henry David Thoreau, who, when he was on his death bed, his family sent for a minister. The minister said, 'Henry, have you made your peace with God?' Thoreau said, 'I didn't know we'd quarreled.
Stewart Udall

26.
We Americans are a funny people. We say that our favorite outdoor recreation is 'walking for pleasure' (or so it is reported in Outdoor Recreation Trends). Yet the average housewife will jump into the family car-or one of them-to go around the corner for a bottle of aspirin and a television guide. The businessman who walks four blocks to an appointment is the exception rather than the rule.
Stewart Udall

27.
I'm trying to encourage my children's generation and the other ones coming to return to basic American principles.
Stewart Udall

28.
A limit on the automobile population of the United States would be the best of news for our cities. The end of automania would save open spaces, encourage wiser land use, and contribute greatly to ending suburban sprawl.
Stewart Udall

29.
Society as we know it is almost a conspiracy against human health. One of the main forces working to counteract that is the trailsman.
Stewart Udall

30.
One of the best things that came out of the Carter administration was the energy policy. The best things in it were renewable energy.
Stewart Udall

31.
Here in the United States we're now consuming about three gallons of petroleum per person per day. That's twenty pounds of oil per person per day. We only consume about four pounds of oxygen per person per day. We're consuming five times more oil each day, here in the United States than we are oxygen. We've become the oil tribe.
Stewart Udall

32.
Utah today remains a battleground for land-use policies.
Stewart Udall

33.
As the master politician navigates the ship of state, he both creates and responds to public opinion. Adept at tacking with the wind, he also succeeds, at times, in generating breezes of his own.
Stewart Udall

34.
Nature will take precedence over the needs of the modern man.
Stewart Udall

35.
I dont remember a big fight between the Republicans and Democrats in the Nixon administration or President Gerald Ford and so on.
Stewart Udall

36.
I think the Colorado Plateau is the most scenic area in the world - let's begin with that. Not just the United States.
Stewart Udall

37.
I plowed fields with horses and worked as a hired hand in high school for 50 cents a day.
Stewart Udall

38.
In a region with a growing population, if you're doing nothing, you're losing ground.
Stewart Udall

39.
We're all pretty individualistic.
Stewart Udall

40.
Nixon was a good president on the environment. Gerald Ford was good.
Stewart Udall

41.
So many people of my generation who served in the government were prisoners of the Cold War culture, still are.
Stewart Udall

42.
Washington's a cesspool of money.
Stewart Udall

43.
For those who want to understand the issues of the environmental crisis, Encounters with the Archdruid is a superb book. McPhee reveals more nuances of the value revolution that dominates the new age of ecology than most writers could pack into a volume twice as long. I marvel at his capacity to listen intently and extract the essence of a man and his philosophy in the fewest possible words.
Stewart Udall

44.
The Atomic Age was born in secrecy, and for two decades after Hiroshima, the high priests of the cult of the atom concealed vital information about the risks to human health posed by radiation. Dr. Alice Stewart, an audacious and insightful medical researcher, was one of the first experts to alert the world to the dangers of low-level radiation.
Stewart Udall