Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American journalist Tony Snow.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Robert Anthony Snow was an American journalist, political commentator, anchor, columnist, musician, and the 25th White House Press Secretary under President George W. Bush, from May 2006 until his resignation in September 2007. Snow also worked for the President George H. W. Bush as chief speechwriter and Deputy Assistant of Media Affairs, from 1991 to 1993.
Between his two White House stints, Snow was a broadcaster and newspaper columnist. After years of regular guest-hosting for The Rush Limbaugh Show and providing news commentary for National Public Radio, he launched his own talk radio program, The Tony Snow Show, which went on to become nationally syndicated. He was also a regular personality on Fox News Channel beginning in 1996, hosting Fox News Sunday and Weekend Live, and often substituting as host of The O'Reilly Factor. In April 2008, Snow briefly joined CNN as a commentator. He also made several notable speeches, including keynote addresses at the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2007 and 2008.
In his journalistic and governmental capacities, Snow generally supported conservative causes.
We've got to rebuild human hearts - and persuade people that hope isn't just possible, but essential.
It serves notice that President Bush is serious about promoting freedom, because free societies are a lot more peaceable than dictatorships and monarchies.
The business of peace requires more than showing up with paint brushes, foodstuffs and an oil pipeline or two.
Sometimes, political campaigns make decent people act and talk like perfect buffoons.
The United States spends more money on African aid than any nation on earth.
Voting is a right best exercised by people who have taken time to learn about the issues.
We live in an anaesthetized society.
Every one of our greatest national treasures, our liberty, enterprise, vitality, wealth, military power, global authority, flow from a surprising source: our ability to give thanks.
Investigators have discovered that dogs can laugh, which can't be too big of a surprise.
To have faith is to believe in truth, believe that truth confers special power on those lucky enough to get a little insight, and to know in our hearts that all these things come from God, which is why we should never get too cocky about our successes.
It makes no sense to pack an auditorium with 5,000 people and then tell them to keep quiet.
Pet lovers know that animals sometimes understand us better than we do, and the annals of human sin and desire provide plenty of stories to drive the point home.
That said, ID does not qualify as science because it gives us nothing to test or measure. Science requires replicable tests involving measurable variables.
The art of being sick is not the same as the art of getting well.
Many people don't give a rip about politics and know as much about public affairs as they know about the topography of Pluto.
The secret of learning to be sick is this: Illness doesn't make you less of what you were. You are still you.
George W. Bush broke a mold four years ago: Even though he lost the popular vote, he governed as if he had won by acclamation.
We believe. We believe in our destiny as a nation. We believe we have been called to do good, to spread the blessings of liberty and encourage the sense of trust upon which free societies depend.
In other words, Social Security is every bit as insecure as the stock market.
The real sin with Social Security is that it's a long-term rip-off and a short-term scam.
If you think Independence Day is America's defining holiday, think again. Thanksgiving deserves that title, hands-down.
Today there are about 40 million retirees receiving benefits; by the time all the baby boomers have retired, there will be more than 72 million retirees drawing Social Security benefits.
There is no Senate rule governing the proper uses of the filibuster.
Somewhere near you, somebody right now is trying to help the indigent and poor - providing food, shelter, clothing or simple kindness.
Sure, science involves trial and error. Scientists refine theories each day. But as they do, they help us grasp more clearly the wonders of the world and the universe.
Yet, it ought to be obvious that good music generally occupies a higher plane that mere politics. Great writers can express moods through melody and capture experiences we share most powerfully - love, lust, longing; joy, rage, fear; triumph, yearning and confusion.
It is a common mistake these days to politicize anything and everything, including music.
Well, we can't afford blindness anymore. There are tens of thousands of thugs who loathe liberty and love death, and want to annihilate Western civilization.
It is no accident that Hitler, Lenin, Pol Pot and other butchers of note took special pains early in their despotic careers to suppress religion and undermine the traditional family. Theophobes would find such a characterization truly horrifying, but it's true. This explains why theophobia - while popular in faculty lounges, journalism seminars and Hollywood bacchanals - has not and probably never will attract a public following of any appreciable influence or size.
The last person to achieve unambiguous victory in an air war was Zeus.
One of the problems with NPR is that there is so much political correctness that if you've got a name that looks like it was made up by Rudyard Kipling, you've got a better chance of getting hired. I'm a white guy named Tony Snow for heaven's sake. That's as white as it goes.
American journalists and politicians made a perfect spectacle of themselves in discussing the Abu Ghraib prison controversy.
President Bush has committed billions to the fight against AIDS, thus making retroviral drugs available to millions of HIV-positive Africans.
You're young and you're bulletproof and invincible. But never underestimate the power of other people's love and prayer.
When politicians rush to fix things, it's a sure sign that either the intended patient is dead or fully healed.
Risk is the inevitable product of liberty - and it's responsible not only for great tragedy, but also great triumph.
In many cases, a bout with sickness stretches your soul, opens your eyes, and introduces you to a world of unimagined grandeur, possibility and joy.
God doesn't promise tomorrow, he does promise eternity.
Go off-road...Practice a little daring.
When you die, you graduate. I don't worry about death. Sickness teaches there is joy in everything. Take joy in your sickness because a lot of times God is telling you: 'You may not know it, but you're more blessed than you realized.'
I hate to tell you, but it's not always pretty up there on Capitol Hill and there have been other scandals as you know that have been more than simply naughty e-mails.
If you disaggregate, things fall apart.
Government never falls lower than when decent people dutifully excuse their leaders' sins.
[The GOP] must decide soon where they stand on the issue of socialized medicine. President Clinton threw down the gauntlet in his State of the Union address, when he proposed guaranteeing health insurance for at least half of the 10 million American children who have none.
We want lives of simple, predictable ease-smooth, even trails as far as the eye can see-but God likes to go off-road.
Love can achieve unexpected majesty in the rocky soil of misfortune.
You think Vietnam was bad? Vietnam is nothing next to Kosovo.
It's hard to describe, but there are times when... you feel a surge of the Spirit. Somehow you just know: others have chosen, when talking to the Author of all creation, to lift us up - to speak to Him about us!
George Bush has become something of an embarrassment.