The men we are attacking are the enemies who killed your father and your brother.

Politicians
Marcus Licinius Crassus
Roman general and statesman of the late Republic (115-53 BC), often called the richest man in Rome. He amassed an enormous fortune through Sulla's proscriptions, fire-brigade extortion, and silver mining, then crushed the Spartacus slave revolt by reviving the ancient practice of decimation and crucifying six thousand captured slaves along the Appian Way. With Pompey and Caesar he formed the First Triumvirate, the unofficial cartel that dominated Roman politics. Envy of his colleagues' military glory finally drove him to invade Parthia, where his legions were destroyed by horse archers at the Battle of Carrhae and he himself was killed during a forced parley — a death that removed the last counterweight between Caesar and Pompey and accelerated the civil war that ended the Republic.
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Marcus Licinius Crassus's Other Quotes
No man should be counted rich who cannot support an army out of his own income.
He made the public calamities his greatest source of revenue.
I die deceived by the enemy, not betrayed by my fellow-citizens.
Crassus has hay on his horns — meaning, he is a dangerous bull, marked as such, and best avoided.
Related Quotes
Time is the wisest counsellor of all.
-- Pericles
Crates with only his wallet and tattered cloak laughed out his life jocosely, as if he had been always at a festival.
-- Crates of Thebes
I will not be led in triumph.
-- Cleopatra
Cleopatra, father-loving, the new goddess.
-- Cleopatra
No man should be counted rich who cannot support an army out of his own income.
-- Marcus Licinius Crassus
I die deceived by the enemy, not betrayed by my fellow-citizens.
-- Marcus Licinius Crassus