Quotes Library

January 18, 2026

The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.

Milan Kundera (1929-2023) Czech-French novelist. Quoted in “Part One: Afterlives of the Shoah”, in The World After Gaza: A History, Pankaj Mishra (New York: 2025)

Assuming you are on the side of mankind against the unreasonable power of others, what good is memory? What is wrong with forgetting?

Among the most troubling features of the present day, particularly as observed in young people, is their appalling ignorance of history, of any sort. 

America’s founding fathers were not political geniuses, but they were students of ancient history. They knew how republics were brought down, both from without, but more importantly from within. So they created a government with checks and balances that have stood the country in, more or less, good stead—at least until recently. If we have little knowledge of historical practice, we will never appreciate what has been lost.


More Quotes

February 8, 2026
Being right, in and of itself, is meaningless…we have to win. And we have to deliver.
January 16, 2025
[On Friedrich Hayek’s Road to Serfdom] A plan to resist all planning may be better than its opposite, but it belongs to the same style of politics.
June 1, 2025
The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance
Page 15 of 23