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Leadership Quote by Dan Quayle

"What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind. Or not to have a mind at all. How true that is"

About this Quote

A vice president trying to warn against mental collapse accidentally delivers a little koan about political life: the terror of losing your mind, and the quieter terror of never having had one. Dan Quayle’s line lands because it’s a two-step that undercuts itself in real time. The first sentence is straightforward enough, even empathetic: cognitive decline is frightening. The second pivots from tragedy to insult, and the third - “How true that is” - functions like an earnest stamp of authority on a thought that has already slipped its leash.

The subtext is almost involuntary. Quayle was dogged by a public image of verbal clumsiness and lightweight intellect; he became a shorthand for the idea that high office can be occupied by someone not fully equipped for it. So when he talks about “not to have a mind at all,” the audience hears a second voice: not a diagnosis of some distant other, but an accidental self-parody. It’s the kind of line that reveals how politics punishes nuance. He reaches for a moral warning and instead produces a sound bite that confirms the caricature.

Context matters: in late-20th-century media culture, the “Quayle gaffe” wasn’t just a mistake, it was a genre. This quote works the way those moments always worked - it turns the performance of seriousness into comedy, and reminds you that in politics, credibility can be undone by a single sentence that can’t decide whether it’s compassion or contempt.

Quote Details

TopicSarcastic
Source
Later attribution: The Language Instinct (Steven Pinker, 2003) modern compilationISBN: 9780141929682 · ID: UtFqXQosVP0C
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind . Or not to have a mind at all . How true that is . -Dan Quayle And who knows what unrepeatable amalgam of genes creates the linguistic genius ? If people don't want to come out to the ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Quayle, Dan. (2026, February 8). What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind. Or not to have a mind at all. How true that is. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-a-terrible-thing-to-have-lost-ones-mind-or-35508/

Chicago Style
Quayle, Dan. "What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind. Or not to have a mind at all. How true that is." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-a-terrible-thing-to-have-lost-ones-mind-or-35508/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind. Or not to have a mind at all. How true that is." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-a-terrible-thing-to-have-lost-ones-mind-or-35508/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Dan Quayle

Dan Quayle (born February 4, 1947) is a Vice President from USA.

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