Top 8 Quotes & Sayings by Bob Herbert

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American journalist Bob Herbert.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
Bob Herbert

Robert Herbert is an American journalist and former op-ed columnist for The New York Times. His column was syndicated to other newspapers around the country. Herbert frequently writes on poverty, the Iraq War, racism and American political apathy towards racism. He is now a fellow at Demos and was elected to serve on the Common Cause National Governing Board in 2015.

I get a headache when I hear supporters of this endless warfare complaining about the federal budget deficits. They're like arsonists complaining about the smell of smoke in the neighborhood.
The soldiers in Iraq are fighting, suffering and dying . . . anonymously and pointlessly, while the rest of us are free to buckle ourselves into the family vehicle and head off to the malls and shop.
I think the Republican Party is... accurately defined as a party that looks out for the interests of the very wealthy. — © Bob Herbert
I think the Republican Party is... accurately defined as a party that looks out for the interests of the very wealthy.
There are few things more dangerous than a mixture of power, arrogance and incompetence.
We pretend that no one's a racist anymore, but it's easier to talk about pornography in polite company than racial integration
There is nothing more American than brutal violence. The country was built on it, revels in it and shows every evidence of clinging to it with the crazed, destructive strength of an obsessive lover.
There's a terrible sense of dread filtering across America at the moment and it's not simply because of the continuing fear of terrorism and the fact that the nation is at war. It's more frightening than that. It grows out of the suspicion that we all may be passengers in a vehicle that has made a radically wrong turn and is barreling along a dark road, with its headlights off and with someone behind the wheel who may not know how to drive.
Schools are no longer legally segregated, but because of residential patterns, housing discrimination, economic disparities and long-held custom, they most emphatically are in reality.
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