776 Stupidest Things Ever Said (16 page)

BOOK: 776 Stupidest Things Ever Said
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directions from a Japanese tooth flosser (grosser), with the accompanying motto: “Help you use gross smoothly and clean tooch dirt,” reported in
Far Eastern Economic Review

On Top Hits, Catchy Chinese:

“Indignantly Condemn the Wang-Chan-Chiang-Yao Gang of Four.”

Hit song of 1976, according to the
People’s Daily,
Beijing, China

On Tourism, Bad Reasons for:

Come to think of it, why wait until May to visit Memphis? April is the month the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in the city.

from an item in
USA Today

On the Trade Deficit, Nuclear War and:

[After a nuclear attack] … so far as the balance of payments is concerned, our results show exports consistently exceeding imports by amounts varying from about 150 to 200 percent.

two economists speaking at a Fort Monroe, Virginia, seminar sponsored by Civil Defense in 1967

On Translations, Bad:

Equal goes it loose.

German President Heinrich Lübke, translating “It will soon begin” (Gleich geht es los) into English

On Translations, Bad:

Pepsi brings your ancestors back from the grave.

ad slogan “Pepsi Comes Alive” as initially translated into Chinese

On Translations, Bad:

I desire the Poles carnally.

President Jimmy Carter’s mistranslation in a 1977 speech in Poland

On Translations, Bad:

We pray for MacArthur’s erection.

sign supposedly erected by Japanese citizens in Tokyo, when General MacArthur was considering a run for United States President

On Translations, Bad:
  1. At the rise of the hand of the policeman, stop rapidly. Do not pass him or otherwise disrespect him.

  2. If pedestrian obstacle your path, tootle horn melodiously. If he continue to obstacle, tootle horn vigorously and utter vocal warning such as “Hi, Hi.”

  3. If wandering horse by roadside obstacle your path, beware that
    he do not take fright as you pass him. Go soothingly by, or stop by roadside till he pass away.

  4. If road mope obstacle your path, refrain from pass on hill or round curve. Follow patiently till road arrive at straight level stretch. Then tootle horn melodiously and step on, passing at left and waving hand courteously to honorable road mope in passing.

  5. Beware of greasy corner where lurk skid demon. Cease step on, approach slowly, round cautiously, resume step on gradually.

    from an official Japanese guide for English-speaking drivers, 1936

On Transportation, Legal Minds and:

When two trains approach each other at a crossing, they shall both come to a full stop and neither shall start up until the other has gone.

a law in Kansas

On Travel:

If you come to a fork in the road, take it.

Yogi Berra (widely attributed to Berra, although some say he never actually said it)

On Trees:

A tree’s a tree. How many more do you need to look at?

President Ronald Reagan

On Trees:

There is today in the United States as much forest as there was when Washington was at Valley Forge.

President Ronald Reagan

On Trees:

When you see one redwood, you’ve seen them all.

President Ronald Reagan

On Trees, Second Thoughts About:

I don’t believe a tree is a tree and if you’ve seen one you’ve seen them all.

President Ronald Reagan

On Tributes, Great Presidential:

A real lady who has given unwittingly of her philosophy to the nation.

President Gerald Ford on adviser Ann Armstrong

On Troubles, Presidential Words of Comfort About:

Remember Lincoln, going to his knees in times of trial in the Civil War and all that stuff. You can’t be. And we are blessed. So don’t feel sorry for—don’t cry for me, Argentina.

President George Bush, in a January 15, 1992, New Hampshire campaign speech

On Trustworthiness:

That fellow is a crook. His word isn’t worth the paper it’s written on.

attributed to movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn

On Truth:

I don’t want to tell you any half-truths unless they’re completely accurate.

Dennis Rappaport, boxing manager, explaining his silence regarding boxer Thomas Hearns

On Truth:

There are two kinds of truth. There are real truths and there are made-up truths.

Marion Barry, mayor of Washington, D.C., on his arrest for drug use

On Truth:

If I told you the truth, I’d be a hypocrite.

Michael Curtiz, Hollywood director, when asked his opinion of a producer

On Truth, the Meaning of:

The honorable member did not want the truth; the honorable member had asked for facts.

Joseph Chamberlain, nineteenth-century British statesman, leader of the Liberal Unionists, and later Colonial Secretary

On the Twentieth Century, Great Observations About:

[The Holocaust] was an obscene period in our nation’s history … this century’s history…. We all lived in this century. I didn’t live in this century.

Dan Quayle, then Indiana senator and Republican vice-presidential candidate during a news conference in which he was asked his opinion about the Holocaust

On Twenty-Twenty Hindsight:

You know, I’ve always wondered about the taping equipment. But I’m damn glad we have it.

President Richard Nixon to White House aide H. R. Haldeman

On Typesetting, Great Moments in:

Several of the Rev. Dr. Mudge’s friends called upon him yesterday, and after a conversation the unsuspecting pig was seized by the hind leg, and slid along a beam until he reached the hot-water tank…. Thereupon he came forward and said that there were times when the feelings overpowered one, and for that reason he would not attempt to do more than thank those around him for the manner in which such a huge animal was cut into fragments was simply astonishing. The doctor concluded his remarks, when the machine seized him and in less time than it takes to write it the pig was cut into fragments and worked up into delicious sausage. The occasion will be long remembered by the doctor’s friends as one of the most delightful of their lives. The best pieces can be procured for tenpence a pound, and we
are sure that those who have sat so long under his ministry will rejoice that he has been treated so handsomely.

from an English newspaper in the late 1800s, when two stories—one on a patent pig-killing and sausage-making machine and the other on the Rev. Dr. Mudge being presented with a gold-headed cane—were mistakenly pieced together by typographers

U
On U.S. History:

[Students and their ancestors] have been coming to the land now called the United States for millennia.

a City University of New York professor in a newsletter

On Unanimity:

Resolved unanimously with one dissenting voice.

from the report of an Irish Board of Guardians meeting

On Uncertainty, Clarity of:

There’s a lot of uncertainty that’s not clear in my mind.

Gib Lewis, Speaker of the Texas House

On Understanding the Pentagon:

OPSDEP: Short for Operations Deputy. By JCS charter, the Army representative is the DCSOPS. However, the ADCSOPS (JA), who is the DEPOPSDEP, may act for the OPSDEP on all joint matters. The use of the term OPSDEP also includes DEPOPSDEP. OPSDEPs or DEPOPSDEPs can approve papers for the JCS.

Army Joint Actions Handbook

On Understatements:

The fact that my father was President and Chief Justice of the United States was a tremendous help and inspiration in my public career.

Senator Robert A. Taft, son of President William H. Taft

On Understatements:

A lot of guys said it was fate that stopped it. Probably I would have been dead if it went over.

Dave Munday, stuntperson and daredevil, after the foam-padded barrel he was in caught on a crag inches away from the edge of Niagara Falls

On Understatements:

Ron Ziegler: So it was a really terrific year except for the downside.

Questioner: What downside?

Ziegler: Watergate.

Press Secretary Ron Ziegler when asked about the accomplishments of the Nixon administration

On Understatements (Made in the Depths of the Great Depression):

The country is not in good condition.

Calvin Coolidge, ex-President, sharing his erudite opinion on the Great Depression in January 1931

On Unemployment:

It [unemployment insurance] provides prepaid vacations for a segment of our country which has made it a way of life.

President Ronald Reagan

On Unemployment:

Now we are trying to get unemployment to go up and I think we’re going to succeed.

President Ronald Reagan at a 1982 GOP fundraiser

On Unemployment, High:

The right to suffer is one of the joys of a free economy.

Howard Pyle, aide to President Dwight Eisenhower, commenting on the unemployment situation in Detroit

On Unemployment, Reasons for:

When a great many people are unable to find work, unemployment results.

Calvin Coolidge, ex-President, discussing the United States economic situation in 1931

On Unforgettable Moments:

Steve Balboni (Kansas City Royals player):

Hitting your first grand slam is a thrill. I’ll always remember this.

Commentator:

But you hit one back in ’83.

Steve Balboni:

You’re right. I guess I forgot about that one.

On Uniforms, Numbers on:

There’s someone warming up in the bull pen, but he’s obscured by his number.

Jerry Coleman, San Diego Padres announcer

On Uniforms, Numbers on:

Q: Do the Broncos have your number, Christian?

A: Do they have my number. I don’t know. Do they have a guy with the number 35?

Chiefs back Christian Okoye, as reported in
Sports Illustrated

On Unknowns:

We received yesterday morning from an unknown source whose immense generosity is well known to us …

Leon Daudet, French royalist leader, speaking about a large amount of money received by his Royalist Party

On Urban Centers, Interesting Facts About:

Bison, elk, and puma are now extinct in the city of Macon.

a report sponsored by the Federal Writers’ Project, Georgia, 1936

V
On Verbs, New:

I’ve tasked Bill. I’ve said, “Bill, work the problem.”

President George Bush about drug czar William Bennett’s job

On Verbs, New:

I have said that the court usurpated its authority.

Alabama Governor George Wallace, on a court ruling on the school prayer issue

On Verbs, New:

You’d better caveat that statement.

Alexander Haig, then Secretary of State

On Verbs, New Uses for:

I would like the government to do all it can to mitigate, then, in understanding, in mutuality of interest, in concern for the common good, our tasks will be solved.

President Warren G. Harding, trying to make a point about the government’s role, as quoted in H. L. Mencken’s essay “Gamalielese.” Mencken coined the term “Gamalielese” (based on Harding’s middle name, Gamaliel) to refer to Harding’s pretentious way of speaking.

On Vietnam Vets:

No wonder we lost the war.

dubious quip by Dorchester, Massachusetts, Judge Paul King, to a Vietnam vet appearing before him

On Violence, the CIA and:

I have definitional problems with the word “violence.” I don’t know what the word “violence” means.

William Colby, director of the Central Intelligence Agency

On Virility, Congressional:

We’re finally going to wrassle to the ground this giant orgasm that is just out of control.

Arizona Senator Dennis DeConcini on a balanced budget amendment

On Virility and Poultry, Interesting Facts About:

It takes a virile man to make a chicken pregnant.

Perdue chicken ad, as mistranslated abroad

W
On Waffling:

I’m not indecisive. Am I indecisive?

Jim Seibel, mayor of St. Paul, Minnesota

On Walking:

Mr. Asquith was like a drunken man walking along a straight line—the further he went the sooner he fell.

Sir Edward Carson, famous Irish politician, and cross-examiner of Oscar Wilde

On War:

This is not a conventional war. We have to forget propriety.

Colonel Robert A. Koob, tentative head of jury in the Sergeant Charles E. Hutto case. Hutto was accused of assault in the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War.

On War:

If we let people see that kind of thing, there would never again be any war.

senior Pentagon official on reasons why United States military censored footage showing Iraqi soldiers sliced in two by U.S. helicopter fire

On War Movies, People in Responsible Positions of Government and:

It made me nostalgic for arms talks and violence—it’s a great dialectic.

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