Top 9 Quotes & Sayings by Simon Heffer

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English journalist Simon Heffer.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Simon Heffer

Simon James Heffer is an English historian, journalist, author and political commentator. He has published several biographies and a series of books on the social history of Great Britain from the mid nineteenth century until the end of the First World War. He was appointed professorial research fellow at the University of Buckingham in 2017.

The IRA sending a message of sympathy to America is like Jack the Ripper giving us a lesson in the sanctity of human life.
Football is not, in my view, a sport: it is somewhere between a business racket and a mental illness. I associate it with all the worst aspects of our society - violence, drunkenness, drugs, racism, exploitation, greed and stupidity; and that's just for starters.
In England, even the poorest of people believe that they have rights; that is very different from what satisfies the poor in other lands. — © Simon Heffer
In England, even the poorest of people believe that they have rights; that is very different from what satisfies the poor in other lands.
The more a climate can be created in which neither the English nor the Scots are given cause to resent each other, the better.
Of the 664 men who rode into the Valley of Death about 540 eventually got out of it again. By far the highest casualty rate was among the horses. Compared with the Somme or an evening in the Blitz, the Valley of Death was a piece of cake.
Those Victorians: endlessly fascinating, broad in their learning, heroic in their achievements, in parts completely mad.
If there is writing on Hadrian's Wall, it reads that the English should leave Scotland to its own devices.
This is, in theory, still a free country, but our politically correct, censorious times are such that many of us tremble to give vent to perfectly acceptable views for fear of condemnation. Freedom of speech is thereby imperiled, big questions go undebated, and great lies become accepted, unequivocally as great truths.
Political genius consists in identifying oneself with a principle.
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