Top 11 Quotes & Sayings by John S. Dickerson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by John S. Dickerson.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
John S. Dickerson

John S. Dickerson is a Christian pastor, author and a nationally awarded American journalist. He has written essays and opinion columns for USA Today, CNN, The New York Times Sunday Opinion Page, and the religion pages of The Washington Post

Born: 1982
For the last 60 years, dictator Fidel Castro was America's most persistent adversary. Although Castro formally handed off to his brother, Raul, eight years ago, the communist leader was a symbolic force in Cuba and around the world.
In many cases, you're forced to make deals that are not the deal you'd make.
The country is split. There are - more people voting for Hillary Clinton than Donald Trump, but he's the president. — © John S. Dickerson
The country is split. There are - more people voting for Hillary Clinton than Donald Trump, but he's the president.
What's confusing about that, though, is you [Marco Rubio] say if he [Donald Trump] were the nominee, it would destroy the conservative movement. You're painting scary pictures of him being the nominee. But then you're saying he will never be the nominee. You have signed onto the hashtag #neverTrump.I guess what people wonder is, you say all these terrible things about him, but then why might you not, like Chris Christie, who said bad things about him, just turn around and endorse him once - once he gets the nomination?
Mr. Obama said that he personally told Mr. Putin to knock it off and vows to retaliate. But the Obama presidency is coming to an end and his successor still won't accept that Russia is guilty of tampering with U.S. elections. But president-elect Donald Trump is accepting the thanks of those who voted for him.
I think the people marching in L.A., on college campuses around the country, aren't marching simply because Trump was a Republican president and he got elected. They're marching because the Trump campaign is very much centered on demagogic rhetoric against immigrants, against Muslim-Americans, against black protest, against sort of America's non-white community.
When people try to stop free speech, stop people from talking, it creates pressure in the system that might cause people to act out.
Presidents have to learn how to adapt. Every president comes into the job, it's different than they expect, they must adapt.
We have a country that we have to take care of.
Donald Trump is a mainstream conservative who wants to profoundly take on the left. The left is infuriated that anybody would challenge the legitimacy of their moral superiority. And so the left goes hysterical.
Why should anybody who doesn't like Donald Trump think, oh, well, I should think he is legitimate now?
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