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Wealth & Money Quote by Al Lewis

"Oscar Wilde said the rich and the poor are equal - they can both sleep under the bridge. Right? Do they have a right? You're damn right they have a right!"

About this Quote

The line lands like a heckle from the cheap seats, and that is the point. Al Lewis takes a Wilde-ish epigram about “equality” and drags it out of the drawing room into the gutter, where the joke stops being clever and starts being accusatory. Wilde’s original barb (often paraphrased) works because it exposes how abstract ideals get used as velvet curtains: everyone is “free” to sleep under a bridge, so the story goes, therefore the system is fair. Lewis keeps the setup, then blows up the punchline.

The key move is the rapid flip from “Right?” to “Do they have a right?” He turns a casual agreement-check into a constitutional question. “Right” shifts from slang (correct) to entitlement (legal and moral claim). That pivot is the subtext: poverty isn’t an unfortunate accident; it’s a political condition, administered through what society chooses to guarantee or deny. When Lewis barks “You’re damn right they have a right!”, he’s mocking the complacent notion that the poor should be grateful for the bare minimum of public space. Sleeping under a bridge is framed as “equality” only if you’re willing to treat homelessness as an option rather than a failure.

As an actor and public personality who often trafficked in populist indignation, Lewis delivers it like street-corner rhetoric: a joke with teeth, a demand disguised as banter. The outrage isn’t ornamental; it’s a challenge to the audience’s complicity in confusing equal vulnerability with equal dignity.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
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Al Lewis on rights and the bridge aphorism
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Al Lewis (April 30, 1910 - February 3, 2006) was a Actor from USA.

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