Best quotes by Ron Stallworth on Me

Checkout quotes by Ron Stallworth on Me

  • To me, race is the single most divisive factor affecting American society. It's an issue that we are afraid of, that we shy away from, and quite frankly, it amuses me that we are so sensitive to the issue.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • My experience working the KKK assignment influenced the rest of my career in law enforcement in that it taught me to think and act on my own initiative when my superiors in the department stood in my way.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • What David Duke was preaching to me in 1978 about the Klan and what the Klan wanted to do regarding immigration is the same rhetoric, the same position that Donald J. Trump advocates and ran on and is trying to implement.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • John David captured the 25-year-old essence of me very well. I'm proud to call him a Stallworth brother.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • How I conned the Grand Wizard, David Duke, and his coterie of followers... It has defined me in ways I never could have imagined.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • It's kind of like an out of body experience, watching my words being spoken by the actors, watching the portrayal of me by John David Washington.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • I would sit at the table with the black kids during lunch, and we'd do our banter back and forth. But occasionally, I'd get up and I'd go sit down with the white kids and chat with them and what not. Of course, because I come from the black table they would look at me like, 'Why are you here?'
    - Ron Stallworth
  • When people come up to me and ask for my autograph and everything... I find it funny that people want my autograph.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • I know that in spite of my varied career accomplishments, the one that will always excite and intrigue is the KKK investigation. It has defined me in ways unimaginable and has always fascinated those who hear its tale.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • The KKK members that I was dealing with never saw me because my interaction with them occurred over the phone. They were convinced that I was 1) white, and 2) a racial supremacist like them based strictly on my telephone conversation with them.
    - Ron Stallworth
  • I wanted to be an undercover cop, blending in with the public, looking like a black militant or a long-haired hippie yet having a gun on my hip, a badge in my wallet, and able to enforce the law. To me, that was the neatest thing in the world. It was also challenging.
    - Ron Stallworth