That quote, which gets repeated ad nauseam, is attributed to Will Rogers (1879–1935). Note that he died early in the FDR administration. It's past time to retire it and maybe replace it with something else, like maybe "Et tu, Brute" (You too, Brutus?) from Shakespeare's JULIUS CAESAR. It's what Caesar says when he realizes that his friend Brutus is among those trying to kill him.
That quote, which gets repeated ad nauseam, is attributed to Will Rogers (1879–1935). Note that he died early in the FDR administration. It's past time to retire it and maybe replace it with something else, like maybe "Et tu, Brute" (You too, Brutus?) from Shakespeare's JULIUS CAESAR. It's what Caesar says when he realizes that his friend Brutus is among those trying to kill him.
That quote, which gets repeated ad nauseam, is attributed to Will Rogers (1879–1935). Note that he died early in the FDR administration. It's past time to retire it and maybe replace it with something else, like maybe "Et tu, Brute" (You too, Brutus?) from Shakespeare's JULIUS CAESAR. It's what Caesar says when he realizes that his friend Brutus is among those trying to kill him.