"Facts are stubborn things"
About this Quote
"Facts are stubborn things" is the kind of line that sounds like humility while doing the work of authority. In Reagan's mouth, it isn’t a gentle plea for empiricism; it’s a rhetorical hammer. The sentence personifies facts as immovable, which lets the speaker cast himself as the grown-up in the room: I’m not being ideological, reality itself is on my side. That’s the subtextual move. It’s less about submitting to evidence than recruiting "evidence" as a character witness.
As a political instrument, the phrase is brilliantly double-edged. It flatters the listener’s self-image as practical and clear-eyed while quietly implying that opponents are the ones trapped in fantasy or spin. Reagan’s larger brand leaned on this: optimism, simplicity, and moral confidence delivered in plain language that feels nonthreatening even when it’s hard-line. Calling facts "stubborn" turns debate into a contest of sturdiness, not nuance. Who wants to be on the side of the flimsy?
Context matters because Reagan’s presidency sat at the crossroads of messaging and governance: a media-savvy White House, an emerging conservative movement, and policy fights where the definition of "the facts" was itself contested (the economy, the Cold War, social change). The line works because it pretends the argument is already over. If facts are stubborn, the only remaining question is whether you’re mature enough to accept them. That posture is politically potent, even when the facts aren’t as settled as the sentence suggests.
As a political instrument, the phrase is brilliantly double-edged. It flatters the listener’s self-image as practical and clear-eyed while quietly implying that opponents are the ones trapped in fantasy or spin. Reagan’s larger brand leaned on this: optimism, simplicity, and moral confidence delivered in plain language that feels nonthreatening even when it’s hard-line. Calling facts "stubborn" turns debate into a contest of sturdiness, not nuance. Who wants to be on the side of the flimsy?
Context matters because Reagan’s presidency sat at the crossroads of messaging and governance: a media-savvy White House, an emerging conservative movement, and policy fights where the definition of "the facts" was itself contested (the economy, the Cold War, social change). The line works because it pretends the argument is already over. If facts are stubborn, the only remaining question is whether you’re mature enough to accept them. That posture is politically potent, even when the facts aren’t as settled as the sentence suggests.
Quote Details
| Topic | Truth |
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