
Top 17 Political Sarcasm Quotes
#1. Sarcasm all around the world is always against right wing and against people in power. That's the definition of political sarcasm.
Bassem Youssef
#2. That's an important lesson for me, to not qualify my experience against somebody else's. My experience is the experience that I wanted to have, and have created for myself, but it doesn't make me any more deserving than anybody else - or less.
Alexis Denisof
#3. This is supposed to be a lighthearted session of symbolic document destruction, not a political debate.
Veronica Roth
#4. Sufficiently advanced political correctness is indistinguishable from sarcasm.
Erik Naggum
#5. Repeat a lie a thousand times and it become a successful political campaign.
Ljupka Cvetanova
#6. How could you know what it feels like to fight the hounds of hell?
Sky Ferreira
#7. The technical aspects of doing motion capture and actually, you know, capturing the motion, is very different. It's an interesting learning curve to be part of because you have so much gear on you.
Noel Fisher
#8. That impulse I think is a form of love. Poetry is something that comes to you, rather than your having to work out its form beforehand.
Judith Wright
#9. The New York Times editorial page is like a Ouija board that has only three answers, no matter what the question. The answers are: higher taxes, more restrictions on political speech and stricter gun control.
Ann Coulter
#10. An accessible introduction to the nature of political thought. Just what I always wanted.
Chris Weitz
#11. You want a friend in this city? [Washington, DC.] Get a dog!
Harry Truman
#13. Truth is neither alive nor dead; it just aggravates itself all the time ...
Mark Twain
#14. Of course you have an e-mail, you idiot, just read it!
Chris Jericho
#15. Truth is condemned as a trap; justice is jeered at; saints are harassed as social enemies. Hence this Incarnation has come to uphold the Truth and suppress the False.
Sathya Sai Baba
#16. Zero-sum thinking is an obsession of mine, but mostly in economics.
P. J. O'Rourke
#17. Schiller writes in a letter [to Goethe, 17 December 1795] of a 'poetic mood'. I think I know what he means, I think I am familiar with it myself. It is the mood of receptivity to nature and one in which one's thoughts seem as vivid as nature itself.
Ludwig Wittgenstein
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