You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.
“You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.”
The World Motivation
You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.
“You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.”
Explore more quotes by Lyndon B. Johnson on topics like Baptist, wisdom, and life lessons.
“You might say that Lyndon Johnson is a cross between a Baptist preacher and a cowboy.”
“While you're saving your face, you're losing your ass.”
“Our most tragic error may have been our inability to establish a rapport and a confidence with the press and television with the communication media. I don't think the press has understood me.”
“John F. Kennedy was the victim of the hate that was a part of our country. It is a disease that occupies the minds of the few but brings danger to the many.”
“The men who have guided the destiny of the United States have found the strength for their tasks by going to their knees. This private unity of public men and their God is an enduring source of reassurance for the people of America.”
“Poverty must not be a bar to learning and learning must offer an escape from poverty.”
“Well, traditionally, how I grew up, I grew up in the Baptist Church, always going to church every Sunday, Sunday school, vacation Bible school.”
“I grew up in the Canaan Baptist Church.”
“Mother humor is such a universal theme. I wrote a show called '25 Questions for a Jewish Mother.' I had people coming up to me after the show saying, 'I'm Baptist, and my mother is just like yours.'”
“And you know, we'd go to church. We were Baptists. And every now and then there'd be a tent would set up, and it was the Holiness folks. And we liked their music.”
“We could say that people who eat grits, listen to country music, follow stock-car racing, support corporal punishment in the schools, hunt 'possum, go to Baptist churches and prefer bourbon to Scotch are likely to be Southerners.”
“My mom had grown up in the South. Louisiana and Georgia. She had been deeply religious. Baptist, then Mormon. She had worked for the U.S. military. She had voted for Ronald Reagan and Bush Senior.”