If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
Humor is richly rewarding to the person who employs it. It has some value in gaining and holding attention, but it has no persuasive value at all.
Wealth is not without its advantages and the case to the contrary, although it has often been made, has never proved widely persuasive.
Few can believe that suffering, especially by others, is in vain. Anything that is disagreeable must surely have beneficial economic effects.
We have escapist fiction, so why not escapist biography?
Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists.
If wrinkles must be written upon our brows, let them not be written upon the heart. The spirit should never grow old.
By all but the pathologically romantic, it is now recognized that this is not the age of the small man.
Few people at the beginning of the nineteenth century needed an adman to tell them what they wanted.
All of the great leaders have had one characteristic in common: it was the willingness to confront unequivocally the major anxiety of their people in their time. This, and not much else, is the essence of leadership.
A person buying ordinary products in a supermarket is in touch with his deepest emotions.
A bad book is the worse that it cannot repent. It has not been the devil's policy to keep the masses of mankind in ignorance; but finding that they will read, he is doing all in his power to poison their books.
Wealth, in even the most improbable cases, manages to convey the aspect of intelligence.
Economics is a subject profoundly conducive to cliche, resonant with boredom. On few topics is an American audience so practiced in turning off its ears and minds. And none can say that the response is ill advised.
Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite.