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Leadership Quote by Everett Dirksen

"We are becoming so accustomed to millions and billions of dollars that "thousands" has almost passed out of the dictionary"

About this Quote

Dirksen’s line is a masterclass in political alarm bell as stand-up punchline: the joke lands because it sneaks a moral indictment into a bookkeeping observation. “Thousands” hasn’t literally vanished, of course; what’s disappearing is a sense of proportion. By framing inflation of scale as linguistic extinction, he turns abstract fiscal bloat into something intimate and slightly ridiculous: a dictionary entry going obsolete. That’s rhetorical jiu-jitsu, making the unimaginable feel obvious.

The intent is twofold. On the surface, it’s a complaint about government spending ballooning into figures too large for ordinary citizens to meaningfully grasp. Underneath, it’s a warning about democratic numbness. Once voters are habituated to “millions and billions,” outrage gets priced out; the numbers stop functioning as accountability and start functioning as weather. You can’t argue with a storm.

The subtext also carries a shrewd politician’s self-awareness. Dirksen, a Senate leader in the mid-century era of expanding federal programs and Cold War budgets, knew that “big numbers” were no longer exceptions but the operating language of the state. The quip works because it doesn’t ask the audience to parse policy; it asks them to notice a cultural shift: scale itself has become a tool of power. When sums get too large to picture, the public’s role shrinks to nodding at commas.

Context sharpens the bite. Postwar America was building highways, fighting proxy wars, funding space dreams. Dirksen’s wit catches the moment when national ambition starts to look like fiscal inevitability - and when “thousands” begins to sound quaint, like a thrift-store morality.

Quote Details

TopicMoney
Source
Verified source: Congressional Record, Senate debate on Bank of the Alliance (Everett Dirksen, 1964)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
We are becoming so accustomed to millions and billions of dollars that "thousands" has almost passed out of the dictionary. (Page 379). This appears in the U.S. Senate section of the Congressional Record for January 14, 1964, during debate on funding the Bank of the Alliance. A Dirksen Center source specifically identifies the context: Dirksen was corrected after saying “millions” when the amount was actually “thousands,” and he replied with this line. Based on the primary-source evidence located, the earliest verified publication/speaking instance found is this Senate floor remark recorded in the Congressional Record on January 14, 1964.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Dirksen, Everett. (2026, March 10). We are becoming so accustomed to millions and billions of dollars that "thousands" has almost passed out of the dictionary. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-becoming-so-accustomed-to-millions-and-146259/

Chicago Style
Dirksen, Everett. "We are becoming so accustomed to millions and billions of dollars that "thousands" has almost passed out of the dictionary." FixQuotes. March 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-becoming-so-accustomed-to-millions-and-146259/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"We are becoming so accustomed to millions and billions of dollars that "thousands" has almost passed out of the dictionary." FixQuotes, 10 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-becoming-so-accustomed-to-millions-and-146259/. Accessed 11 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

Everett Dirksen

Everett Dirksen (January 4, 1896 - September 7, 1969) was a Politician from USA.

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