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201 | If, in war, you're not willing to die for your cause but your enemy is willing to die for his, a terrible weight has been set on one side of the scales. | |
202 | I'm definitely not the man I was, thank goodness. | |
203 | I'm not a human being. I walk in eternity. | |
204 | I'm not a professional educator, of course, but maybe if the school system would stop teaching third-graders how to have sex, they wouldn't have so big a problem. | |
205 | I'm not exactly breaking the laws of time, but I am bending them a little. | |
206 | I'm sick of being cold and wet and hypnotized left, right, and center. I'm sick of being shot at, savaged by bug-eyed monsters, never knowing if I'm coming or going, or been! | |
207 | I'm sick of people lying to me for my own good. Because really it's mostly for their own good. | |
208 | In a manner of speaking you hide behind women's skirts as you shoot arrows so that when arrows come back at you, you can feign outrage at an atrocity. | |
209 | In other words, the only legal hoe is a union hoe. | |
210 | In the end words are just wind. | |
211 | In the hills we like our coffee strong but this here would make bobwire grow ona man's chest in the place of hair. | |
212 | In this age of social networking, privacy is becoming an ancient relic. Lives can be changed by the posting of a single photo or profile update. And in the case of Tyler, lives can be lost in 140 characters or less. | |
213 | In trade between willing parties who share moral values and who deal fairly and honestly with one another, compromise over something like price is legitimate. In matters of morality or truth, there can be no compromise. | |
214 | Instead you did what the rest did - what humans always do - you believed that your vision was somehow superior to that of your fellows. You decided that everything would be all right if only people wouild listen to you. And you acted on that wholly selfish belief. | |
215 | It ain’t ever as simple, is it, as a man is just good or bad? Not even you. Not even Bethod. Not anybody. | |
216 | It appears to be a machine with a distinctly limited repertoire. | |
217 | It frightens me... because we all see the world by some kind of light personal to us, and that light changes our perception. I don't see clearly. I want to, but I don't know if I ever truly can. | |
218 | It gets tiresome being spoken to as if you are a child, even if you happen to be one. | |
219 | It has been my experience that most problems in life are caused by a lack of information. Many people just don’t know the things they need to know. Some ignore the truth; others never understand it. | |
220 | It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. | |
221 | It is for such reasons that I always ask my clinical clients first about sleep. Do they wake up in the morning at approximately the time the typical person wakes up, and at the same time every day? If the answer is no, fixing that is the first thing I recommend. It doesn’t matter so much if they go to bed at the same time each evening, but waking up at a consistent hour is a necessity. Anxiety and depression cannot be easily treated if the sufferer has unpredictable daily routines. The systems that mediate negative emotion are tightly tied to the properly cyclical circadian rhythms. The next thing I ask about is breakfast. I counsel my clients to eat a fat and protein-heavy breakfast as soon as possible after they awaken (no simple carbohydrates, no sugars, as they are digested too rapidly, and produce a blood-sugar spike and rapid dip). This is because anxious and depressed people are already stressed, particularly if their lives have not been under control for a good while. Their bodies are therefore primed to hypersecrete insulin, if they engage in any complex or demanding activity. If they do so after fasting all night and before eating, the excess insulin in their bloodstream will mop up all their blood sugar. Then they become hypoglycemic and psychophysiologically unstable. | |
222 | It is good to know well a man you are going to kill; it is not good to understand him. | |
223 | It is illogical, you see, to have a law which says 'guns are forbidden' when no one to whom the law applies is permitted to know the meaning of the word. Far more orderly to dispense with the concept altogether. At the moment, they withhold only the objects, and information. But it is only logical that they should also try to withhold ideas. You cannot control knowledge without controlling discovery, and you cannot control discovery without controlling thought, and when you control thought... do you see what I'm getting at... | |
224 | It is said that the greatest cruelty is drawn from those with the kindest hearts. | |
225 | It is wrong to believe that such men suffer in the conscience for what they do... it is only regret at being caught that troubles them. And they never admit it was any fault of their own... it was always chance, bad luck.... The criminal does not regret his crime, he only regrets failure. | |
226 | It 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. | |
227 | It seemed that there was no one more glad for peace than those whose job it was to fight for it. | |
228 | It 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. | |
229 | It 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.
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230 | It 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. | |
231 | It 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. | |
232 | It's always easier to come up with a rationalization than to change your basic assumptions. | |
233 | It's easy to prescribe remedies for our own weaknesses when they're comfortably ensconced in other people. | |
234 | It's easy when you have nine hundred years experience. | |
235 | It's nothing to joke about.... A twenty-pound gassy sheep could blow a hole in the ozone. | |
236 | It's silly, isn't it, but I feel frightened. As if we're about to interfere in something that's better left alone. | |
237 | It's the end but the moment has been prepared for. | |
238 | It's the end. But the moment has been prepared for. | |
239 | It's the most extraordinary thing, I can't seem to find my sonic screwdriver anywhere. | |
240 | It'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. | |
241 | It's weird. Being with you I can't tell what's right and what's wrong anymore. | |
242 | Jenkins! Chap with the wings there... five rounds rapid. | |
243 | Jesus meant us to ast God to hep us stand the pain, not beg Him to take the pain away. | |
244 | Laughter is poison to fear. | |
245 | Let me guess. My theories appall you, my heresies outrage you, I never answer letters and you don't like my tie. | |
246 | Let me in. We can sit down. We can have a cup of tea. We can talk about this. Reasonably. | |
247 | Let 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.' ... | |
248 | Let 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. | |
249 | Liberal 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. | |
250 | Life 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. | |