Top 28 Quotes & Sayings by Alexander Cockburn

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English journalist Alexander Cockburn.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Alexander Cockburn

Alexander Claud Cockburn was a Scottish-born Irish-American political journalist and writer. Cockburn was brought up by British parents in Ireland but had lived and worked in the United States since 1972. Together with Jeffrey St. Clair, he edited the political newsletter CounterPunch. Cockburn also wrote the "Beat the Devil" column for The Nation as well as one for The Week in London, syndicated by Creators Syndicate.

A childish soul not inoculated with compulsory prayer is a soul open to any religious infection.
Be careful about Burma. Most people cannot remember whether it was Siam and has become Thailand, or whether it is now part of Malaysia and should be called Sri Lanka.
Wear the badge of environmental radicalism, and you're a citizen automatically under suspicion. — © Alexander Cockburn
Wear the badge of environmental radicalism, and you're a citizen automatically under suspicion.
England in the late 1940s was famously grim. As I remember it, London back then was a very dirty place, from coal dust and smoke, from the grit stirred up every day by the jackhammers still clearing out rubble from the Blitz.
The First Law of Journalism: to confirm existing prejudice, rather than contradict it.
Pose a political threat to Business As Usual, and sooner or later, mostly sooner, someone will try to kill you.
The weapon of the advocate is the sword of the soldier, not the dagger of the assassin.
They keep telling us that in war truth is the first casualty, which is nonsense since it implies that in times of peace truth stays out of the sick bay or the graveyard.
The travel writer seeks the world we have lost - the lost valleys of the imagination.
By 1967, J. Edgar Hoover had concluded that the Black Panther Party had replaced the Communist Party as the gravest threat to national security.
In its attempt to crush the Black Panthers, the FBI engineered frequent arrests on the flimsiest of pretexts.
There's a whole journalistic-industrial complex dedicated to keeping newsprint, TV screens and radio waves clean of destabilizing scoops damaging to corporations or the state.
Republicans know well that a change of rhetorical pace is necessary. But efforts by their leaders to damp down the bellicosity of newly elected Tea Party types is running into the fact that the Tea Partiers have only the high volume setting on their amplifiers, just like Palin. They're like a couple having a fight at a funeral; politely sotto voce, then suddenly bursting out fortissimo with their plaints and accusations.
No chord in populism reverberates more strongly than the notion that the robust common sense of an unstained outsider is the best medicine for an ailing polity. Caligula doubtless got big cheers from the plebs when he installed his horse as proconsul.
Can it be that a generation of school children is growing up heedless of the simple truth that the Pentagon's centrla role for many years has been to buy weapons that don't work, against threats that don't exist?
No one believes for a moment the embargo will prompt the Iraqi people to rise against Saddam Hussein.
Nothing can inspire religious duty or animation but religion.
Are you more likely to tolerate drivel than you were four years ago? I think the answer is yes. Four years of Reagan has deadenedthe senses against a barrage of uninterrupted nonsense.
A "just war" is hospitable to every self-deception on the part of those waging it, none more than the certainty of virtue, under whose shelter every abomination can be committed with a clear conscience.
There is still zero empirical evidence that anthropogenic production of CO2 is making any measurable contribution to the world's present warming trend.
So much for the crusade against drugs . . . all America is actually doing is consolidating its position as the biggest dealer in addictive and lethal substances on the planet, waging war on all rivals, whether they take the form of the Thai domestic tobacco industry or the Colombian cocaine cartels.
Nothing but mountains filled with barbarous ethnics with views as medieval as their muskets, and unspeakably cruel too. — © Alexander Cockburn
Nothing but mountains filled with barbarous ethnics with views as medieval as their muskets, and unspeakably cruel too.
Regulation of sexual behavior is the preferred route to wider social control.
The art of politics is to separate actions from consequences
No foundation that I am aware of has hired ex-journalists to promote a thoroughgoing inquiry.
There is never finality in the display terminal's screen, but an irresponsible whimsicality, as words, sentences, and paragraphs are negated at the touch of a key. The significance of the past, as expressed in the manuscript by a deleted word or an inserted correction, is annulled in idle gusts of electronic massacre.
Cockburn's personal history links him to the politics of the Communist Party, and there are still moments in his writing - debating the number of people estimated to have perished in Stalin's gulags, claiming that 'the Brezhnev years were a Golden Age for the Soviet working class', when aspects of his father's convictions can be glimpsed.
Despair is the central part of the psychopathology. For the handmaiden of gossip is treachery.
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