"The unforgivable crime is soft hitting. Do not hit at all if it can be avoided; but never hit softly"
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Roosevelt’s line has the snap of a rulebook and the moral heat of a sermon: if you’re going to strike, strike clean. Coming from a president who made combativeness into a civic style, “soft hitting” isn’t about politeness; it’s about cowardice disguised as restraint. The “unforgivable crime” is the half-measure that lets you indulge aggression while dodging responsibility for its consequences. A soft hit wounds and lingers; a hard hit ends the contest fast. In Roosevelt’s ethic, that distinction matters because it frames force as something that should be decisive, accountable, and, above all, owned.
The sentence is built like a drill command. First, an absolute moral condemnation. Then a conditional escape hatch: “Do not hit at all if it can be avoided.” Finally, the imperative that reasserts dominance: “never hit softly.” That structure performs his politics. Roosevelt isn’t a simple warmonger; he’s selling a theory of legitimate power. Violence (literal or rhetorical) is permitted only when necessity is claimed, and once claimed, it must be executed without squeamishness.
Context sharpens it. Roosevelt’s America was flexing into empire; his brand was strenuous manhood, plain speech, and the policing of national will. “Soft hitting” reads as a rebuke to the era’s genteel evasions: backroom sabotage, passive-aggressive governance, wars fought without admitting they’re wars. It also doubles as advice for public argument. Don’t snipe, don’t insinuate, don’t smear and then pretend you didn’t. Either stay out of the fight or put your name on the punch.
The sentence is built like a drill command. First, an absolute moral condemnation. Then a conditional escape hatch: “Do not hit at all if it can be avoided.” Finally, the imperative that reasserts dominance: “never hit softly.” That structure performs his politics. Roosevelt isn’t a simple warmonger; he’s selling a theory of legitimate power. Violence (literal or rhetorical) is permitted only when necessity is claimed, and once claimed, it must be executed without squeamishness.
Context sharpens it. Roosevelt’s America was flexing into empire; his brand was strenuous manhood, plain speech, and the policing of national will. “Soft hitting” reads as a rebuke to the era’s genteel evasions: backroom sabotage, passive-aggressive governance, wars fought without admitting they’re wars. It also doubles as advice for public argument. Don’t snipe, don’t insinuate, don’t smear and then pretend you didn’t. Either stay out of the fight or put your name on the punch.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Rejected source: Theodore Roosevelt THE ROUGH RIDERS 1925 Charles Scribner... (theodore roosevelt, 1924)IA: theodoreroosevel0000unse_b5g5
Evidence: t he too appealed to me in terms which i could not withstand and came in like kane to do his full duty as a trooper and li Other candidates (2) Theodore Roosevelt (Theodore Roosevelt) compilation98.8% by the way that the unforgivable crime is soft hitting do not hit at all if it can be avoided but never hit softly pr... The Complete Works of Theodore Roosevelt. Illustrated (Theodore Roosevelt, 2021) compilation95.0% ... the unforgivable crime is soft hitting. Do not hit at all if it can be avoided; but never hit softly. Like most y... |
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