| ContentsIntroduction Quotes Other pages of this site with quotes Small excerpts from some books | 
      When a thing has been said, and said well, have no scruple.
      Take it and copy it.
     
      Anatole France
     
 
      Anyone tempted to take the attribution of aphorisms and
      well-known sayings too seriously should read
      Nice Guys Finish Seventh:
        False Phrases, Spurious Sayings, and Familiar Misquotations,
      by Ralph Keyes.  This book is unfortunately out of print.
      Keyes’ rules of misquotation are:
     
      
	Axiom 1. Any Quotation That Can Be Altered Will Be.
	
	  Corollary 1A: Vivid words hook misquotes in the mind.Corollary 1B: Numbers are hard to keep straight.Corollary 1C: Small changes can have a big impact (or:
	      What a difference an A makes).Corollary 1D: If noted figures don’t say what needs to
	      be said, we’ll say it for them.Corollary 1E: Journalists are a less than dependable
	      source of accurate quotes.Corollary 1F: Famous dead people make excellent
	      commentators on current events.
	Axiom 2. Famous Quotes Need Famous Mouths.
	
	  Corollary 2A: Well-known messengers get credit for
	      clever comments they report from less celebrated mouths.Corollary 2B: Particularly quotable figures receive more
	      than their share of quotable quotes.Corollary 2C: Comments made about someone might as well
	      have been said by that person.Corollary 2D: Who you think said something may depend on
	      where you live.Corollary 2E: Vintage quotes are considered to be in the
	      public domain.Corollary 2F: In a pinch, any orphan quote can be called
	      a chinese proverb. 
      One of the surest of tests is the way in which a poet
      borrows.  Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets
      deface what they take, and good poets make it into something
      better, or at least something different.  The good poet welds
      his theft into a whole of feeling which is unique, utterly
      different from that from which it was torn; the bad poet
      throws it into something which has no cohesion.
     
      T.S. Eliot, in The Sacred Wood: Essays on Poetry and Criticism, Chapter on Philip Massinger
       
   
      
	
	  | Words ought to be a little wild, for they are the assault of
	    thoughts on the unthinking. |  
	  |  | John Maynard Keynes, New Statesman and Nation (15 July 1933) |  
	  | …everything except ourselves is judged by its own
	    properties: we praise a horse for its vigour and
	    dexterity…we do not praise it for its harness.  We
	    praise a greyhound for its speed not for its neck-band; a
	    hawk, for its wing not for its bells and its leg-straps.
	    So why do we not similarly value a man for qualities which
	    are really his?  He may have a great suite of attendants,
	    a beautiful palace, great influence and a large income:
	    all that may surround him but it is not in him. |  
	  |  | Michel de Montaigne,
	    On the inequality there is between us,
	    as translated by M. A. Screech in
	    The Complete Essays |  
	  | Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes it
	    visible. |  
	  |  | Paul Klee, Creative Credo, 1920,
	    as quoted at Some Quotable Quotes for Statistics |  
	  | There are two ways to slide easily through life: Namely,
	    to believe everything, or to doubt everything; both ways
	    save us from thinking. |  
	  |  | Alfred Korzybski, Manhood of Humanity |  
	  | Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most pick
	    themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened. |  
	  |  | Winston Churchill |  
	  | The obscure we always see sooner or later; the obvious
	    always seems to take a little longer. |  
	  |  | Edward R. Murrow |  
	  | So convenient a thing it is to be a reasonable Creature,
	    since it enables one to find or make a Reason for
	    everything one has a mind to do. |  
	  |  | Benjamin Franklin,
	    Autobiography |  
	  | Certainty about the world does not make the world more certain.
	    The easiest road to moral clarity is a refusal to learn from
	    complex events. |  
	  |  | Paul Wells, Macleans.Ca essay |  
	  | Ideology—that is, the doctrines, opinions, or way of
	    thinking of an individual, a class, a nation, or an
	    empire—is as tricky a substance to use in
	    international conflicts as poison gas.  It too has a
	    tendency to blow back onto the party releasing it. |  
	  |  | Chalmers Johnson, Blowback, Chapter 8 |  
	  | The men of the higher circles are not representative men;
	    their high position is not a result of moral virtue; their
	    fabulous success is not firmly connected with meritorious
	    ability.  Those who sit in the seats of the high and the
	    mighty are selected and formed by the means of power, the
	    sources of wealth, the mechanics of celebrity, which
	    prevail in their society.  They are not men selected and
	    formed by a civil service that is linked with the world of
	    knowledge and sensibility.  They are not men shaped by
	    nationally responsible parties that debate openly and
	    clearly the issues this nation now so unintelligently
	    confronts.  They are not men held in responsible check by
	    a plurality of voluntary associations which connect
	    debating publics with the pinnacles of decision.
	    Commanders of power unequaled in human history, they have
	    succeeded within the American system of organized
	    irresponsibility. |  
	  |  | C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite, concluding paragrah |  
	  | To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards
	    out of men. |  
	  |  | Abraham Lincoln |  
	  | Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, concerned
	    citizens can change the world.  Indeed, it is the only
	    thing that ever has. |  
	  |  | Margaret Mead |  
	  | Authority without wisdom is like a heavy axe without an edge:
	    fitter to bruise than polish. |  
	  |  | Anne Bradstreet, poet (1612-1672) |  
	  | Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious
	    triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take
	    rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor
	    suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that
	    knows not victory or defeat. |  
	  |  | Theodore Roosevelt |  
	  | There is no such thing at this date of the world’s history
	    in America as an independent press.  You know it, and I
	    know it.  There is not one of you who dares to write his
	    honest opinion, and if you did, you know beforehand it
	    would never appear in print.  I am paid weekly for keeping
	    my honest opinion out of the paper.  Others of you are
	    paid similar salaries for similar things.  And any of you
	    who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would
	    be out on the streets looking for another job.  If I allow
	    my honest opinions to appear in one issue of my paper,
	    before 24 hours, my occupation would be gone.  The
	    business of the journalist is to destroy the truth, to lie
	    outright, to pervert, to vilify, to fawn at the feet of
	    Mammon and to sell his country and his race for his daily
	    bread.  You know it, and I know it, and what folly is this
	    toasting an independent press?  We are the tools and the
	    vassals of rich men behind the scenes.  We are the jumping
	    jacks.  They pull the strings, and we dance.  Our talents,
	    our possibilities and our lives are all the property of
	    other men.  We are intellectual prostitutes. |  
	  |  | a quote found on the Internet, attributed to
	    John Swinden, 1953, then head of the
	    New York Times, when asked to toast an
	    independent press in a gathering at
	    the National Press Club |  
	  | Who controls the past controls the future;
	    who controls the present controls the past. |  
	  |  | George Orwell |  
	  | Now, it is clear that the decline of a language must
	    ultimately have political and economic causes: it is not
	    due simply to the bad influence of this or that individual
	    writer.  But an effect can become a cause, reinforcing the
	    original cause and producing the same effect in an
	    intensified form, and so on indefinitely.  A man may take
	    to drink because he feels himself to be a failure, and
	    then fail all the more completely because he drinks.  It
	    is rather the same thing that is happening to the English
	    language.  It becomes ugly and inaccurate because our
	    thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language
	    makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts.  The
	    point is that the process is reversible.  Modern English,
	    especially written English, is full of bad habits which
	    spread by imitation and which can be avoided if one is
	    willing to take the necessary trouble.  If one gets rid of
	    these habits one can think more clearly, and to think
	    clearly is a necessary first step toward political
	    regeneration: so that the fight against bad English is not
	    frivolous and is not the exclusive concern of professional
	    writers. |  
	  |  | George Orwell,
	    Politics and the English Language, 1946 |  
	  | In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defense
	    of the indefensible.  Things like the continuance of British rule
	    in India, the Russian purges and deportations, the dropping of
	    the atom bombs on Japan, can indeed be defended, but only by
	    arguments which are too brutal for most people to face, and which
	    do not square with the professed aims of the political parties.
	    Thus political language has to consist largely of euphemism,
	    question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness.  Defenseless villages
	    are bombarded from the air, the inhabitants driven out into the
	    countryside, the cattle machine-gunned, the huts set on fire with
	    incendiary bullets: this is called pacification.  Millions of
	    peasants are robbed of their farms and sent trudging along the
	    roads with no more than they can carry: this is called transfer
	    of population or rectification of frontiers.  People are
	    imprisoned for years without trial, or shot in the back of the
	    neck or sent to die of scurvy in Arctic lumber camps: this is
	    called elimination of unreliable elements.  Such phraseology is
	    needed if one wants to name things without calling up mental
	    pictures of them. |  
	  |  | George Orwell,
	    Politics and the English Language, 1946 |  
	  | The corporate grip on opinion in the United States is one
	    of the wonders of the Western world.  No first world
	    country has ever managed to eliminate so entirely from its
	    media all objectivity — much less dissent. |  
	  |  | Gore Vidal, 1991 |  
	  | Today the methods are different—now it’s not the
	    threat of force that ensures the media will present things
	    within a framework that serves the interests of
	    the dominant institutions, the mechanisms today are much
	    more subtle.  But nevertheless, there is a complex system
	    of filters in the media and educational institutions which
	    ends up ensuring that dissident perspectives are weeded
	    out, or marginalized in one way or another.  And the end
	    result is in fact quite similar: what are called opinions
	    “on the left” and “on the right”
	    in the media represent only a limited spectrum of debate,
	    which reflects the needs of private power—but
	    there’s essentially nothing beyond those
	    “acceptable” positions.
	    … So you see, in our system what you might call
	    “state propaganda” isn’t expressed as such, as
	    it would be in a totalitarian society—rather it’s
	    implicit, it’s presupposed, it provides the framework for
	    debate among the people who are admitted into the
	    mainstream discussion.  In fact, the nature of Western
	    systems of indoctrination is typically not understood by
	    dictators; they don’t understand the utility for
	    propaganda purposes of having “critical
	    debate” that incorporates the basic assumptions of
	    the official doctrines, and thereby marginalizes and
	    eliminates authentic and rational critical discussion.
	    Under what’s sometimes been called “brainwashing
	    under freedom,” the critics, or at least the
	    “responsible critics” make a major
	    contribution to the cause by bounding the debate within
	    certain acceptable limits—that’s why they’re
	    tolerated, and in fact even honored. |  
	  |  | Noam Chomsky, Understanding Power, 1989 |  
	  | The threat of a centralized, monolithic, state-controlled
	    broadcasting system is well understood and feared in the
	    West.  What is little recognized or understood is the
	    centralizing, ideologically monolithic, and
	    self-protecting properties of an increasingly powerful
	    commercial broadcasting system. |  
	  |  | Edward Herman,
	    The Myth of the Liberal Media, 1999 |  
	  | Circus dogs jump when the trainer cracks the whip, but the
	    really well-trained dog is the one that turns somersaults
	    when there is no whip. |  
	  |  | George Orwell |  
	  | 
	      Among the corrosive lies a nation at war tells itself is
	      that the glory—the lofty goals announced
	      beforehand, the victories, the liberation of the
	      oppressed—belongs to the country as a whole; but
	      the failure—the accidents, the uncounted civilian
	      dead, the crimes and atrocities—is always
	      exceptional.  Noble goals flow naturally from a noble
	      people; the occasional act of barbarity is always the
	      work of individuals, unaccountable, confusing and
	      indigestible to the national conscience.
	     
	      This kind of thinking was widely in evidence among
	      military and political leaders after the emergence of
	      pictures documenting American abuse of Iraqi prisoners
	      in Abu Ghraib prison.  These photographs do not capture
	      the soul of America, they argued.  They are aberrant.
	     
	      This belief, that the photographs are distortions,
	      despite their authenticity, is indistinguishable from
	      propaganda.  Tyrants censor; democracies self-censor.
	      Tyrants concoct propaganda in ministries of information;
	      democracies produce it through habits of thought so
	      ingrained that a basic lie of war — only the good
	      is our doing — becomes self-propagating.
	     
	      …
	     
	      Reputation, image, perception.  The problem, it seems,
	      isn’t so much the abuse of the prisoners, because we
	      will get to the bottom of that and, of course, we’re not
	      really like that.  The problem is our reputation.  Our
	      soldiers’ reputations.  Our national self-image.  These
	      photos, we insist, are not us.
	     
	      But these photos are us.  Yes, they are the acts of
	      individuals (though the scandal widens, as scandals
	      almost inevitably do, and the military’s own internal
	      report calls the abuse "systemic").  But armies are made
	      of individuals.  Nations are made up of individuals.
	      Great national crimes begin with the acts of misguided
	      individuals; and no matter how many people are held
	      directly accountable for these crimes, we are,
	      collectively, responsible for what these individuals
	      have done.  We live in a democracy.  Every errant smart
	      bomb, every dead civilian, every sodomized prisoner, is
	      ours.
	     |  
	  |  | Philip Kennicott,
	    A Wretched New Picture Of America, 4 May 2004, Washington Post |  
	  | In no part of the constitution is more wisdom to be found, than
	    in the clause which confides the question of war or peace to the
	    legislature, and not to the executive department.  Beside the
	    objection to such a mixture to heterogeneous powers, the trust
	    and the temptation would be too great for any one man; not such
	    as nature may offer as the prodigy of many centuries, but such
	    as may be expected in the ordinary successions of magistracy.
	    War is in fact the true nurse of executive aggrandizement.  In
	    war, a physical force is to be created; and it is the executive
	    will, which is to direct it.  In war, the public treasures are
	    to be unlocked; and it is the executive hand which is to
	    dispense them.  In war, the honours and emoluments of office are
	    to be multiplied; and it is the executive patronage under which
	    they are to be enjoyed.  It is in war, finally, that laurels are
	    to be gathered, and it is the executive brow they are to
	    encircle.  The strongest passions and most dangerous weaknesses
	    of the human breast; ambition, avarice, vanity, the honourable
	    or venial love of fame, are all in conspiracy against the desire
	    and duty of peace. |  
	  |  | James Madison,
	    The Pacificus-Helvidius Debates of 1793-1794 |  
	  | Of all the enemies to public liberty, war is, perhaps, the most
	    to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of
	    every other.  War is the parent of armies; from these proceed
	    debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known
	    instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the
	    few.  In war, too, the discretionary power of the Executive is
	    extended; its influence in dealing out offices, honors, and
	    emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the
	    minds are added to those of subduing the force of the people.
	    The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced in the
	    inequality of fortunes and the opportunities of fraud growing
	    out of a state of war, and in the degeneracy of manners and of
	    morals engendered by both.  No nation could reserve its freedom
	    in the midst of continual warfare. |  
	  |  | James Madison, Political Observations, 20 April 1795, as published in Letters and Other Writings of James Madison, Vol. IV, p. 491 |  
	  | A popular Government without popular information or the
	    means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a
	    Tragedy or perhaps both.  Knowledge will forever govern
	    ignorance, and a people who mean to be their own
	    Governors, must arm themselves with the power knowledge
	    gives. |  
	  |  | James Madison,  Letter to W.T. Barry, Aug. 4, 1822, The Writings of James Madison |  
	  | In the 1980s capitalism triumphed over communism.  In the
	    1990s it triumphed over democracy and the market economy.
	    For those of us who grew up believing that capitalism is
	    the foundation of democracy and market freedom, it has
	    been a rude awakening to realize that under capitalism,
	    democracy is for sale to the highest bidder and the market
	    economy is centrally planned by global megacorporations
	    larger than most states. |  
	  |  | David C. Korten, The Post-Corporate World, 1999 |  
	  | Civilization, in fact, grows more and more
	    maudlin and hysterical; especially under
	    democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere
	    combat of crazies; the whole aim of practical
	    politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and
	    hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing
	    it with an endless series of hobgoblins, most of
	    them imaginary.  Wars are no longer waged by the
	    will of superior men, capable of judging
	    dispassionately and intelligently the causes
	    behind them and the effects flowing out of them.
	    They are now begun by first throwing a mob into a
	    panic; they are ended only when it has spent its
	    ferine fury. |  
	  |  | H.L. Mencken, In Defense of Women, 1918 |  
	  | The greatest triumphs of propaganda have been
	    accomplished, not by doing something, but by refraining
	    from doing.  Great is truth, but still greater, from a
	    practical point of view, is silence about truth. |  
	  |  | Aldous Huxley, foreword to 1946 edition of Brave New World |  
	  | In Germany, they came first for the communists, and I
	    didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a communist.  Then they
	    came for the Jews, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t
	    a Jew.  Then they came for the trade unionists but I
	    didn’t speak up because I was not a trade unionist.  Then
	    they came for the Catholics, and I didn’t speak up because
	    I was a Protestant.  Then they came for me, and by that
	    time nobody was left to speak up. |  
	  |  | Martin Niemoeller, Dachau, 1944
	    (found at Gordon’s Quotations) |  
	  | If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to
	    tell people what they don’t want to hear. |  
	  |  | George Orwell |  
	  | 
	      Freedom is the ability to act upon our beliefs.  It expands,
	      therefore, with the scope of the action we are prepared to
	      contemplate.  If we know that we will never act, we have no
	      freedom: we will, for the rest of our lives, do as we are told.
	      Almost everyone has some sense that other people should be
	      treated as she would wish to be.  Almost everyone, in other
	      words, has a notion of justice, and for most people this notion,
	      however formulated, sits somewhere close to the heart of their
	      system of beliefs.  If we do not act upon this sense of justice,
	      we do not act upon one of our primary beliefs, and our freedom
	      is restricted accordingly.  To be truly free, in other words, we
	      must be prepared to contemplate revolution.
	     
	      Another reason why we do not act is that, from the days of our
	      birth, we are immersed in the political situation into which we
	      are born, and as a result we cannot imagine our way through it;
	      we cannot envisage that it will ever come to an end.  This is
	      why imagination is the first qualification of the revolutionary.
	      A revolutionary is someone who recognizes the contingency of
	      power.  What sustains coercive power is not force of arms, or
	      even capital, but belief.  When people cease to believe –
	      to believe in it as they would believe in a god, in its
	      omnipotence, its unassailability and its validity – and
	      when they act upon that belief, an empire can collapse, almost
	      overnight.
	     
	      Those who possess power will surrender it only when they see
	      that the costs – physical or psychological – of
	      retaining it are higher than the costs of losing it.  There have
	      been many occasions on which rulers possessed the means of
	      suppressing revolt – the necessary tanks and planes or
	      cannons and cavalry divisions – but chose not to deploy
	      them, because they perceived that the personal effort of
	      retaining power outweighed the effort of relinquishing it.  One
	      of the surprises of history is the tendency of some of the most
	      inflexible rulers suddenly to give up, for no evident material
	      reason.  They give up because they are tired, so tired that they
	      can no longer sustain the burning purpose required to retain
	      power.  They are tired because they have had to struggle against
	      the unbelief of their people, to reassert, through a supreme
	      psychological effort, the validity of their power.
	     |  
	  |  | George Monbiot, Manifesto for a New World Order |  
	  | It is not power that corrupts but fear.  Fear of losing
	    power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge
	    of power corrupts those who are subject to it. |  
	  |  | Aung San Suu Kyi, Freedom from Fear, 1990 |  
	  | 
	      Hope, in this deep and powerful sense, is not the same
	      as joy that things are going well, or willingness to
	      invest in enterprises that are obviously headed for early
	      success, but rather, an ability to work for something
	      because it is good, not just because it stands a chance to
	      succeed.  The more unpropitious the situation in which we
	      demonstrate hope, the deeper that hope is.  Hope is
	      definitely not the same thing as optimism.  It is not the
	      conviction that something will turn out well, but the
	      certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it
	      turns out.  …
	     
	      … I have never fixed my hopes there [in the
	      sphere of power]; I’ve always been more interested in what
	      was happening “below,” in what could be
	      expected from “below,” what could be won
	      there, and what defended.  All power is power over
	      someone, and it always somehow responds, usually
	      unwittingly rather than deliberately, to the state of mind
	      and the behavior of those it rules over.  One can always
	      find in the behavior of power, a reflection of what is
	      going on “below.”
	     |  
	  |  | Václav Havel,
	    Disturbing the Peace, 1986 |  
	  | Journalism’s main task is to monitor Power, to locate
	    Domination and to follow its characteristics and effects
	    on the people, to observe the relations developing between
	    Power and the Subjugated.  Even between these two ends
	    there is always a dialogue, an exchange of behaviours,
	    opinions, emotions, habits, influences.  Power is never a
	    one-track, one direction action.…
	    By monitoring Power, the media is contributing to the
	    dialogue between the sides.  They are not equal, not
	    symetrical, and still they converse.  The media reports
	    about this conversation, but it also participates in it,
	    by the very publication.  It mediates information and by
	    doing so it helps developing the dialogue.  And the media
	    should do the impossible: scrutinize itself as to what
	    extend it silences or not the voice of the disadvantageous
	    party in the dialogical relations. |  
	  |  | Amira Haas, 2004,
	    accepting
	    the first
	    Anna Lind Award
	    on 18 June 2004 in Stockholm |  
	  | Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate
	    agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the
	    ground.  They want rain without thunder and
	    lightning. …Power concedes nothing without a
	    demand.  It never did and it never will. …Find out
	    just what people will submit to, and you have found the
	    exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed
	    upon them; and these will continue until they are resisted
	    with either words or blows, or with both.  The limits of
	    tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they
	    oppress. |  
	  |  | Frederick Douglass, 1849,
	    as quoted at
	    ZMag’s Quote Archive |  
	  | Pessimism comes from the repression of creativity. |  
	  |  | Otto Rank, 1994 |  
	  | Every political villain in history first persuaded himself that
	    the end justifies the means.  Nothing but ends justify means,
	    but they do not justify any means.  Where the line is drawn
	    among means is the determinant between civilized life and
	    savagery.  Inadmissible means devour principle and corrupt their
	    users, often forever. |  
	  |  | Eric Sevareid |  
	  | Those great and good men foresaw that troublous times
	    would arise, when rulers and people would become restive
	    under restraint, and seek by sharp and decisive measures
	    to accomplish ends deemed just and proper; and that the
	    principles of constitutional liberty would be in peril,
	    unless established by irrepealable law.  The history of the
	    world had taught them that what was done in the past might
	    be attempted in the future.
	    The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers
	    and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with
	    the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all
	    times, and under all circumstances.  No doctrine, involving
	    more pernicious consequences, was ever invented by the wit
	    of man than that any of its provisions can be suspended
	    during any of the great exigencies of government. |  
	  |  | Justice David Davis, Ex Parte Milligan, 71 U.S. 2 (4 Wall.) (1866) |  
	  | The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to
	    strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but
	    allow very lively debate within that spectrum — even
	    encourage the more critical and dissident views.  That
	    gives people the sense that there’s free thinking going
	    on, while all the time the presuppositions of the system
	    are being reinforced by the limits put on the range of the
	    debate. |  
	  |  | Noam Chomsky, quote from www.thirdworldtraveler.com |  
	  | 
	      Obviously it is not desirable that a government
	      department should have any power of censorship (except
	      security censorship, which no one objects to in war time)
	      over books which are not officially sponsored.  But the
	      chief danger to freedom of thought and speech at this
	      moment is not the direct interference of the MOI [Ministry
	      of Information] or any official body.  If publishers and
	      editors exert themselves to keep certain topics out of
	      print, it is not because they are frightened of
	      prosecution but because they are frightened of public
	      opinion.  In this country intellectual cowardice is the
	      worst enemy a writer or journalist has to face, and that
	      fact does not seem to me to have had the discussion it
	      deserves.
	     
	      Any fairminded person with journalistic experience will
	      admit that during this war official censorship has not
	      been particularly irksome.  We have not been subjected to
	      the kind of totalitarian ‘co-ordination’ that
	      it might have been reasonable to expect.  The press has
	      some justified grievances, but on the whole the Government
	      has behaved well and has been surprisingly tolerant of
	      minority opinions.  The sinister fact about literary
	      censorship in England is that it is largely voluntary.
	      Unpopular ideas can be silenced, and inconvenient facts
	      kept dark, without the need for any official ban.  Anyone
	      who has lived long in a foreign country will know of
	      instances of sensational items of news – things
	      which on their own merits would get the big headlines
	      – being kept right out of the British press, not
	      because the Government intervened but because of a general
	      tacit agreement that ‘it wouldn’t do’ to
	      mention that particular fact.  So far as the daily
	      newspapers go, this is easy to understand.  The British
	      press is extremely centralized, and most of it is owned by
	      wealthy men who have every motive to be dishonest on
	      certain important topics.  But the same kind of veiled
	      censorship also operates in books and periodicals, as well
	      as in plays, films and radio.  At any given moment there
	      is an orthodoxy, a body of ideas which it is assumed that
	      all right-thinking people will accept without question.
	      It is not exactly forbidden to say this, that or the
	      other, but it is ‘not done’ to say it, just as
	      in mid-Victorian times it was ‘not done’ to
	      mention trousers in the presence of a lady.  Anyone who
	      challenges the prevailing orthodoxy finds himself silenced
	      with surprising effectiveness.  A genuinely unfashionable
	      opinion is almost never given a fair hearing, either in
	      the popular press or in the highbrow periodicals.
	     
	      …And this tolerance of plain dishonesty means
	      much more than that admiration for Russia happens to be
	      fashionable at this moment.  Quite possibly that
	      particular fashion will not last.  For all I know, by the
	      time this book is published my view of the Soviet
	      régime may be the generally-accepted one.  But what
	      use would that be in itself?  To exchange one orthodoxy
	      for another is not necessarily an advance.  The enemy is
	      the gramophone mind, whether or not one agrees with the
	      record that is being played at the moment.
	     |  
	  |  | George Orwell, quoted from Orwell’s Preface to Animal Farm |  
	  | When Saddam Hussein canceled our regularly scheduled war,
	    Sam “Strangelove” Donaldson and his hotblooded
	    colleagues practically climbed into the F-16s themselves
	    to finish the job. |  
	  |  | James Poniewozik, Salon Magazine |  
	  | The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as
	    well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the
	    streets and to steal bread. |  
	  |  | Anatole France, 1894 |  
	  | We can have democracy in this country, or we can have
	    great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we
	    can’t have both. |  
	  |  | Louis Brandeis, U.S. Supreme Court 1916-1939
	    quote from www.thirdworldtraveler.com |  
	  | We cannot solve the problems we have created with the same
	    thinking that created them. |  
	  |  | Albert Einstein |  
	  | It is not enough merely to provide the poor with material
	    assistance.  They have to be sufficiently empowered to
	    change their perception of themselves as helpless and
	    ineffectual in an uncaring world. |  
	  |  | Aung San Suu Kyi,
	    21 November 1994 address to WCCD in Manila |  
	  | The plural of the word ‘anecdote’ is not
	    ‘data.’ When you reason and govern from
	    anecdote, all you are doing is inflaming passions and
	    skewing the debate. |  
	  |  | Larry Bensky, 14 April 1995
	    from a speech in Tampa Florida;
	    transcript by Alternative Radio |  
	  | Today’s public figures can no longer write their own
	    speeches or books, and there is some evidence that they
	    can’t read them either. |  
	  |  | Gore Vidal, writer |  
	  | The plain consequence is (and it is a general maxim worthy
	    of our attention), “that no testimony is sufficient
	    to establish a miracle, unless the testimony be of such a
	    kind, that its falsehood would be more miraculous, than
	    the fact, which it endeavors to establish; and even in
	    that case there is a mutual destruction of arguments, and
	    the superior only gives us an assurance suitable to that
	    degree of force, which remains, after deducting the
	    inferior.” |  
	  |  | David Hume,
	    An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
	    Section 10: Of Miracles |  
	  | Faith may be defined briefly as an illogical belief in the
	    occurrence of the improbable. |  
	  |  | H.L. Mencken |  
	  | Picture a pasture open to all.  It is expected that each
	    herdsman will try to keep as many cattle as possible on
	    [this] commons….  What is the utility…of
	    adding one more animal?….  Since the herdsman
	    receives all the proceeds from the sale of the additional
	    animal, the positive utility [to the herdsman] is nearly
	    +1….  Since, however, the effects of overgrazing are
	    shared by all the herdsmen, the negative utility for any
	    particular decision-making herdsman is only a fraction of
	    -1.  Adding together the…partial utilities, the
	    rational herdsman concludes that the only sensible course
	    for him to pursue is to add another animal to the herd.
	    And another; and another….  Therein is the tragedy.
	    Each man is locked into a system that [causes] him to
	    increase his herd without limit — in a world that is
	    limited….  Freedom in a commons brings ruin to
	    all. |  
	  |  | Garrett Hardin, The Tragedy of the Commons, 1968* |  
	  | Each snowflake in an avalanche pleads not guilty. |  
	  |  | Stanislaw J. Lee |  
	  | … At the same time, I don’t believe that we can
	    wave a magic wand and dispose of these problems by a
	    change of ownership, or that all we need do to remedy the
	    situation is bring back capitalism.  The point is that
	    capitalism, albeit on another level and not in such
	    trivial forms, is struggling with the same problems
	    (alienation, after all, was first described under
	    capitalism): it is well known, for instance, that enormous
	    private multinational corporations are curiously like
	    socialist states; with industrialization, centralization,
	    specialization, monopolization, and finally with
	    automation and computerization, the elements of
	    depersonalization and the loss of meaning in work become
	    more and more profound everywhere. … |  
	  |  | Václav Havel,
	    Disturbing the Peace, 1986 |  
	  | There is now an almost religious faith in the market, a
	    least among the elite, so that regardless of evidence,
	    markets are assumed to be benevolent and nonmarket
	    mechanisms are suspect. |  
	  |  | Edward Herman,
	    The Myth of the Liberal Media, 1999 |  
	  | For all their power and vitality, markets are only tools.
	    They make a good servant but a bad master and a worse
	    religion. |  
	  |  | Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins,
	    Natural Capitalism |  
	  | The official definitions of progress confuse more with
	    better, costs with gains, borrowing with earnings, and
	    means with ends.  To achieve real progress we must learn to
	    distinguish these again. |  
	  |  | Redefining Progress, in the Atlantic Monthly, 1995 |  
	  | Globalization today is not working for many of the
	    world’s poor.  It is not working for much of the
	    environment.  It is not working for the stability
	    of the global economy. |  
	  |  | Joseph E. Stiglitz,
	    Globalization And Its Discontents, 2002,
	    co-recipient of the 2001 Nobel prize in Economics |  
	  | Even a cursory inspection of the historical record reveals
	    that a persistent theme in American foreign policy has
	    been the subversion and overthrow of parliamentary
	    regimes, and the resort to violence to destroy popular
	    organizations that might offer the majority of the
	    population an opportunity to enter the political
	    arena. |  
	  |  | Noam Chomsky, Deterring Democracy |  
	  | If Lech Walesa had been doing his organizing work in El
	    Salvador, he would have already entered into the ranks of
	    the disappeared, at the hands of “heavily armed men
	    dressed in civilian clothes”; or have been blown to
	    pieces in a dynamite attack on his union headquarters.  If
	    Alexander Dubcek were a politician in our country, he
	    would have been assassinated like Héctor
	    Oquelí [the social democratic leader assassinated
	    in Guatemala, by Salvadoran death squads, according to the
	    Guatemalan government].  If Andrei Sakharov had worked
	    here in favor of human rights, he would have met the same
	    fate as Herbert Anaya [one of the many murdered leaders of
	    the independent Salvadoran Human Rights Commission CDHES].
	    If Ota-Sik or Václav Havel had been carrying out
	    their intellectual work in El Salvador, they would have
	    woken up one sinister morning, lying on the patio of a
	    university campus with their heads destroyed by bullets of
	    an elite army battalion. |  
	  |  | The journal Proceso of the Jesuit
	    University of El Salvador, quoted by
	    John Reed in the Guardian, May 23, 1990 |  
	  | One is tempted to believe that some people in the White
	    House worship Aztec gods — with the offering of
	    Central American blood. |  
	  |  | Julio Godoy, Guatemalan journalist
	    whose newspaper, La Epoca, was
	    blown up by state terrorists |  
	  | People are not just killed by death squads in El Salvador;
	    they are decapitated and then their heads are placed on
	    pikes and used to dot the landscape.  Men are not just
	    disemboweled by the Salvadoran Treasury Police; their
	    severed genitalia are stuffed into their mouths.
	    Salvadoran women are not just raped by the National Guard;
	    their wombs are cut from their bodies and used to cover
	    their faces.  It is not enough to kill children; they are
	    dragged over barbed wire until the flesh falls from their
	    bones while parents are forced to watch. … The
	    aesthetics of terror in El Salvador is religious. |  
	  |  | Reverend Daniel Santiago,
	    a Catholic priest in El Salvador |  
	  | There’s a famous definition in the Gospels of the
	    hypocrite, and the hypocrite is the person who refuses to
	    apply to himself the standards he applies to others.  By
	    that standard, the entire commentary and discussion of the
	    so-called War on Terror is pure hypocrisy, virtually
	    without exception. |  
	  |  | Noam Chomsky, Power and Terror, 2003 |  
	  | In brief, for the United States, Eurasian geostrategy
	    involves the purposeful management of geostrategically
	    dynamic states and the careful handling of geopolitically
	    catalytic states, in keeping with the twin interests of
	    America in the short-term preservation of its unique
	    global power and in the long-run transformation of it into
	    increasingly institutionalized global cooperation.  To put
	    it in a terminology that hearkens back to the more brutal
	    age of ancient empires, the three grand imperatives of
	    imperial geostrategy are to prevent collusion and maintain
	    security dependence among the vassals, to keep tributaries
	    pliant and protected, and to keep the barbarians from
	    coming together. |  
	  |  | Zbigniew Brzezinkski,
	      National Security Adviser to President Jimmy Carter,
	      Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board under Ronald Reagan,
	      etc.
	      in The Grand Chessboard |  
	  | But it was impossible to save the Great Republic.  She was
	    rotten to the heart.  Lust of conquest had long ago done
	    its work.  Trampling upon the helpless abroad had taught
	    her, by a natural process, to endure with apathy the like
	    at home.  Multitudes who had applauded the crushing of
	    other people’s liberties, lived to suffer for their
	    mistake in their own persons.  The government was
	    irrevocably in the hands of the prodigiously rich and
	    their hangers-on; the suffrage was become a mere machine,
	    which they used as they chose.  There was no principle but
	    commercialism, no patriotism but of the pocket. |  
	  |  | Mark Twain |  
	  | To children today, the war was something in the dusty past, as
	    ancient as Caesar.  They wonder why their parents are forever
	    using the phrases before the waror after the war.It is because war is a watershed in the life of a nation and a
	    person.  Nothing is ever the same again.  The last great war
	    crucified some American families and made others rich.  It threw
	    up new leaders and broke the careers of some who pretended to be
	    leaders.  It broke bodies and hearts and moral values.  It
	    poisoned the meaning of existing words and kindled new words and
	    meanings.  It invented new ways to kill a thousand people and to
	    cure fever in a child.  It taught us that free men can build
	    anything, pay for anything, endure anything, if they have the
	    will to do so.  The war that started 25 years ago began 25 years
	    after the first world war had begun, but the lesson was not
	    learned.  It wasn’t learned because every generation starts life
	    afresh, without memory and because pain and death are not
	    multiplied in the human spirit.  Because even 35 million deaths
	    leave an empty place at only one family table.  This presumably
	    is what permits life to go on, and makes a next time always
	    possible. |  
	  |  | Eric Sevareid |  
	  | In order for us human beings to commit ourselves
	    personally to the inhumanity of war, we find it necessary
	    first to dehumanize our opponents, which is in itself a
	    violation of the beliefs of all religions.  Once we
	    characterize our adversaries as beyond the scope of God’s
	    mercy and grace, their lives lose all value.  We deny
	    personal responsibility when we plant landmines and, days
	    or years later, a stranger to us — often a child
	    — is crippled or killed.  From a great distance, we
	    launch bombs or missiles with almost total impunity, and
	    never want to know the number or identity of the victims. |  
	  |  | Jimmy Carter, Oslo 2002,
		    accepting the Nobel Peace Prize |  
	  | The logic of war is power, and power has no inherent
	    limit.  The logic of peace is proportion, and proportion
	    implies limitation.  The success of war is victory; the
	    success of peace is stability.  The conditions of victory
	    are commitment, the condtion of stability is
	    self-restraint. |  
	  |  | Henry Kissinger,
	    A World Restored, Chapter 8 |  
	  | When the rich make war, it’s the poor that die. |  
	  |  | Jean-Paul Sartre |  
	  | 
	      Today, our continuing progress is restricted not by the
	      number of fishing boats but by the decreasing numbers of
	      fish; not by the power of pumps but the depletion of
	      aquifers; not by the number of chainsaws but by the
	      disappearance of primary forests.  While living systems are
	      the source of such desired materials as wood, fish, or
	      food, of utmost importance are the services that
	      they offer, services that are far more critical to human
	      prosperity than are nonrenewable resources.  A forest
	      provides not only the resource of wood but also the
	      services of water storage and flood management. …
	     
	      Humankind has inherited a 3.8-billion-year store of
	      natural capital.  At present rates of use and degradation,
	      there will be little left by the end of [this] century.
	      This is not only a matter of aesthetics and morality, it
	      is of the utmost practical concern to society and all
	      people.
	     |  
	  |  | Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins, Natural Capitalism |  
	  | The Earth does not belong to us; we belong to the
	    Earth… We did not weave the web of life; we are
	    merely a strand in it.  Whatever we do to the web, we do
	    to ourselves. |  
	  |  | Ted Perry, 1971
	    (who presented them as the words of Chief Seattle in a film script) |  
	  | We do not inherit the earth from our fathers.  We borrow
	    it from our children. |  
	  |  | David Bower |  
	  | I see you all as jockeys, and your companies are the
	    horses you ride.  You’re beating your horses on in a race,
	    but now you can see that you are racing toward a stone
	    wall.  You see some of those ahead of you smashing into
	    the wall, but you don’t turn around or even pause.  You’re
	    beating your horses on anyway as fast as you can. |  
	  |  | Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the
	    Onondaga Nation, addressing CEOs, bankers, and financiers
	    in Davos Switzerland, 1996 as quoted by
	    The Cultural Creatives |  
	  | 
	      All ethics so far evolved rest upon a single premise: that
	      the individual is a member of a community of
	      interdependent parts.  His instincts prompt him to compete
	      for his place in the community, but his ethics prompt him
	      also to cooperate (perhaps in order that there may be a
	      place to compete for).
	     
	      The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the
	      community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals,
	      or collectively: the land.
	     
	      This sounds simple: do we not already sing our love for
	      and obligation to the land of the free and the home of
	      the brave?  Yes, but just what and whom do we love?
	      Certainly not the soil, which we are sending
	      helter-skelter downriver.  Certainly not the waters,
	      which we assume have no function except to turn
	      turbines, float barges, and carry off sewage.  Certainly
	      not the plants, of which we exterminate whole
	      communities without batting an eye.  Certainly not the
	      animals, of which we have already extirpated many of the
	      largest and most beautiful species.  A land ethic of
	      course cannot prevent the alteration, management, and
	      use of these ‘resources,’ but it does affirm their right
	      to continued existence, and, at least in spots, their
	      continued existence in a natural state.
	     
	      In short, a land ethic changes the role of Homo sapiens
	      from conqueror of the land-community to plain member and
	      citizen of it.  It implies respect for his
	      fellow-members, and also respect for the community as
	      such.
	     |  
	  |  | Aldo Leopold, A Sand County
	      Almanac with Essays on Conservation from Round
	      River, 1949, as excerpted at
	      Introduction to U.S. Environmental Law |  
	  | For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each
	    other.  Indeed, he who sows the seed of murder and pain
	    cannot reap joy and love. |  
	  |  | Pythagoras |  
	  | Can you really ask what reason Pythagoras had for
	    abstaining from flesh?  For my part I rather wonder both
	    by what accident and in what state of soul or mind the
	    first man did so, touched his mouth to gore and brought
	    his lips to the flesh of a dead creature, he who set forth
	    tables of dead, stale bodies and ventured to call food and
	    nourishment the parts that had a little before bellowed
	    and cried, moved and lived.  How could his eyes endure the
	    slaughter when throats were slit and hides flayed and
	    limbs torn from limb?  How could his nose endure the
	    stench?  How was it that the pollution did not turn away
	    his taste, which made contact with the sores of others and
	    sucked juices and serums from mortal wounds?  … It
	    is certainly not lions and wolves that we eat out of
	    self-defense; on the contrary, we ignore these and
	    slaughter harmless, tame creatures without stings or teeth
	    to harm us, creatures that, I swear, Nature appears to
	    have produced for the sake of their beauty and grace.
	    … But nothing abashed us, not the flower-like
	    tinting of the flesh, not the persuasiveness of the
	    harmonious voice, not the cleanliness of their habits or
	    the unusual intelligence that may be found in the poor
	    wretches.  No, for the sake of a little flesh we deprive
	    them of sun, of light, of the duration of life to which
	    they are entitled by birth and being… |  
	  |  | Plutarch, essayist and biographer,
	    c.AD 46 – c.120, from the essay On the Eating of
	    Flesh |  
	  | I have from an early age abjured the use of meat, and the
	    time will come when men such as I will look upon the
	    murder of animals as they now look on the murder of men. |  
	  |  | Dimitri Merejkowski, The Romance of Leonardo da Vinci |  
	  | The difference in mind between man and the higher animals,
	    great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of
	    kind. |  
	  |  | Charles Darwin |  
	  | There is no fundamental difference between man and the
	    higher animals in their mental faculties… The lower
	    animals, like man, manifestly feel pleasure and pain,
	    happiness, and misery. |  
	  |  | Charles Darwin |  
	  | Animals, whom we have made our slaves, we do not like to
	    consider our equal. |  
	  |  | Charles Darwin |  
	  | Pain is pain, whether it be inflicted on man or on beast;
	    and the creature who suffers it, whether man or beast,
	    being sensible to the misery of it, whilst it lasts,
	    suffers evil… The white man…can have no right,
	    by virtue of his color, to enslave and tyrannize over a
	    black man… For the same reason, a man can have no
	    natural right to abuse and torment a beast. |  
	  |  | Dr. Humphrey Primatt, 1776 |  
	  | That cruelty can be extraordinarily satisfying cannot be
	    denied, for cruelty is a magnifier of identity, a
	    simplifier of social function, and the temporary
	    resolution of insecurity and doubt… Cruelty relies
	    on a rigid observance of the categorical distance between
	    victim and oppressor. |  
	  |  | Coral Lansbury,
	    Old Brown Dog |  
	  | But is any of this relevant in determining if
	    humans or any other animals are “worthy” of
	    moral consideration?  What are the qualities which a being
	    need possess before treating them “like an
	    animal” would be unacceptable? … But it is we
	    … who are presently calling the shots, and as such
	    we have made those characteristics which are claimed to be
	    exclusively human attributes the requirements for
	    moral consideration. … It is only human arrogance
	    that is able to find beauty and perfection exclusively in
	    those things human. |  
	  |  | Marjorie Spiegel,
	    The Dreaded Comparison |  
	  | Was there ever any domination that did not appear natural
	    to those who possessed it? |  
	  |  | John Stuart Mill,
	    British philosopher and economist, 1806-1873,
	    from www.thirdworldtraveler.com |  
	  | Everyone’s values are defined by what they will tolerate
	    when it is done to others. |  
	  |  | William Greider |  
	  | Evolution has no long-term goal.  There is no
	    long-distance target, no final perfection to serve as a
	    criterion for selection, although human vanity cherishes
	    the absurd notion that our species is the final goal of
	    evolution. |  
	  |  | Richard Dawkins,
	    The Blind Watchmaker |  
	  | I do not see a delegation for the four-footed.  I see no
	    seat for the eagles.  We forget and we consider ourselves
	    superior, but we are after all a mere part of the
	    Creation. |  
	  |  | Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the
	    Onondaga Nation, addressing the United Nations assembly,
	    as quoted by The Sacred Depths of Nature |  
	  | Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a
	    strong impulse to see it tried on him personally. |  
	  |  | Abraham Lincoln |  
	  | I am in favor of animal rights as well as human rights.
	    That is the way of a whole human being. |  
	  |  | Abraham Lincoln,
	    Complete Works |  
	  | The day has been, I grieve to say in many places it is not
	    yet past, in which the greater part of the species, under
	    the denomination of slaves, have been treated by the law
	    exactly upon the same footing as, in England for example,
	    the inferior races of animals are still.  The day may
	    come, when the rest of the animal creation may acquire
	    those rights which never could have been withholden from
	    them but by the hand of tyranny.  The French have already
	    discovered that the blackness of the skin is no reason why
	    a human being should be abandoned without redress to the
	    caprice of a tormentor.  It may come one day to be
	    recognized, that the number of the legs, the villosity of
	    the skin, or the termination of the os sacrum, are
	    reasons equally insufficient for abandoning a sensitive
	    being to the same fate.  What else is it that should trace
	    the insuperable line?  Is it the faculty of reason, or,
	    perhaps, the faculty of discourse?  But a full-grown horse
	    or dog is beyond comparison a more rational, as well as a
	    more conversable animal, than an infant of a day, or a
	    week, or even a month, old.  But suppose the case were
	    otherwise, what would it avail?  the question is not, Can
	    they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? |  
	  |  | Jeremy Bentham,
	    The Principles of Morals and Legislation, 1789 |  
	  | Non-violence leads to the highest ethics, which is the
	    goal of all evolution.  Until we stop harming all other
	    living beings, we are still savages. |  
	  |  | Thomas Edison |  
	  | It is my view that the vegetarian manner of living by its
	    purely physical effect on the human temperament would most
	    beneficially influence the lot of mankind. |  
	  |  | Albert Einstein |  
	  | I have no doubt that it is a part of the destiny of the
	    human race, in its gradual improvement, to leave off
	    eating animals. |  
	  |  | Henry David Thoreau |  
	  | And in fasting, if he be really and seriously seeking to
	    live a good life, the first thing from which he will
	    abstain will always be the use of animal food, because
	    … its use is simply immoral, as it involves the
	    performance of an act which is contrary to the moral
	    feeling — killing. |  
	  |  | Leo Tolstoy |  
	  | Animals are my friends … and I don’t eat my friends. |  
	  |  | George Bernard Shaw |  
	  | People often say that humans have always eaten animals, as
	    if this is a justification for continuing the practice.
	    According to this logic, we should not try to prevent
	    people from murdering other people, since this has also
	    been done since the earliest of times. |  
	  |  | Isaac Bashevis Singer |  
	  | Whether it is a white master brutally punishing his slave
	    for using a tone of voice he doesn’t like, or a dairy
	    farmer slaughtering his cows, the ramifications are
	    immense.  Weaving these disparate relationships together
	    is a common thread: only the master’s perspective is
	    considered. |  
	  |  | Marjorie Speigel,
	    The Dreaded Comparison |  
	  | True human goodness, in all its purity and freedom, can
	    come to the fore only when its recipient has no power.
	    Mankind’s true moral test, its fundamental test (which
	    lies deeply buried from view), consists of its attitude
	    towards those who are at its mercy: animals.  And in this
	    respect mankind has suffered a fundamental debacle, a
	    debacle so fundamental that all others stem from it. |  
	  |  | Milan Kundera |  
	  | Humans are nowadays not supposed to be anybody’s property,
	    yet the rationale for discriminating against chimpanzees
	    in this way is seldom spelled out, and I doubt if there is
	    a defensible rationale at all.  Such is the breathtaking
	    speciesism of our Christian-inspired attitudes, the
	    abortion of a single human zygote (most of them are
	    destined to be spontaneously aborted anyway) can arouse
	    more moral solicitude and righteous indignation than the
	    vivisection of any number of intelligent adult
	    chimpanzees! |  
	  |  | Richard Dawkins,
	    The Blind Watchmaker |  
	  | If you deny any affinity with another person or kind of
	    person, if you declare it to be wholly different from
	    yourself—as men have done to women, and class has
	    done to class, and nation has done to nation—you may
	    hate it, or deify it; but in either case you have denied
	    its spiritual equality, and its human reality.  You have
	    made it into a thing, to which the only possible
	    relationship is a power relationship.  And thus you have
	    fatally improverished your own reality.  You have, in
	    fact, alienated yourself. |  
	  |  | Ursula K. Le Guin,
	    American SF and The Other |  
	  | I abhor vivisection.  It should at least be curbed.
	    Better, it should be abolished.  I know of no achievement
	    through vivisection, no scientific discovery, that could
	    not have been obtained without such barbarism and cruelty.
	    The whole thing is evil. |  
	  |  | Charles Mayo (founder of the Mayo Clinic) |  
	  | If you step back and look at the data, the optimum amount
	    of red meat you eat should be zero. |  
	  |  | Walter Willett, M.D., of Brigham and Women’s
	    Hospital, director of a study that
	    found a close correlation between
	    red meat consumption and colon cancer. |  
	  | The beef industry has contributed to more American deaths
	    than all the wars of this century, all natural disasters,
	    and all automobile accidents combined.  If beef is your
	    idea of ‘real food for real people,’ you’d
	    better live real close to a real good hospital. |  
	  |  | Neal D. Barnard, M.D., President,
	    Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine |  
	  | How many anecdotes?  Where did this all start?  What is
	    this about?  I don’t know when it started, but I know when
	    it got bad, really bad.  It got bad under Ronald Reagan,
	    who had a very active fantasy life.  … He was
	    convinced that he did things in the Second World War that
	    he clearly hadn’t done.  You can look it up.  He didn’t do
	    them.  He would say these stories over and over again.  He
	    would remember what he’d done and he hadn’t done it.  And
	    he remembered things about welfare queens who had abused
	    the privilege of welfare and bought Cadillacs and things
	    like that.  Perhaps there was one such person.  Let’s give
	    him the benefit of the doubt.  But what does that prove?
	    Government by anecdote.  … The federal government in
	    the Office of Technology Assessment, in the Congressional
	    Budget Office, in the Congressional Research Service, and
	    in several other bureaus, … is very good at
	    generating statistics that are good points of discussion
	    because they’re accurate.  But accurate statistics have
	    the inconvenience of destroying prejudices.  And if you
	    find, for example, that the average woman who receives
	    public assistance in this country is on for less than two
	    years and has only 1.5 children, very much would like to
	    get off public assistance, but has certain inconveniences,
	    like lack of education, drug and alcohol habits, abusive
	    former or current mates hanging around driving her nuts,
	    you add all those up and you find that sixty or seventy
	    percent of the women in this country terribly need some
	    program that would deal with all the aforementioned
	    problems.  They’re not sitting home watching TV on fat
	    welfare checks, breeding more.  There may be some, but
	    there aren’t very many.  That’s not what data says.
	    That’s what anecdotes say. |  
	  |  | Larry Bensky, 14 April 1995 |  
	  | One of the important distinctions between
	    ideology and science is that science
	    recognizes the limitations on what one knows.
	    There is always uncertainty. |  
	  |  | Joseph E. Stiglitz,
	    Globalization And Its Discontents, 2002,
	    co-recipient of the 2001 Nobel prize in Economics |  
	  | It is strangely absurd to suppose that a million of human
	    beings collected together are not under the same moral
	    laws which bind each of them separately.  It is a great
	    consolation to me that our government, as it cherishes
	    most its duties to its own citizens, so is it the most
	    exact in its moral conduct towards other nations.  I do
	    not believe that in the four administrations which have
	    taken place, there has been a single instance of departure
	    from good faith towards other nations.  We may sometimes
	    have mistaken our rights, or made an erroneous estimate of
	    the actions of others, but no voluntary wrong can be
	    imputed to us.  In this respect England exhibits the most
	    remarkable phaenomenon in the universe in the contrast
	    between the profligacy of its government and the probity
	    of its citizens.  And accordingly it is now exhibiting an
	    example of the truth of the maxim that virtue &
	    interest are inseparable.  It ends, as might have been
	    expected, in the ruin of its people, but this ruin will
	    fall heaviest, as it ought to fall on that hereditary
	    aristocracy which has for generations been preparing the
	    catastrophe.  I hope we shall take warning from the
	    example and crush in its birth the aristocracy of our
	    monied corporations which dare already to challenge our
	    government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the
	    laws of our country. |  
	  |  | Thomas Jefferson, 1816 letter to George Logan |  
	  | I see in the near future a crisis approaching that
	    unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my
	    country.  As a result of the war, corporations have been
	    enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will
	    follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor
	    to prolong its reign … until all wealth is aggregated in a
	    few hands, and the Republic is destroyed.  I feel at this
	    moment more anxiety for the safety of my coutry than ever
	    before, even in the midst of war. |  
	  |  | Attributed to Abraham Lincoln, 1864 letter (attribution disputed at snopes.com)
 |  
	  | The belief is common in America that the day is at hand
	    when corporations far greater than the Erie —
	    swaying power such as has never in the world’s
	    history been trusted in the hands of private citizens,
	    controlled by single men like Vanderbilt, or by
	    combinations of men like Fisk, Gould, and Lane, after
	    having created a system of quiet but irresistible
	    corruption — will ultimately succeed in directing
	    government itself.  Under the American form of society,
	    there is no authority capability of effective resistance.
	    The national government, in order to deal with the
	    corporations, must assume powers refused to it by its
	    fundamental law, — and even then is exposed to the
	    chance of forming an absolute central government which
	    sooner or later is likely to fall into the hands it is
	    struggling to escape, and thus destroy the limits of its
	    power only in order make corruption omnipotent.  Nor is
	    this danger confined to America alone.  The corporation is
	    in its nature a threat against the popular institutions
	    which are spreading so rapidly over the whole world.
	    Wherever a popular and limited government exists this
	    difficulty will be found in its path; and unless some
	    satisfactory solution of the problem can be reached,
	    popular institutions may yet find their very existence
	    endangered. |  
	  |  | Henry Adams,
	    The New York Gold Conspiracy, 1870 |  
	  | The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not
	    safe if the people tolerate the growth of a private power
	    to the point where it becomes stronger than that of their
	    democratic state itself. |  
	  |  | Franklin Roosevelt |  
	  | This conjunction of an immense military establishment and
	    a large arms industry is new in the American experience.
	    …We recognize the imperative need for this
	    development.  Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave
	    implications.  …In the councils of government, we
	    must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
	    influence, whether sought or unsought, by the
	    military-industrial complex.  The potential for the
	    disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will
	    persist. |  
	  |  | Dwight David Eisenhower
	    Farewell Address to the American People, 1961 |  
	  | In the aftermath of the Civil War, an old institution took
	    on a new form in the United States.  Created through an
	    unprecedented legal metamorphosis, the modern corporation
	    was a device like nothing the world had seen before:
	    restless, autonomous, self-perpetuating.  Designed to seek
	    profit and power, it pursued both with endless tenacity,
	    steadily bending the framework of law and even challenging
	    the sovereign status of the state.  Where did the
	    corporation get so much power?  What is its ultimate
	    trajectory?  Perhaps no phenomenon will more deeply shape
	    the human future than this puzzling, endlessly evolving
	    entity. |  
	  |  | Ted Nace, The American Invention, 2002 |  
	  | How many people in this room made $100,000 last year?
	    Less than five percent of the American people make that
	    much money.  But one who did, Mikey Eisner, the head
	    mouseketeer of Disney.  In 1995 he made $100,000.  Not for
	    the year, not for the month, he didn’t make $100,000 a
	    week; he didn’t make $100,000 a day; he made $100,000 an
	    hour.  Plus a car.  Meanwhile he was knocking down the
	    health care benefits of the minimum wage workers who were
	    at Disney Land and Disney World. These executives, like Michael Eisner, they get so rich
	    that they could afford to air-condition hell.  And the way
	    they’re acting, they better be setting money aside for
	    that project.
 |  
	  |  | Jim Hightower
	    21 October 1997 Democracy NOW! |  
	  | Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex,
	    and more violent.  It takes a touch of genius — and a
	    lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction. |  
	  |  | E. F. Schumacher
	    (found at Gordon’s Quotations) |  
	  | The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping
	    from the old ones, which ramify, for those brought up as
	    most of us have been, into every corner of our minds. |  
	  |  | John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1935) |  
	  | Don’t tell me about all those millions of jobs that Bill
	    Clinton has created; I’ve got three of them myself. |  
	  |  | Constituent of Representative Jerrold Nadler |  
	  | Every morning when the sun comes up, the gazelle wakes.
	    He knows that he must outrun the fastest lion or he will
	    be eaten.  When the sun comes up, the lion also wakes.  He
	    knows that he must outrun the slowest gazelle or he will
	    starve.  In the end, it doesn’t matter whether you are a
	    lion or a gazelle.  When the sun comes up, you’d better be
	    running. |  
	  |  | Unknown |  
	  | Look around the table.  If you don’t see a sucker, get up,
	    because you’re the sucker. |  
	  |  | Amarillo Slim, legendary poker
	    player |  
	  | In a way, risking climate change is even more frightening
	    than playing Russian roulette … but with the pistol
	    pointed at the head of one’s child …. |  
	  |  | Stephen J. Decanio,
	    The Economics of Climate Change |  
	  | Technology is the knack of so arranging the world that we
	    do not experience it. |  
	  |  | Max Frisch, Postman, 1995 |  
	  | Propaganda in favor of action that is consonant with
	    enlightened self-interest appeals to reason by means of
	    logical arguements based upon the best available evidence
	    fully and honestly set forth.  Propaganda in favor of
	    action dictated by the impulses that are below
	    self-interest offers false, garbled or incomplete
	    evidence, avoids logical argument and seeks to influence
	    its victims by the mere repetition of catchwords, by the
	    furious denunciation of foreign or domestic scapegoats,
	    and by cunningly associating the lowest passions with the
	    highest ideals, so that atrocities come to be perpetrated
	    in the name of God and the most cynical kind of
	    Realpolitik is treated as a matter of religious
	    principle and patriotic duty. |  
	  |  | Aldous Huxley,
	    Propaganda in a Democratic Society, 1958 |  
	  | In regard to propaganda the early advocates of universal
	    literacy and a free press envisaged only two
	    possibilities: the propaganda might be true, or it might
	    be false.  They did not forsee what in fact has happened,
	    above all in our Western capitalist democracies —
	    the development of a vast mass communications industry,
	    concerned in the main neither with the true nor the false,
	    but with the unreal, the more or less totally irrelevant.
	    In a word, they failed to take into account man’s almost
	    infinite appetite for distractions. |  
	  |  | Aldous Huxley
	    Propaganda in a Democratic Society, 1958 |  
	  | To die for an idea; it is unquestionably noble.  But how
	    much nobler it would be if men died for ideas that were
	    true. |  
	  |  | H.L. Mencken, 1919 |  
	  | Honorable beaters of children, sadists, uniformed and in
	    plain clothes, distinguished Dixiecrat wearing the
	    clothing of a gentleman, eminent Republican who opposes an
	    accommodation with the one country with which we must live
	    at peace in order for us and all our children to survive,
	    my boy of fifteen left this room a few minutes ago in
	    sound health and not jailed solely because I asked him to
	    be in here to learn something about the procedures of the
	    United States government and one of its committees.  Had
	    he been outside where a certain friend of mine had his
	    head split by these goons operating under your orders, my
	    boy today might have paid the penalty of permanent injury
	    or a police record for desiring to come here and hear how
	    this committee operates.  If you think that I am going to
	    cooperate with this collection of Judases, of men who sit
	    there in violation of the United States Constitution, if
	    you think I will cooperate with you in any way, you are
	    insane.  This body is improperly constituted.  It is a
	    kangaroo court.  It does not have my respect; it has my
	    utmost contempt. |  
	  |  | William Mandel, KPFA programmer, 1960,
	    testifying before the
	    House Committee on Unamerican Activities |  
	  | The government of an exclusive company of merchants is,
	    perhaps, the worst of all governments for any country
	    whatsoever. |  
	  |  | Adam Smith,
	    The Wealth of Nations |  
	  | None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely
	    believe they are free. |  
	  |  | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
	    as quoted at BrainyQuote |  
	  | Fighting crime by building more jails is like fighting
	    cancer by building more cemeteries. |  
	  |  | Paul Kelly, as quoted at
	    UNH Student Environmental Action Coalition — Quotes |  
	  | Almost certainly we are moving into an age of totalitarian
	    dictatorships.  An age in which freedom of thought will be
	    at first a deadly sin and later on a meaningless
	    abstraction.  The autonomous individual is going to be
	    stamped out of existence. |  
	  |  | George Orwell, as quoted at
	    Selections from George Orwell at conservativeforum.org |  
	  | Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the
	    wise as false, and by the rulers as useful. |  
	  |  | Lucius Annaeus Seneca,
	    as quoted at BrainyQuote |  
	  | Hear me people: We now have to deal with another
	    race—small and feeble when our fathers first met
	    them, but now great and overbearing.  Strangely enough
	    they have a mind to till the soil and the love of
	    possessions is a disease with them.  These people have
	    made many rules which the rich may break but the poor may
	    not.  They take their tithes from the poor and weak to
	    support the rich and those who rule. |  
	  |  | Chief Sitting Bull,
	    speaking at the Powder River Conference, 1877,
	    as quoted at
	    ZMag’s Archive of Past Quotes of the Day |  
	  | Propaganda is to democracy what violence is to totalitarianism. |  
	  |  | Noam Chomsky,
	      Propaganda, American-style |  
	  | At the age of 16, after reading a book by Tryon, Franklin
	    made the countercultural decision to follow a Vegetable
	    Diet. My refusing to eat flesh occasioned an
	    Inconveniency,Franklin notes, and I was frequently chid
	    for my singularity.Notwithstanding the chiding of his
	    peers, Franklin continued in this practice because he
	    found that it saved him money, gave him more time to read,
	    and increased his aptitude for his studies, since he
	    gained that greater Clearness of Head and quicker
	    Apprehension which usually attend Temperance in Eating and
	    Drinking.It wasn’t long, however, before Franklin found
	    himself unable to maintain his vow.  He was traveling for
	    the first time by ship from Boston to Philadelphia when
	    the crew caught and fried a large quantity of codfish. Hitherto I had stuck to my Resolution of not eating
	    animal Food,Franklin observes, and on this Occasion
	    consider’d, with my Master Tryon, the taking every Fish as
	    a kind of unprovoked Murder, since none of them had, or
	    ever could do us any Injury that might justify the
	    Slaughter.  All this seemed very reasonable. But I had
	    formerly been a great Lover of Fish,Franklin continues, and, when this came hot out of the Frying Pan, it smelt
	    admirably well.  I balanc’d some time between Principle
	    & Inclination, till I recollected that, when the Fish
	    were opened, I saw smaller Fish taken out of their
	    Stomachs: Then thought I, ‘If you eat one another, I don’t
	    see why we mayn’t eat you.’ So I din’d upon Cod very
	    heartily, and continued to eat with other People,
	    returning only now & then occasionally to a vegetable
	    Diet.  So convenient a thing it is to be a reasonable
	    Creature, since it enables one to find or make a Reason
	    for everything one has a mind to do. |  
	  |  | unknown, quoting Benjamin Franklin |  
	  | No formula which expresses clearly the thought of one
	    generation can convey the same meaning to the generation
	    which follows. |  
	  |  | Bishop Wescott |  
	  | Such defects may be all on the surface, but they augur
	    badly: when we see cracks in the plaster and the cladding
	    of our walls it warns us that there are fissures in the
	    actual masonry. |  
	  |  | Michel De Montaigne |  
	  | Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s need, but not
	    every man’s greed. |  
	  |  | Mohandas K. Gandhi |  
	  | You have learnt something.  That always feels at first
	    as if you had lost something. |  
	  |  | George Bernard Shaw’s Andrew Undershaft,
	    Major Barbara, Act III |  
	  | What do we do here when we spend years of work and thought
	    and thousands of pounds of solid cash on a new gun or an
	    aerial battleship that turns out just a hairsbreadth wrong
	    after all?  Scrap it. Scrap it without wasting another
	    hour or another pound on it.  Well, you have made for
	    yourself something that you call a morality or a religion
	    or what not.  It doesn’t fit the facts.  Well, scrap it.
	    Scrap it and get one that does fit.  That is what is wrong
	    with the world at present.  It scraps its obsolete steam
	    engines and dynamos; but it won’t scrap its old prejudices
	    and its old moralities and its old religions and its old
	    political constitutions.  What’s the result?  In machinery
	    it does very well; but in morals and religion and politics
	    it is working at a loss that brings it nearer bankruptcy
	    every year.  Don’t persist in that folly.  If your old
	    religion broke down yesterday, get a newer and a better
	    one for tomorrow. |  
	  |  | George Bernard Shaw’s Andrew Undershaft,,
	    Major Barbara, Act III |  
	  | Churches are suffered to exist only on condition that they
	    preach submission to the State as at present
	    capitalistically organized. |  
	  |  | George Bernard Shaw,
	    Major Barbara, Preface |  
	  | It would be curious then, if an idea, the fugitive
	    fermentation of an individual brain, could, of natural
	    right, be claimed in exclusive and stable property.  If
	    nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all
	    others of exclusive property, it is the action of the
	    thinking power called an idea, which an individual may
	    exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but
	    the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the
	    possession of every one, and the receiver cannot
	    dispossess himself of it.  Its peculiar character, too, is
	    that no one possesses the less, because every other
	    possesses the whole of it.  He who receives an idea from
	    me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine;
	    as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without
	    darkening me.  That ideas should freely spread from one to
	    another over the globe, for the moral and mutual
	    instruction of man, and improvement of his condition,
	    seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by
	    nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all
	    space, without lessening their density in any point, and
	    like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our
	    physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive
	    appropriation.  Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a
	    subject of property. |  
	  |  | Thomas Jefferson,
	    Letter to Isaac McPherson, Monticello, 13 August 1813 |  Quotes introducing other pages of this siteSmall excerpts from some books |