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| Quotations |
| Archive List |
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Charles
Allen
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Lawrence
J. Peter
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Fred Allen
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| "Politics is supposed
be the second oldest profession. I have come to realise that it bears a
very close resemblance to the first."
Ronald Reagan
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| "Quotes from Mao, Castro,
and Che Guevara... are as germane to our highly technological, computerized
society as a stagecoach on a jet runway at Kennedy airport."
Saul
Alinsky
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Eleanor Roosevelt
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Heraclitus
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Mark Twain
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Oscar Wilde
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Reinhold Niebuhr, The Serenity
Prayer (1934)
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Carl Sagan (1987)
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Roderick Scobie (2004)
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W. Edwards Deming (1900
- 1993)
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Yoda ('The Empire Strikes
Back')
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Don Quixote - "Man of La
Mancha"
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| The function of education
has never been to free the mind and spirit of man, but to bind them; and
to the end that the mind and spirit of his children should never escape
Homo sapiens has employed praise, ridicule, admonition, accusation, mutilation,
and even torture to chain them to the culture pattern . . . for where every
man is unique there is no society, and where there is no society there
can be no man. Contemporary American educators think they want creative
children, yet it is an open question as to what they expect these children
to create. And certainly the classrooms –
from kindergarten to graduate school – in
which they expect it to happen are not crucibles of creative activity and
thought. It stands to reason that were young people truly creative the
culture would fall apart, for originality, by definition, is different
from what is given, and what is given is the culture itself. From the endless,
pathetic, "creative hours" of kindergarten to the most abstruse problems
in sociology and anthropology, the function of education is to prevent
the truly creative intellect from getting out of hand.
Jules Henry, Culture Against
Man
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| The Christian view
that all intercourse outside marriage is immoral was, as we see in the
above passages from St. Paul, based upon the view that all sexual intercourse,
even within marriage, is regrettable. A view of this sort, which goes against
biological facts, can only be regarded by sane people as a morbid aberration.
The fact that it is embedded in Christian ethics has made Christianity
throughout its whole history a force tending towards mental disorders and
unwholesome views of life.
Bertrand Russell
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Socrates (470-399 B.C.)
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Emile Durkheim, 1933, p.226
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Voltaire (1694-1778)
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Gilbert Keith Chesterton
(1874-1936)
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George Washington Carver
(1864-1943)
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| "When any government
. . . undertakes to say to its subjects, 'This you may not read, this you
must not see, this you are forbidden to know,' the end result is tyranny
and oppression, no matter how holy the motives. Mighty little force
is needed to control a man whose mind has been hoodwinked; contrariwise,
no amount of force can control a free man, a man whose mind is free.
No, not the rack, not fission bombs, not anything -- you can't conquer
a free man; the most you can do is kill him.
Robert A. Heinlein, If This
Goes On...
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Mark Twain (1835-1910)
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| You're aware the boy
failed my grade school math class, I take it? And not that many years later
he's teaching college. Now I ask you: Is that the sorriest indictment
of the educational system you ever heard? [pauses to light cigarette.]
No aptitude at all for long division, but never mind. It's him they ask
to split the atom. How he talked his way into the Nobel prize is
beyond me. But then, I suppose it's like the man says, "It's not
what you know..."
Karl Arbeiter: former teacher
of Albert Einstein
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Henry Ford
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"What you've done becomes
the judge of what you're going to do especially in other people's minds.
When you're travelling, you are what you are right there and then. People
don't have your past to hold against you. No yesterdays on the road."
William Least Heat Moon, Blue Highways |
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Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
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Isaac Newton
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Oscar Wilde
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Al Capone (1899-1947)
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| It is worth noting
that the word family originally meant a band of slaves. Even after the
word came to apply to people affiliated by blood and marriage, for many
centuries the notion of family referred to authority relations rather than
love ones. The sentimentalization of family life and female nurturing was
historically and functionally linked to the emergence of competitive individualism
and formal egalitarianism for men.
Stephanie Coontz, The Way
We Never Were, pp. 43-44
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| Beyond a critical point
within a finite space, freedom diminishes as numbers increase. . . . the
human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system,
but what kind of existence is possible for those who do survive.
Frank Herbert, Dune
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Albert
Einstein (1879-1955)
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Gloria Steinem
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Doris Lessing
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