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Strom Thurmond Quotes

American general, Birth: 5-12-1902, Death: 26-6-2003 Strom Thurmond Quotes
1.
I wanna tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that there's not enough troops in the army to force the Southern people to break down segregation and admit the nigra race into our theaters, into our swimming pools, into our homes, and into our churches.
Strom Thurmond

2.
It is a matter of common knowledge that the government of South Carolina is under domination of a small ring of cunning, conniving men.
Strom Thurmond

3.
An American should be able choose to work in a place where he is with his kind of people and not find that at the counters, desk or benches they will be forced to work, side by side, with all types of people of all races; that in the lunchrooms, rest rooms, recreation rooms, they will be compelled by law to mingle with persons and races which all their lives they have by free choice, avoided in social and business intercourse.
Strom Thurmond

4.
We stand for the segregation of the races and the racial integrity of each race.
Strom Thurmond

5.
All the bayonets of the Army cannot force the Negro into our homes, into our schools, our churches and our places of recreation and amusement.
Strom Thurmond

Similar Authors: William James George Washington Dwight D. Eisenhower Alexander Hamilton Colin Powell George S. Patton Douglas MacArthur Robert E. Lee Andrew Jackson Rutherford B. Hayes Charles de Gaulle Barry Goldwater James A. Garfield Ulysses S. Grant Albert Pike
6.
Martin Luther King demeans his race and retards the advancement of his people.
Strom Thurmond

7.
The white people of the South are the greatest minority in this nation. They deserve consideration and understanding instead of the persecution of twisted propaganda.
Strom Thurmond

8.
I have done more for black people than any other person in the nation, North or South.
Strom Thurmond

Quote Topics by Strom Thurmond: People Race Men Government Home Black Army Done Years School Believe Integrity Southern Long Two Temptation Matter Walks Appreciate Leader Thinking Understanding Brother Growth Segregation Agreement Kings Doubt Bills Law
9.
Mr. President, passage of this bill will visit the heel of oppression on all the people, vitiate their constitutional shield against tyranny, and materially hasten the destruction of the best design for self-government yet devised by the minds of men. Its passage will mark one of the darkest days in history
Strom Thurmond

10.
I fully recognize and appreciate the many substantial contributions of black Americans and other minorities to the creation and preservation and development of our great nation
Strom Thurmond

11.
Segregation in the South is honest, open and aboveboard. Of the two systems, or styles of segregation, the Northern and the Southern, there is no doubt whatever in my mind which is the better.
Strom Thurmond

12.
This bill would renounce the safe, proper, and acceptable role for Government as a referee of disputes between the governed. It would interpose the Government as a biased protagonist, armed with the awesome authority of the Federal Government, in addition to rulemaking and umpire powers. The broad grants of power to the Attorney General to initiate and intervene in civil actions would go far toward transforming him into George Orwell's 'Big Brother' of '1984,' in the year 1964.
Strom Thurmond

13.
I am not prejudiced against the Negro. When I was governor, I did more to help the Negroes in our State than any previous Governor, and I think you can find Negro leaders in the State who will attest to this fact
Strom Thurmond

14.
If I had been elected president in 1948, history would be vastly different. I believe we would have stemmed the growth of Big Government, which had begun with the New Deal and culminated with the Great Society.
Strom Thurmond

15.
She walks well, she looks good. Let's see how she kisses.
Strom Thurmond

16.
I love all of you men, but you women even more!
Strom Thurmond

17.
This bill, by vesting the power to withhold or terminate Federal funds, creates a concentration of power of economic coercion unequaled in the history of governments-a power concentration which defies the experience of mankind with the temptation of power to corrupt.
Strom Thurmond

18.
By its attempt to regulate and govern the private businesses, which are miscalled public accommodations in the bill, this proposal would inject the Government into the most sensitive areas of human contractual relations-agreements for personal services. In so doing, constitutional interpretations of long standing are being swept aside in favor of tortuous rationalizations which studiously ignore the constitutionally-forbidden imposition of involuntary servitude on citizens
Strom Thurmond