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Leadership Quote by Andrew Jackson

"There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is having lots to do and not doing it"

About this Quote

It reads like a joke about procrastination, but coming from Andrew Jackson it lands as something sharper: a confession that power is as much performance as it is labor. Jackson wasn’t a salon wit; he was a brawler-president who made the executive branch feel like a weapon. That’s what makes the line interesting. It’s not praising laziness. It’s praising optionality.

The first clause rejects the fantasy of pure leisure. “Nothing to do” isn’t freedom; it’s emptiness, a loss of friction. The second clause flips the knife: the “fun” comes from abundance of obligations and the ability to refuse them. That’s a very Jacksonian psychology. He thrived on conflict, deadlines, enemies, the sense of a crowded arena. In that world, not acting isn’t inertia; it’s dominance. You don’t withhold effort because you’re bored. You withhold it because you can.

As presidential subtext, it’s also a small, cynical truth about governance: the thrill often sits less in policy craftsmanship than in control of attention and timing. Jackson famously embraced the veto as a political instrument, not just a constitutional check, and cultivated an image of decisive will. The quote suggests the shadow side of that willpower: the pleasure of delaying, of letting others sweat, of choosing when not to choose.

It’s a line that flatters modern busyness while exposing its dirty secret. The point isn’t work. The point is having work hover around you like proof you matter.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
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Pleasure of Choosing Not to Work - Andrew Jackson
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Andrew Jackson

Andrew Jackson (March 15, 1767 - June 8, 1845) was a President from USA.

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