CH

Author

Christopher Hitchens

/christopher-hitchens-quotes-and-sayings

343 Quotes
22 Works

Author Summary

About Christopher Hitchens on QuoteMust

Christopher Hitchens currently has 343 indexed quotes and 22 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

A Long Short War: The Postponed Liberation of Iraq A Matter of Principle: Humanitarian Arguments for War in Iraq Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson Arguably: Selected Essays Christopher Hitchens and His Critics: Terror, Iraq, and the Left For the Sake of Argument: Essays and Minority Reports god is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything Hitch-22: A Memoir Inequalities in Zimbabwe Is Christianity Good for the World? Letters to a Young Contrarian Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays Mortality Prepared for the Worst: Selected Essays and Minority Reports The Enemy The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice The Portable Atheist: Essential Readings for the Nonbeliever The Quotable Hitchens from Alcohol to Zionism: The Very Best of Christopher Hitchens The Trial of Henry Kissinger Thomas Paine's Rights of Man: A Biography Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere Why Orwell Matters

Quotes

All quote cards for Christopher Hitchens

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Americanism in all its forms seemed to be trashy and wasteful and crude, even brutal. There was a metaphor ready to hand in my native Hampshire. Until some time after the war, the squirrels of England had been red. I can still vaguely remember these sweet Beatrix Potter__ype creatures, smaller and prettier and more agile and lacking the rat-like features that disclose themselves when you get close to a gray squirrel. These latter riffraff, once imported from America by some kind of regrettable accident, had escaped from captivity and gradually massacred and driven out the more demure and refined English breed. It was said that the gray squirrels didn't fight fair and would with a raking motion of their back paws castrate the luckless red ones. Whatever the truth of that, the sighting of a native English squirrel was soon to be a rarity, confined to the north of Scotland and the Isle of Wight, and this seemed to be emblematic, for the anxious lower middle class, of a more general massification and de-gentrification and, well, Americanization of everything.

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A little later, the Apollo mission was consummated and there were Americans on the moon. I remember distinctly looking up from the quad on what was quite a moon-flooded night, and thinking about it. They made it! The Stars and Stripes are finally flown on another orb! Also, English becomes the first and only language spoken on a neighboring rock! Who could forbear to cheer? Still, the experience was poisoned for me by having to watch Richard Nixon smirking as he babbled to the lunar-nauts by some closed-circuit link. Was even the silvery orb to be tainted by the base, earthbound reality of imperialism?

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[T]he hyphenation question is, and always has been and will be, different for English immigrants. One can be an Italian-American, a Greek-American, an Irish-American and so forth. (Jews for some reason prefer the words the other way around, as in 'American Jewish Congress' or 'American Jewish Committee.') And any of those groups can and does have a 'national day' parade on Fifth Avenue in New York. But there is no such thing as an 'English-American' let alone a 'British-American,' and one can only boggle at the idea of what, if we did exist, our national day parade on Fifth Avenue might look like. One can, though, be an Englishman in America. There is a culture, even a literature, possibly a language, and certainly a diplomatic and military relationship, that can accurately be termed 'Anglo-American.' But something in the very landscape and mapping of America, with seven eastern seaboard states named for English monarchs or aristocrats and countless hamlets and cities replicated from counties and shires across the Atlantic, that makes hyphenation redundant. Hyphenation__f one may be blunt__s for latecomers.

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I can see why people find him [Hugo Chávez] charming. He's very ebullient, as they say. I've heard him make a speech, though, and he has a vice that's always very well worth noticing because it's always a bad sign: he doesn't know when to sit down. He's worse than Castro was. He won't shut up. Then he told me that he didn't think the United States landed on the moon and didn't believe in the existence of Osama bin Laden. He thought all of this was all a put-up job. He's a wacko.