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Quotes

Quotes
Section is Books;
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151It is said that the greatest cruelty is drawn from those with the kindest hearts.
152It means, my dear friend,... that our language contains many words having a double meaning; and that to pronounce a joke that allows both meanings of a certain word, proves the joker a person of culture and refinement, who has, moreover, a thorough command of the language.
153It seemed that there was no one more glad for peace than those whose job it was to fight for it.
154It takes guts and nuts to tackle the various sciences and no matter what his idiot friends think, serious study is not for pussies. As a matter of fact, it is just the opposite. Reading, meditating, gaining understanding and knowledge and staying abreast of what has happened and what is happening on this world's stage is so hard that the effeminate, the little Sally's, the prancing, petite male poodles won't do it; they actually avoid it like Rosie O'Donnell does Jenny Craig.
155It took a few minutes to scroll through the catalog and find the painkiller, though, then a minute or two more convincing the machine that it really did want to take coins, not the credit card I no longer had. I winced at the noise it made coughing up the tube, and the man taking live orders charged me for the cup of water. That was all there was to his mart, just the machine and his window, in a storefront six feet wide. Talk about low overhead. And minimizing shoplifting.
156It was always quite obvious why people were advocating one program over another; you could look at people’s name tags and see their institutional affiliation, and predict what they were going to support or attack. To see science twisted so blatantly pained Sax a great deal, and it seemed to him that it distressed everyone there, even the ones doing it, which added to the general irritability and defensiveness. Everyone knew what was going on, and no one liked it, and yet no one would admit it.
157It was the first horror movie I'd seen where I didn’t think the people in it would look out for each other," he said. "The way they related to each other frightened me as much as the Alien because usually there's a safe haven of, 'Well, we've got each others' backs.' And they didn't seem like they did.
158It's always easier to come up with a rationalization than to change your basic assumptions.
159It's easy to prescribe remedies for our own weaknesses when they're comfortably ensconced in other people.
160It's nothing to joke about.... A twenty-pound gassy sheep could blow a hole in the ozone.
161It's the questions we can't answer that teach us the most. They teach us how to think. If you give a man an answer, all he gains is a little fact. But give him a question and he'll look for his own answers.
162Jesus meant us to ast God to hep us stand the pain, not beg Him to take the pain away.
163Laughter is poison to fear.
164Let me tell you what that is - a rationalization. It's giving something the appearance of rationality, of reason, when it doesn't have the reality of it. It's finding a way to justify what you want to do, any way. It's finding an excuse from somthing you've already done - a way to make it seem to be good, when it really isn't. That's all you're doing here - tying to find a way to make the wrong things you want to do, seem right. All your arguments really boil down to, 'I want power, so I'm going to take it.' ...
165Let them see that their words can cut you, and you'll never be free of the mockery. If they want to give you a name, take it, make it your own. Then they can't hurt you with it anymore.
166Liberal democracy says that cultural tolerance is essential, but you don’t have to get very far away from liberal democracy for liberal democrats to get very intolerant.
167Life is precious. That's why sacrifice for freedom is rational: it is for life itself and your ability to live it that you act, since life without freedom is the slow, sure death of self-sacrifice to the 'good' of mankind - who is always someone else. Mankind is just a collection of individuals. Why should everyone's life be more important, more precious, more valuable than yours? Mindless mandatory self-sacrifice is insane.
168Life is the future, not the past. The past can teach us, through experience, how to accomplish things in the future, comfort us with cherished memories, and provide the foundation of what has already been accomplished. But only the future holds life. To live in the past is to embrace what is dead. To live life to its fullest, each day must be created anew. As rational, thinking beings, we must use our intellect, not a blind devotion to what has come before, to make rational choices.
169Like hounds at a feast, people gather round the table of tyranny, eager for tasty scraps tossed on the floor. Not everyone will wag their tail for a tyrant, but most will, if he first makes them salivate with hate and gives license to their covetous impulses by making them feel it is only their due. Many would rather take than earn. Tyrants make the envious comfortable with their greed.
170Look folks, here’s the deal, if we forego the foundations upon which our country was built and start winging it with “progressive” principles instead of our old school traditional values, substituting God's eternal blueprint for some secularist wizard's ideas for a better mañana, then we officially put ourselves in line for historical butt kicking.
171Look ladies, if you enter into a relationship rudderless, like a needy parasite, you will become the slave of whatever host you hitched yourself to. You'll find yourself doing things... changing things... believing things... compromising things... and getting involved in crap you wouldn't even think of doing just because you neeeeeeeeeeed him.
172Look with your eyes. Hear with your ears. Taste with your mouth. Smell with your nose. Feel with your skin. Then comes the thinking, afterward, and in that way knowing the truth.
173Math must pay its way with useful things.... Even though mere computation is like bashing down a door because you cannot find the key.
174Mayhap through over-familiarity. We treasure least what we have known too long.
175Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself; but talent instantly recognizes genius...
176Mercy is a contingency plan devised by the guilty in the eventuality that they are caught. Justice is the domain of the just. This is about justice.
177Murder came before food, but there was always time for coffee.
178My father always claimed that a league wasn't really a unit of measurement at all, just a way for farmers to attach numbers to their rough guesses.
179My foot swings directly up where my jaw used to be and I become perhaps the first person in the history of man to kick himself in his own uvula.
180My name is Marillion.
181'Never let a beautiful woman pick your path for you when there be a man in her line of sight.'
182Never underestimate the human capacity for wishful thinking and willful blindness...
183Ninety-nine percent of everything that goes on in most Christian churches has nothing whatsoever to do with the actual religion. Intelligent people all notice this sooner or later, and they conclude that the entire one hundred percent is {+bullshit}, which is why atheism is connected with being intelligent in people's minds.
184No data yet.... It is a capital mistake to theorize before you have all the evidence. It biases the judgment.
185No man knew better than he the tricks that Destiny plays on a man, or how often the right man dies at the wrong time and place. A man never wore a gun without inviting trouble, he never stepped into a street and began the gunman's walk without the full knowledge that he might be a shade too slow, that some small thing might disturb him just long enough!
186No... he doesn't understand. Down here... a man is admired for daring to face another armed man with a pistol and for settling his quarrels bravely. It isn't a killing that is admired, it is the courage to fight for what you believe. You won't be admired as the man who killed Cullen Baker, you will be despised as someone who murdered a sleeping man.
187Nothing but the truth could break me. What is harder than the truth?
188Nothing gained without cost is valued. I was reminded of that fact only today. She was the one we buried. Freedom has a cost, and all will bear it, so that all will value and preserve it.
189Nothing was more dangerous for the sanity of men than a woman with too much time on her hands.
190Now thou dost begin to comprehend. All folk must be allowed to speak their minds, whether thou dost think them wise or foolish - and thou must weigh what they do say, on chance that the most unlikely of them may be right. Therefore thou must needs see it enshrined in the highest Law of the Land.... If thou dost not, evil men may keep good folk from learning of their evil deeds.
191Now, my personal role models might not be the ones you'd choose; but the point for you as a parent is to be one for your son - and get some others who will help you forge your son into the force he's been called to become.
192Old Laurent Moutier was gone, at the age of ninety, taking with him like everyone does a lifetime of unknown private hopes and dreams and fears and experiences, and leaving behind him like most people do a thin trace of himself in his living descendants. He had never had a clear idea of what would become of his beautiful mophaired daughter and his two handsome grandsons, nor did he really want one, but like every other twentieth-century male human in Europe he hoped they would live lives of peace, prosperity and plenty, while simultaneously knowing they almost certainly wouldn't. So he hoped they would bear their burdens with grace and good humour, and he was comforted in his final moments by the knowledge that so far they always had, and probably always would.
193Old stories are like old friends, she used to say. You have to visit them from time to time.
194Once liberty was surrendered to tyranny, it could be smothered for centuries before its flames again sprang to life and brightened the world.
195One cannot eliminate unhappiness any more than one can eliminate darkness. The goal of government, you see,... is to load the unhappiness onto those least able to make you suffer for it.
196One of the things that defines our character is how we handle our mistakes.
197One thing you’ll learn as you get older, Simon, is that when people tell you something unpleasant about themselves, it’s usually true.
198Only a fool humbles himself when the world is so full of men eager to do that job for him.
199Only in our dreams are we free. The rest of the time we need wages.
200Only you can achieve self-worth for yourself. Any group offering it to you, or demanding it of you, comes bearing chains of slavery.






See my goodreads icon goodreads page. I almost never do reviews, but I use this site to catalogue books.
See my librarything icon librarything page. I use this site to catalogue books and it has more details on books than goodreads does.


Presented: 09-May-2024 08:05:50

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