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Daily Inspiration Quote by Winston Churchill

"This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read"

About this Quote

Churchill lands the blade with a bureaucrat's favorite weapon: the document so long it becomes self-protecting. The line is funny because it treats verbosity not as a flaw but as strategy, a kind of institutional camouflage. Length isn’t merely inconvenient; it’s a shield. In a single sentence, he exposes how official language can be engineered to exhaust curiosity, defer accountability, and let decisions slide through on the soft wheels of fatigue.

The subtext is a warning about power. When an organization wants to avoid scrutiny, it doesn’t have to lie; it can bury. A report that can’t be read can’t be argued with, and what can’t be argued with can quietly govern outcomes. Churchill’s phrasing mimics the formal politeness of administrative prose ("by its very length") and then detonates it with the blunt end of human reality: people have limited time, attention, and patience. He’s not mocking intelligence; he’s mocking incentives.

Context matters because Churchill wasn’t an outside critic tossing stones. As a wartime leader and lifelong manager of state machinery, he knew how memos, committees, and ministerial paperwork could become a second front. The quip signals impatience with the British civil service’s talent for producing paper as a substitute for clarity. Rhetorically, it’s compact enough to be remembered - the opposite of the report he’s skewering - and that’s the point. In politics, readability isn’t style; it’s responsibility.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Later attribution: Mad Toffs - The British Upper Classes at Their Best and W... (Patrick Scrivenor, 2016) modern compilation
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Churchilliana, which seem to me to demonstrate his love of words and their power: 'This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read.' 'We contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is ...
Other candidates (2)
Winston Churchill (Winston Churchill) compilation92.9%
this treasury paper by its very length defends itself against the risk of being read as cited
The crisis (Churchill, Winston, 1871-1947, Barnes..., 1924) primary40.4%
the stranger stood impassively chewing his cigar his hand against the treebox a regiment in 10
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Churchill, Winston. (2026, February 7). This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/this-report-by-its-very-length-defends-itself-87138/

Chicago Style
Churchill, Winston. "This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/this-report-by-its-very-length-defends-itself-87138/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"This report, by its very length, defends itself against the risk of being read." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/this-report-by-its-very-length-defends-itself-87138/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Winston Churchill

Winston Churchill (November 30, 1874 - January 24, 1965) was a Statesman from England.

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