"In America any boy may become President and I suppose it's just one of the risks he takes"
About this Quote
A civics slogan gets flipped into a punchline, and the joke lands because it’s only half a joke. Stevenson takes the most pious American boast - that the presidency is open to “any boy” - and quietly adds the part the boosterism omits: that democratized power also democratizes danger. If anyone can become President, then the office is exposed not just to greatness but to mediocrity, vanity, and sheer accident. The line works by treating the highest office in the country as if it were an ill-advised hobby, something a kid might try without fully grasping the consequences. That mock-casual “I suppose” is doing a lot of work; it’s the sound of an adult watching a culture romanticize its own machinery.
Stevenson was a polished, cerebral Midwestern liberal in an era when television was beginning to reward simplicity over nuance, when Cold War anxieties made leadership feel existential, and when his own opponent (Eisenhower) embodied comforting, uniformed competence. The quip carries a patrician edge, yes, but it’s also a warning: American democracy’s proud openness can become a liability if citizenship is reduced to a fairy tale of upward mobility.
Subtextually, he’s puncturing the myth that the system guarantees wise outcomes. It doesn’t. It guarantees access. The “risk” isn’t that a boy might aspire too high; it’s that the country might have to live with whoever gets there.
Stevenson was a polished, cerebral Midwestern liberal in an era when television was beginning to reward simplicity over nuance, when Cold War anxieties made leadership feel existential, and when his own opponent (Eisenhower) embodied comforting, uniformed competence. The quip carries a patrician edge, yes, but it’s also a warning: American democracy’s proud openness can become a liability if citizenship is reduced to a fairy tale of upward mobility.
Subtextually, he’s puncturing the myth that the system guarantees wise outcomes. It doesn’t. It guarantees access. The “risk” isn’t that a boy might aspire too high; it’s that the country might have to live with whoever gets there.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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