There aren’t traditions of freedom in a place like Iraq. They’re going to have to come to grips with a concept that they hadn’t been allowed to conceive before.

About Malcolm Wallop

Malcolm Wallopwas an American rancher and politician. He served as a United States Senator from Wyoming from 1977 to 1995.

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More quotes from Malcolm Wallop

Our educational system is appallingly poor right now. Yet, somehow we’re turning out some of the most intellectual and powerful sophisticated minds in the world. I think that’s because we still have the opportunity here.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

The utter incompetence of the U.N. is literally incomprehensible.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

Doctrines provide an architecture for both Republican and Democrat presidents to carry out policies.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

If the Republicans think that by having stated and even achieved most of the Contract that they are therefore entitled to the acceptance and favor of the American voter, they’re crazy.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

Yes, many immigrants cherish the value of choice and opportunity and the value of education more than 7th or 8th generation Americans.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

The concept of minimum wage is crazy, if you really stop to think about it. If $8 an hour seems right, why not $20 an hour? If it’s coming by order of the government, why stop at any level? Why not just say everyone should get what Gates gets?

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

Government, which does not and did not grant us our rights, must not now seek to deny them by using fear as its justification.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

We’re taking on Social Security as a property rights issue. We figure that every single American has an absolute property right interest in the fruits of his or her own labor. What I work for should be my property.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

The ultimate end is a nation that lies under the concept of the Declaration of Indepen dence. The Declaration of Independence is such an extraordinary statement – it was designed by people skeptical of government, local or national, but in particular national.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

We don’t need a nation that has national identity cards.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

You talked about national identity cards and the terrorism bill. We have made a government that has grown used to viewing us as subjects, has grown used to seeing its role as commanding us.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

We are a communicating nation which needs access to space, access to the seas.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

So with the end of the Cold War, it became increasingly obvious that there was no basis upon which any decision was being made, not in the White House, and certainly because of that, not in the Congress.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

There aren’t traditions of freedom in a place like Iraq. They’re going to have to come to grips with a concept that they hadn’t been allowed to conceive before.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

I don’t think the only place to fight for freedom is in the halls of Congress.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

Finally we are a nation with some conscience. It means alliances are extremely important when they’re based on a national interest. We have to have the ability to sustain our presence within those alliances.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

It’s insanity for a party that believes in freedom to allow some Republicans to seize an agenda that is totally alien to the agenda that was established in the election.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

I’m a big supporter of immigration.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)

We are a studying nation. Scholarship from science is important to the whole world and those people need to be able to be safe and secure in what they do.

Malcolm Wallop

American politician (1933-2011)