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For it is mutual trust, even more than mutual interest that holds human associations together.
H. L. Mencken
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H. L. Mencken
Age: 75 †
Born: 1880
Born: September 12
Died: 1956
Died: January 29
Autobiographer
Essayist
Historian
Journalist
Linguist
Literary Critic
Satirist
Social Critic
Writer
Baltimore
Maryland
Henry Louis Mencken
Trust
Interest
Together
Associations
Human
Distrust
Humans
Association
Even
Holds
Mutual
Ethics
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Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.
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The trouble with Communism is the Communists, just as the trouble with Christianity is the Christians.
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The only way that a government can provide for jobs for all citizens is by deciding what every man should do.
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Philadelphia is the most pecksniffian of American cities, and thus probably leads the world.
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Evil: That which one believes of others. It is a sin to believe evil of others, but it is seldom a mistake
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When a new source of taxation is found it never means, in practice, that the old source is abandoned. It merely means that the politicians have two ways of milking the taxpayer where they had one before.
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Why writers write I do not know. As well ask why a hen lays an egg or why a cow stands patiently while an underprivileged farmer burglarizes her.
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Popularity--The capacity for listening sympathetically when men boast of their wives and women complain of their husbands.
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Justice is what you get when you run out of money.
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When I mount the scaffold at last these will be my farewell words to the sheriff: Say what you will against me when I am gone, but don't forget to add, in common justice, that I was never converted to anything.
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Government, like any other organism, refuses to acquiesce in its own extinction. This refusal, of course, involves the resistance to any effort to diminish its powers and prerogatives.
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Government is actually the worst failure of civilized man. There has never been a really good one, and even those that are most tolerable are arbitrary, cruel, grasping and unintelligent.
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There are no mute, inglorious Miltons, save in the hallucinations of poets. The one sound test of a Milton is that he functions as a Milton.
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Whenever a husband and wife begin to discuss their marriage they are giving evidence at a coroner's inquest.
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There are two impossibilities in life: just one drink and an honest politician.
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One smart reader is worth a thousand boneheads.
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The effect of every sort of New Deal is to increase and prosper the criminal class. It teaches precisely what all professional criminals believe, to wit, that, it is neither virtuous nor necessary to suffer and to do without.
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Friendship is a common belief in the same fallacies, mountebanks and hobgoblins.
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It is not materialism that is the chief curse of the world, as pastors teach, but idealism. Men get into trouble by taking their visions and hallucinations too seriously.
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When somebody says it’s not about the money, it’s about the money.
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