"Nothing..is unchangeable but the inherent
and inalienable rights of man."
Thomas Jefferson
"We know what happens to people who stay in
the middle of the road.
They get run down."
Aneurin Bevan
"Where ever public spirit prevails,
liberty is secure."
Noah Webster
Lyndon B. Johnson's Administration Accomplishments
Johnson took office determined to secure the measures that Kennedy
had sought. Immediate priorities were bills to reduce taxes and
guarantee civil rights. Using his skills of persuasion and calling on
the legislators' respect for the slain president, in 1964 Johnson
succeeded in gaining passage of the Civil Rights Bill. Introduced by
Kennedy, it was the most far-reaching piece of civil rights legislation
enacted since Reconstruction. Soon Johnson addressed other issues
as well. By the spring of 1964, he had begun to use the name
"Great Society" to describe his reform program, and that term
received even more play after his landslide victory over conservative
Republican Barry Goldwater in the presidential election of that year.
On the economic front, Johnson pushed successfully for a tax cut, then
pressed for a poverty program Kennedy had initiated. "This
administration today, here and now, declares unconditional war on
poverty in America," he announced. The Office of Economic Opportunity
provided training for the poor and established various community-action
programs to give the poor themselves a voice in housing, health and
education programs.
Medical care came next. Truman had proposed a centralized scheme
more than 20 years earlier, but had failed to gain congressional passage.
Under Johnson's leadership, Congress enacted Medicare, a health
insurance program for the elderly, and Medicaid, a program providing
health-care assistance for the poor.
Similarly, Johnson succeeded in the effort to provide aid for elementary
and secondary schooling where Kennedy had failed. The measure that
was enacted gave money to the states based on the number of their
children from low-income families. Funds could be used to assist
public- and private-school children alike.
The Great Society reached even further. A new housing act provided
rent supplements for the poor and established a Department of
Housing and Urban Development. An immigration measure finally
replaced the discriminatory quotas set in 1924. Federal assistance
went to artists and scholars to encourage their work.
The Johnson administration also addressed transportation safety
issues, in part because of the efforts of a young lawyer, lobbyist and
consultant named Ralph Nader. In his 1965 book, Unsafe at Any
Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile, Nader
argued that many cars could cause death or damage in even
low-speed accidents. Nader said that automobile manufacturers were
sacrificing safety features for style, and he named specific models
in which faulty engineering contributed to highway fatalities.
In September 1966, Johnson signed into law two transportation bills.
The first provided funds to state and local governments for developing
safety programs, while the other set up federal safety standards for
cars and tires.
In all, the Great Society was the greatest burst of legislative activity
since the New Deal.
Johnson Quotes
American Covenant
And here at home one of our greatest responsibilities
is to assure fair play for all of our people. Every American
has the right to be treated as a person. He should be
able to find a job. He should be able to educate his children,
he should be able to vote in elections and he should be
judged on his merits as a person.
They came here--the exile and the stranger,
brave but frightened--to find a place where a
man could be his own man. They made a
covenant with this land. Conceived in justice,
written in liberty, bound in union, it was meant
one day to inspire the hopes of all mankind;
and it binds us still. If we keep its terms,
we shall flourish."
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. It should
be a place where each individual's dignity and
self-respect is strenghtened by the respect and
affection of his neighbors. It should be a place
where each of us can find the satisfaction and warmth
which comes from being a member of the community of
man. This is what man sought at the dawn of
civilization. It is what we seek today.
Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965
Barry Goldwater
He wants to repeal the present and veto the future.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:The Johnson Humor, Bill Adler
Comments on signing the Medicare Bill
No longer will older Americans be denied the
healing miracle of modern medicine. No longer
will illness crush and destroy the savings that
they have so carefully put away over a lifetime
so that they might enjoy dignity in their later
years. No longer will young families see their
own incomes, and their own hopes, eaten away
simply because they are carrying out their deep
moral obligations to their parents, and to their
uncles, and their aunts.
And this is not just our tradition--or the tradition
of the Democratic Party--or even the tradition of
the Nation. It is as old as the day it was first
commanded: "Thou shalt open thine hand wide
unto thy brother, to thy poor, to thy needy,
in thy land."
Compromiser
I'm a compromiser and a maneuverer. I try to get something.
That's the way our system works.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:NY Times, Dec 8, 1963
Democratic Party
The Democrats of this day and age are providing this
Nation with the kind of leadership that the world
requires. Ours is a party that is responsible and is
responsive, this is progressive and prudent. It is a
party of vision and a party of common sense. It is a
party where all expect full hearing and receive fair
play.
Lyndon B. Johnson, Democratic Convention 8-28-64
Deal With It
I am the only President you've got.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source: Reminder to US Senators, Apr 27, 1964
Destiny
"For every generation, there is a destiny.
For some, history decides. For this
generation, the choice must be our own."
President Lyndon Johnson
in his inaugural address
Differences
We all have differences. Men of different ancestries,
men of different tongues, men of different colors, men
of different environments, men of different geographies,
do not see everything a like. If we did, we would all
want the same wife--and that would be a problem,
wouldn't it?
Lyndon Johnson
Source:Speech Feb 11, 1964
Disagree
If we must disagree, let's disagree without being disagreeable.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:Remarks to US Senators, 1965
Education
Education is not a problem,
Education is an opportunity.
Lyndon B. Johnson
Environment
"No one has the right to use America's rivers and
America's Waterways, that belong to all the people
as a sewer. The banks of a river may belong to one
man or one industry or one State, but the waters
which flow between the banks should belong to all
the people."
Lyndon B. Johnson,
signing the Clean Water Act of 1965
Source:http://www.epa.gov/Region2/library/quotes.ht
Equality
It is not enough just to open the gates of opportunity.
All our citizens must have the ability to walk through
those gates. This is the next, and the most profound
stage of the battle for civil rights.
Lyndon B. Johnson
While the races may stand side by side, whites stand on
history's mountain and blacks stand in history's hollow.
Until we overcome unequal history, we cannot overcome
unequal opportunity....It's time we get down to the
business of trying to stand black and white on level
ground.
Lyndon B. Johnson
Farmer
"Whenever I see so many country people in a big
city like this, I think of that old definition of
a farmer: 'A person who occasionally visits the
city to see where his sons and his profits went.' "
Lyndon B. Johnson
Ford
Jerry Ford is so stupid he couldn't chew
gum and crap at the same time.
Johnson reportedly would tap his head in mock sorrow when asked
about Ford, saying, "Too bad, too bad — that's what happens when
you play football too long without a helmet."
Lyndon B. Johnson
Source:By ANN SANNER, Associated Press Writer
Fri Dec 29, 2006
Freedom
"Freedom is not enough. You do not wipe
away the scars of centuries. You do not
take a man who for years has been hobbled
by chains, liberate him, bring him to the
starting line of a race saying, 'You are free to
compete with all the others', and still justly
believe you have been completely fair.
Thus it is not enough to open the
gates of opportunity."
Harry S Truman
The people of the United States love and
voted for Harry Truman, not because he
gave them hell--but because he gave them hope.
Headline
"If one morning I walked on top of the water
across the Potomac River, the headline that
afternoon would read PRESIDENT CAN'T SWIM."
Hoover
Better to have him inside the tent
pissing out, than outside pissing in.
(on Edgar Hoover Head of the FBI)
Law
Law is the great civilizing machinery. It liberates
the desire to build and subdues the desire to destroy.
And if war can tear us apart, law can unite us--out of
fear, or love, or reason, or all three. Law is the
greatest human invention. All the rest give man mastery
over his world. Law gives him mastery over himself.
Lyndon B. Johnson
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 Johnson, [This quote appears on page 130 of
"Gun Control" by Robert J. Kukla, (edited by Harlon
Carter), 1973, Stackpole Books, ISBN 0-8117-1190-0.
Macy's Window
I want real loyalty. I want someone who will kiss my ass
in Macy's window, and say it smells like roses.
Nixon
When I was President I had 5 phones on the Oval office
desk with 6 buttons each, if I wanted to know something
I'd be on the phone to a clerk at some agency if needs
be to get the info. Nixon has one phone with
2 buttons!
Lyndon B. Johnson
Noble
The noblest search is the search for excellence.
On Reading a Complimentary Article about Himself
I wish my mother and father could read this. My father
would enjoy it and my mother would believe it.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:The Johnson Humor, Bill Adler
Politics
I never think of politics more than eighteen hours a day.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:The Johnson Humor, Bill Adler
Power
[Asked why he would accept second place on the 1960 ticket with
John F. Kennedy, with less power than the Senate majority leader:]
Power is where power goes.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:Remarks, 1960
Poverty
... I have called for a national war on poverty.
Our objective: total victory.
...
Our fight against poverty will be an investment
in the most valuable of our resources--the skills
and strength of our people. And in the future, as
in the past, this investment will return its cost
many fold to our entire economy.
...
... I do not intend that the war against poverty
become a series of uncoordinated and unrelated
efforts--that it perish for lack of leadership
and direction.
...
Today, for the first time in our history, we have
the power to strike away the barriers to full
participation in our society. Having the power,
we have the duty.
...
The new program I propose is within our means.
Its cost of 970 million dollars is 1 percent of our
national budget--and every dollar I am requesting
for this program is already included in the budget
I sent to Congress in January.
...
And this program is much more than a beginning.
Rather it is a commitment. It is a total commitment
by this President, and this Congress, and this
nation, to pursue victory over the most ancient of
mankind's enemies.
Let us, above all, open wide the exits from proverty
to the children of the poor.
Lyndon B. Johnson, Economic Report, 1964
Poverty has many roots, but the taproot is ignorance.
Lyndon B. Johnson, 1-12-2965
Presidency
The presidency is not just a place to protect the
present. It is a focus for the posibilities
of the future.
Lyndon B. Johnson
Prospective Assistant
I want his pecker in my pocket.
Question
You're asking the leader of the Western world a
chickenshit question like that?
Radical Ideas
"Free speech, free press, free religion, the right of free assembly,
yes, the right of petition... well, they are still radical ideas."
President Lyndon B. Johnson
Source: Speech, 3 August 1865
Republicans
Lincoln was right about not fooling all the people
all the time. But Republicans haven't given up trying.
Lyndon B. Johnson 1964
Society
As man increases his knowledge of the heavens, why
should he fear the unknown on earth? As man draws
nearer to the stars, why should he not also draw
nearer to his neighbor?
Lyndon B. Johnson 8-29-1965
The Great Society is not a safe harbor.
The Great Society is a place where men are more
concerned with the quality of their goals than the
quantity of their goods.
Lyndon B. Johnson 5-22-1964
Steer
You fellows know what a steer is. That's a bull who's
lost his social standing.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:The Johnson Humor, Bill Adler
Succeeding and Failing
If we fail now, we shall have forgotten in
abundance what we learned in hardship:
that democracy rests on faith, that freedom
asks more than it gives, and that the
judgment of God is harshest on those who
are most favored.
If we succeed, it will not be because of what
we have, but it will be because of what we are;
not because of what we own, but, rather
because of what we believe.
Two Types 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 Baines Johnson
Source:The Johnson Humor, Bill Adler
Unity
There are not problems we cannot solve together, and
very few we can solve by ourselves.
Lyndon B. Johnson, 1964 to the NATO alliance
We come to reason, not to dominate. We do not seek to
have our way, but to find a common way.
Lyndon B. Johnson, Georgetown University, 1964
Upon President Kennedy's Death
I will do my best. That is all I can do.
I ask for your help, and God's."
Waste
Controlling waste is like bailing a boat--you have to keep at it.
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Source:Speech Dec 4, 1964
Words
Words wound. But as a veteran of twelve years in the United States
Senate, I happily attest that they do not kill.
Lyndon Johnson
Source:Speech, Denver, Aug 26, 1966
- News of death of Lyndon B. Johnson
Cabinet:
Secretary of State
Dean Rusk (1963-69)
Secretary of the Treasury
C. Douglas Dillon (1963-65)
Henry H. Fowler (1965-68)
Joseph W. Barr (1968-69)
Secretary of Defense
Robert S. McNamara (1963-68)
Clark M. Clifford (1968-69)
Attorney General
Robert F. Kennedy (1963-65)
Nicholas Katzenbach (1965-67)
Ramsey Clark (1967-69)
Postmaster General
John A. Gronouski (1963-65)
Lawrence F. O'Brien (1965-68)
W. Marvin Watson (1968-69)
Secretary of the Interior
Stewart L. Udall (1963-69)
Secretary of Agriculture
Orville L. Freeman (1963-69)
Secretary of Commerce
Luther H. Hodges (1963-65)
John T. Connor (1965-67)
Alexander B. Trowbridge (1967-68)
Cyrus R. Smith (1968-69)
Secretary of Labor
W. Willard Wirtz (1963-69)
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
Anthony J. Celebrezze (1963-65)
John W. Gardner (1965-68)
Wilbur J. Cohen (1968-69)
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
Robert C. Weaver (1966-69)
Robert C. Wood (1969)
Secretary of Transportation
Alan S. Boyd (1967-69)
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