"Let us all take more responsibility, not only for ourselves and our families but for our communities and our country"
About this Quote
“Take more responsibility” is classic Clinton: a velvet-glove command that sounds like empowerment while quietly redrawing the moral contract between citizen and state. As a president governing in the long shadow of Reagan-era individualism and the 1990s drumbeat about “welfare dependency,” Clinton learned to speak in a hybrid dialect: communal obligation packaged as personal initiative. The line’s genius is its stack of loyalties - self, family, community, country - which makes responsibility feel less like policy and more like patriotism.
The intent is to recruit listeners into a national project without triggering the allergy many Americans have to being told what they “owe” society. Clinton doesn’t say “sacrifice” or “redistribution”; he chooses “responsibility,” a word that flatters the audience as capable adults. It’s also a subtle rebuke. “More” implies you’re not doing enough, but it lands softly because the speaker includes himself in “us all.” That inclusive phrasing is political judo: it reduces defensiveness while raising the bar.
The subtext is triangulation, Clinton’s signature move. He’s signaling to progressives that community matters, while reassuring moderates that the answer isn’t just bigger government - it’s better citizens. Contextually, it fits an era when Democrats tried to reclaim moral language from conservatives, arguing that civic duty and national strength aren’t right-wing property. It’s less a warm slogan than a strategic bridge: from private life to public life, from feeling concerned to being accountable.
The intent is to recruit listeners into a national project without triggering the allergy many Americans have to being told what they “owe” society. Clinton doesn’t say “sacrifice” or “redistribution”; he chooses “responsibility,” a word that flatters the audience as capable adults. It’s also a subtle rebuke. “More” implies you’re not doing enough, but it lands softly because the speaker includes himself in “us all.” That inclusive phrasing is political judo: it reduces defensiveness while raising the bar.
The subtext is triangulation, Clinton’s signature move. He’s signaling to progressives that community matters, while reassuring moderates that the answer isn’t just bigger government - it’s better citizens. Contextually, it fits an era when Democrats tried to reclaim moral language from conservatives, arguing that civic duty and national strength aren’t right-wing property. It’s less a warm slogan than a strategic bridge: from private life to public life, from feeling concerned to being accountable.
Quote Details
| Topic | Leadership |
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