Denis Healey
Denis Healey
Denis Winston Healey, Baron Healey, CH MBE PC FRSLwas a British Labour Party politician who served as Secretary of State for Defence from 1964 to 1970, Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1974 to 1979 and Deputy Leader of the Labour Party from 1980 to 1983...
NationalityBritish
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth30 August 1917
rich
Squeeze the rich until the pips squeak
funny life law
First law on holes - when you're in one, stop digging!
digging holes ifs
If you’re in a hole, stop digging.
employment economics achieve
We cannot hope to achieve full employment and sustain it until we have mastered inflation.
country war common
War inside countries is all too common.
glasses tea mug
Karl Marx himself preferred a glass of claret to the mug of tea affected by some of his recent converts.
people taxpayers used
An aircraft which is used by wealthy people on their expense accounts, whose fares are subsidized by much poorer taxpayers.
would-be world influence
The Americans have a very active presence and policy in every single part of the world and if we broke with them, we would lose any possibility of influencing them. They would go in for global unilateralism, and the world would be a more dangerous place.
sarcastic sheep
Being attacked by him is like being savaged by a dead sheep.
use politician dangerous
Nothing is more dangerous that the politician who uses politics as a surrogate for an unsatisfactory personal life.
problem situation solve
Unless you understand the history of a situation, you can't ever hope to solve problems.
law people working-together
Trying to create a sense of common interest does involve getting people actually to work together on common problems. It can't be created by law, that's why I disagree with the liberal approach becuase it's essentially a lawyer's approach.
military technology competition
Many of us in the West have come to feel that the development of technology in the military and economic fields has produced a single world in which the central problems, both military and economic, are going to require co-operation rather than continued confrontation and competition.