β
Our biggest regrets are not for the things we have done but for the things we haven't done
β
β
Chad Michael Murray
β
Briefly stated, the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect is as follows. You open the newspaper to an article on some subject you know well. In Murray's case, physics. In mine, show business. You read the article and see the journalist has absolutely no understanding of either the facts or the issues. Often, the article is so wrong it actually presents the story backwardβreversing cause and effect. I call these the "wet streets cause rain" stories. Paper's full of them.
In any case, you read with exasperation or amusement the multiple errors in a story, and then turn the page to national or international affairs, and read as if the rest of the newspaper was somehow more accurate about Palestine than the baloney you just read. You turn the page, and forget what you know.
β
β
Michael Crichton
β
Pride must die in you, or nothing of heaven can live in you.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
An atheist believes that a hospital
should be built instead of a church.
An atheist believes that deed must
be done instead of prayer said.
An atheist strives for involvement in life
and not escape into death.
He wants disease conquered,
poverty vanished, war eliminated.
β
β
Madalyn Murray O'Hair
β
I'm suspicious of people who don't like dogs, but I trust a dog when it doesn't like a person.
β
β
Bill Murray
β
It is clearly absurd to limit the term 'education' to a person's formal schooling.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard (Education: Free & Compulsory)
β
Humility is perfect quietness of heart. It is to expect nothing, to wonder at nothing that is done to me, to feel nothing done against me. It is to be at rest when nobody praises me, and when I am blamed or despised. It is to have a blessed home in the Lord, where I can go in and shut the door, and kneel to my Father in secret, and am at peace as in a deep sea of calmness, when all around and above is trouble.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a βdismal science.β But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Life makes fools of all of us sooner or later. But keep your sense of humor and you'll at least be able to take your humiliations with some measure of grace. In the end, you know, its our own expectations that crush us.
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
The assumption that what currently exists must necessarily exist is the acid that corrodes all visionary thinking.
β
β
Murray Bookchin
β
It is better to beg forgiveness, than ask permission.
β
β
Grace Murray Hopper
β
Two hands working can do more than a thousand clasped in prayer.
β
β
Madalyn Murray O'Hair
β
It is easy to be conspicuously 'compassionate' if others are being forced to pay the cost.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Here is the path to the higher life: down, lower down! Just as water always seeks and fills the lowest place, so the moment God finds men abased and empty, His glory and power flow in to exalt and to bless.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
This is the whole point of technology. It creates an appetite for immortality on the one hand. It threatens universal extinction on the other. Technology is lust removed from nature. - Murray (WN 285)
β
β
Don DeLillo (White Noise: Text and Criticism (Viking Critical Library))
β
Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his way. I have learned a deep respect for one of Goethe's couplets:
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it.
Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it!
β
β
William Hutchison Murray
β
War is Mass Murder, Conscription is Slavery, Taxation is Robbery.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Taxation is theft, purely and simply even though it is theft on a grand and colossal scale which no acknowledged criminals could hope to match. It is a compulsory seizure of the property of the Stateβs inhabitants, or subjects.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
I knew at that moment I had to make a choice... I could submit to everything and live a life of excuses, or I could push myself... I could push myself and make my life good...
β
β
Liz Murray
β
A dead Christ I must do everything for; a living Christ does everything for me.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Jesus Himself)
β
Humility is nothing but the disappearance of self in the vision that God is all.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
Disagreement is not oppression. Argument is not assault. Words β even provocative or repugnant ones β are not violence. The answer to speech we do not like is more speech.
β
β
Douglas Murray (The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity)
β
Murray said, 'I don't trust anybody's nostalgia but my own. Nostalgia is a product of dissatisfaction and rage. ItΒ΄s a settling of grievances between the present and the past. The more powerful the nostalgia, the closer you come to violence. War is the form nostalgia takes when men are hard-pressed to say something good about their country.
β
β
Don DeLillo
β
The family is the cradle of the worldβs misinformation. There must be something in family life that generates factual error. Over-closeness, the noise and heat of being. Perhaps even something deeper like the need to survive. Murray says we are fragile creatures surrounded by a world of hostile facts. Facts threaten our happiness and security. The deeper we delve into things, the looser our structure may seem to become. The family process works towards sealing off the world. Small errors grow heads, fictions proliferate. I tell Murray that ignorance and confusion canβt possibly be the driving forces behind family solidarity. What an idea, what a subversion. He asks me why the strongest family units exist in the least developed societies. Not to know is a weapon of survival, he says. Magic and superstition become entrenched as the powerful orthodoxy of the clan. The family is strongest where objective reality is most likely to be misinterpreted. What a heartless theory, I say. But Murray insists itβs true.
β
β
Don DeLillo (White Noise)
β
No action can be virtuous unless it is freely chosen.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Humility is the displacement of self by the enthronement of God.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
In the years ahead of me, I learned that the world is actually filled with people ready to tell you how likely something is, and what it means to be realistic. But what I have also learned is that no one, no one truly knows what is possible until they go and do it.
β
β
Liz Murray (Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness, Survival, and My Journey from Homeless to Harvard)
β
Instead, what I was beginning to understand was that however things unfolded from here on, whatever the next chapter was, my life could never be the sum of one circumstance. It would be determined, as it had always been, by my willingness to put one foot in front of the other, moving forward, come what may.
β
β
Liz Murray (Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness, Survival, and My Journey from Homeless to Harvard)
β
βHomeless person or business person, doctor or teacher, whatever your background may be, the same holds true for each of us: life takes on the meaning that you give it.
β
β
Liz Murray
β
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, magic, and power in it. Begin it now." β W. H. Murray,
β
β
Steven Pressfield (The War of Art)
β
Answered prayer is the interchange of love between the Father and His child.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
Libertarianism holds that the only proper role of violence is to defend person and property against violence, that any use of violence that goes beyond such just defense is itself aggressive, unjust, and criminal
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Each time, before you intercede, be quiet first, and worship God in His glory. Think of what He can do, and how He delights to hear the prayers of His redeemed people. Think of your place and privilege in Christ, and expect great things!
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
If we do not do the impossible, we shall be faced with the unthinkable.
β
β
Murray Bookchin
β
I said to myself: what if I woke up, and every single day I did everything within my ability during that day to change my life. What could happen in just a month? A year?
β
β
Liz Murray
β
There are no hierarchies in nature other than those imposed by hierarchical modes of human thought, but rather differences merely in function between and within living things.
β
β
Murray Bookchin (Post-Scarcity Anarchism (Working Classics))
β
Whenever someone starts talking about 'fair competition' or indeed, about 'fairness' in general, it is time to keep a sharp eye on your wallet, for it is about to be picked.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Our instructors do not understand how it is. To be bound to someone in such a way. They are too old, too out of touch with their emotions. They no longer remember what it is to live and breathe within the world. They think it simple to pit any two people against each other. It is never simple. The other person becomes how you define your life, how you define yourself. They become as necessary as breathing. Then they expect the victor to continue on without that. It would be like pulling the Murray twins apart and expecting them to be the same. They would be whole but not complete.
β
β
Erin Morgenstern (The Night Circus)
β
God cannot hear the prayers on our lips often because the desires of our heart after the world cry out to Him much more strongly and loudly than the our desires for Him.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
Sometimes it takes great suffering to pierce the soul and open it up to greatness
β
β
Jocelyn Murray
β
The sooner I learn to forget myself in the desire that He may be glorified, the richer will be the blessing that prayer will bring to myself. No one ever loses by what he sacrifices to the Father.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
Dream, but don't sleep.
β
β
Liz Murray (Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness, Survival, and My Journey from Homeless to Harvard)
β
I would never have broken up with you," I said earnestly. "I'm more miserable without you than I am with you." As soon as that sentence came out I groaned, because I knew how bad it sounded.
But Declan laughed. "Vintage Simon Murray comment.
β
β
Sean Kennedy (Tigers and Devils (Tigers and Devils #1))
β
Being filled with the Spirit is simply this - having my whole nature yielded to His power. When the whole soul is yielded to the Holy Spirit, God Himself will fill it.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Absolute Surrender (Pure Gold Classics))
β
When it comes to anti-fascism in most of Western Europe, there would appear for now to be a supply-and-demand problem: the demand for fascists vastly outstrips the actual supply.
β
β
Douglas Murray (The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam)
β
You can handle just about anything that comes at you out on the road with a believable grin, common sense and whiskey.
β
β
Bill Murray (Common Sense and Whiskey: Travel Adventures Far from Home)
β
Leadership is a two-way street, loyalty up and loyalty down."
(CBS 60 Minutes interview, March 6, 1983)
β
β
Grace Murray Hopper
β
People need self-respect, but self-respect must be earned -- it cannot be self-respect if it's not earned -- and the only way to earn anything is to achieve it in the face of the possibility of failing.
β
β
Charles Murray (Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010)
β
God has a plan for His Church upon earth. But alas! we too often make our plan, and we think that we know what ought to be done. We ask God first to bless our feeble efforts, instead of absolutely refusing to go unless God go before us.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Absolute Surrender (Pure Gold Classics))
β
Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative and creation, there is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too.
All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favour all manner of unforeseen incidents, meetings and material assistance which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. I have learned a deep respect for one of Goethe's couplets:
Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Begin it now.
β
β
William Hutchison Murray (The Scottish Himalayan Expedition)
β
I miss it if Iβm not in it for any length of time; I donβt feel comfortable. I want trees and I want frequent rain.
β
β
Murray Morgan
β
To be moral, an act must be free.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
The root of all virtue and grace, of all faith and acceptable worship, is that we know that we have nothing but what we receive, and bow in deepest humility to wait upon God for it.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
History, in the end, is only another kind of story, and stories are different from the truth. The truth is messy and chaotic and all over the place. Often it just doesnβt make sense. Stories make things make sense, but the way they do that is to leave out anything that doesnβt fit. And often that is quite a lot.
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
We drove 22 miles into the country around Farmington. There were meadows and apple orchards. White fences trailed through the rolling fields. Soon the sign started appearing. THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED BARN IN AMERICA. We counted five signs before we reached the site. There were 40 cars and a tour bus in the makeshift lot. We walked along a cowpath to the slightly elevated spot set aside for viewing and photographing. All the people had cameras; some had tripods, telephoto lenses, filter kits. A man in a booth sold postcards and slides -- pictures of the barn taken from the elevated spot. We stood near a grove of trees and watched the photographers. Murray maintained a prolonged silence, occasionally scrawling some notes in a little book.
"No one sees the barn," he said finally.
A long silence followed.
"Once you've seen the signs about the barn, it becomes impossible to see the barn."
He fell silent once more. People with cameras left the elevated site, replaced by others.
We're not here to capture an image, we're here to maintain one. Every photograph reinforces the aura. Can you feel it, Jack? An accumulation of nameless energies."
There was an extended silence. The man in the booth sold postcards and slides.
"Being here is a kind of spiritual surrender. We see only what the others see. The thousands who were here in the past, those who will come in the future. We've agreed to be part of a collective perception. It literally colors our vision. A religious experience in a way, like all tourism."
Another silence ensued.
"They are taking pictures of taking pictures," he said.
β
β
Don DeLillo (White Noise)
β
Since when has love ever looked for reasons, or evidence? Why would love bow to the reality of things, when it creates a reality of its own, so much more vivid, wherein everything resonates to the key of the heart?
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
But avoidance allows you to believe that you're making all kinds of strides when you're not.
β
β
Liz Murray (Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness, Survival, and My Journey from Homeless to Harvard)
β
Humility, the place of entire dependence on God, is the first duty and the highest virtue of the creature, and the root of every virtue. And so pride, or the loss of this humility, is the root of every sin and evil.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
Humility is simply the disposition which prepares the soul for living on trust.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
Weak men cannot handle power. It will either crush them, or they will use it to crush others
β
β
Jocelyn Murray (The English Pirate)
β
Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now.
β
β
William H. Murray
β
The great thing in prayer is to feel that we are putting our supplications into the bosom of omnipotent love.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
Books make dangerous devils out of women.
β
β
Yxta Maya Murray (The Conquest)
β
Humans are allergic to change. They love to say, 'We've always done it this way.' I try to fight that. That's why I have a clock on my wall that runs counter-clockwise.
β
β
Grace Murray Hopper
β
To immerse oneself in popular culture for any length of time is to wallow in an almost unbearable shallowness. Was the sum of European endeavour and achievement really meant to culminate in this?
β
β
Douglas Murray (The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam)
β
A critic is someone who enters the battlefield after the war is over and shoots the wounded.
β
β
Murray Kempton
β
Our forgiving love toward men is the evidence of God's forgiving love in us. It is a necessary condition of the prayer of faith.
β
β
Andrew Murray (With Christ in the School of Prayer (Christian Classics))
β
And, indeed, what is the State anyway but organized banditry? What is taxation but theft on a gigantic, unchecked, scale? What is war but mass murder on a scale impossible by private police forces? What is conscription but mass enslavement? Can anyone envision a private police force getting away with a tiny fraction of what States get away with, and do habitually, year after year, century after century?
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard (For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto (LvMI))
β
Christianity was not meant to be a weapon or an argument or a show of force or a political tool. Or an act of aggression or coercion. It was never meant to be a cause or a prop for a cause. Or something to pacify and make thousands go to bed happy and unthinking. It was meant to be a challenge, yes, but that challenge to a second life was meant to be laced with kindness. If someone forces you to choose between God is holy and God is love choose God is love because holiness without love translates into tyranny.
β
β
Murray Pura
β
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who love chocolate, and communists.
β
β
Leslie Moak Murray
β
I need to spend time with God even when I do not know what to pray.
β
β
Andrew Murray
β
It's hard to win an argument with a smart person. It's damn near impossible to win an argument with a stupid person.
β
β
Bill Murray
β
Gradually the awful truth dawns on you: that Santa Claus was just the tip of the iceberg - that your future will not be the rollercoaster ride you'd imagined, that the world occupied by your parents, the world of washing the dishes, going to the dentist, weekend trips to the DIY superstore to buy floor tiles, is actually largely what people mean when they speak of 'life'.
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
Sometimes a man doesn't want to be strong. Sometimes a man just wants to be human.
β
β
Victoria Christopher Murray (Never Say Never)
β
The more relaxed you are, the better you are at everything: the better you are with your loved ones, the better you are with your enemies, the better you are at your job, the better you are with yourself.
β
β
Bill Murray
β
Ignoring is what you are supposed to do with bullies, so they get bored and leave you alone. But the problem in school is that they don't get bored, because whatever else there is to do is more boring still.
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
A robber who justified his theft by saying that he really helped his victims, by his spending giving a boost to retail trade, would find few converts; but when this theory is clothed in Keynesian equations and impressive references to the βmultiplier effect,β it unfortunately carries more conviction.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard (Anatomy of the State)
β
If somebody has the competency to do something, and the desire to do something, then nothing about their race, sex or sexual orientation should hold them back. But minimizing difference is not the same as pretending difference does not exist. To assume that sex, sexuality and skin colour mean nothing would be ridiculous. But to assume that they mean everything will be fatal.
β
β
Douglas Murray (The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity)
β
In not a single one of these little campaigns was I victorious. In other words, in each case, I personally failed, but I have lived to see the thesis upon which I was operating vindicated. And what I very often say is that Iβve lived to see my lost causes found.
β
β
Pauli Murray
β
Capitalism is the fullest expression of anarchism, and anarchism is the fullest expression of capitalism. Not only are they compatible, but you can't really have one without the other. True anarchism will be capitalism, and true capitalism will be anarchism
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
The achievement of maturity, psychologically speaking, might be said to be the realization and acceptance that we simply cannot live independently from the world, and so we must live within it, with whatever compromises that might entail.
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
A writer is a dangerous friend. Everything you say, all of your life and experience, is fodder for our writing. We mean you no harm, but what you know and what youβve done is unavoidably fascinating to us. Being friends with a writer is a bit like trying to keep a bear as a pet. Theyβre wonderful, friendly creatures, but they play rough and they donβt know their own strength or remember that they have claws. Choose the stories you tell to your writer friends carefully.
β
β
Randy Murray
β
The highest glory of the creature is in being only a vessel, to receive and enjoy and show forth the glory of God. It can do this only as it is willing to be nothing in itself, that God may be all. Water always fills first the lowest places. The lower, the emptier a man lies before God, the speedier and the fuller will be the inflow of the diving glory.
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
Today the network of relationships linking the human race to itself and to the rest of the biosphere is so complex that all aspects affect all others to an extraordinary degree. Someone should be studying the whole system, however crudely that has to be done, because no gluing together of partial studies of a complex nonlinear system can give a good idea of the behavior of the whole.
β
β
Murray Gell-Mann
β
Men sometimes speak as if humility and meekness would rob us of what is noble and bold and manlike. O that all would believe that this is the nobility of the kingdom of heaven, that this is the royal spirit that the King of heaven displayed, that this is Godlike, to humble oneself, to become the servant of all!
β
β
Andrew Murray (Humility: The Journey Toward Holiness)
β
I'll tell you what you did with Atheists for about 1500 years. You outlawed them from the universities or any teaching careers, besmirched their reputations, banned or burned their books or their writings of any kind, drove them into exile, humiliated them, seized their properties, arrested them for blasphemy. You dehumanised them with beatings and exquisite torture, gouged out their eyes, slit their tongues, stretched, crushed, or broke their limbs, tore off their breasts if they were women, crushed their scrotums if they were men, imprisoned them, stabbed them, disembowelled them, hanged them, burnt them alive.
And you have nerve enough to complain to me that I laugh at you.
β
β
Madalyn Murray O'Hair
β
Humanity has passed through a long history of one-sidedness and of a social condition that has always contained the potential of destruction, despite its creative achievements in technology. The great project of our time must be to open the other eye: to see all-sidedly and wholly, to heal and transcend the cleavage between humanity and nature that came with early wisdom.
β
β
Murray Bookchin
β
Maybe instead of strings it's stories things are made of, an infinite number of tiny vibrating stories; once upon a time they all were part of one big giant superstory, except it got broken up into a jillion different pieces, that's why no story on its own makes any sense, and so what you have to do in a life is try and weave it back together, my story into your story, our stories into all the other people's we know, until you've got something that to God or whoever might look like a letter, or even a whole word....
β
β
Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)
β
It is curious that people tend to regard government as a quasi-divine, selfless, Santa Claus organization. Government was constructed neither for ability nor for the exercise of loving care; government was built for the use of force and for necessarily demagogic appeals for votes. If individuals do not know their own interests in many cases, they are free to turn to private experts for guidance. It is absurd to say that they will be served better by a coercive, demagogic apparatus.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard (Power and Market: Government and the Economy)
β
The most sanctified figure in American historiography is, by no accident, the Great Saint of centralizing "democracy" and the strong unitary nation-state: Abraham Lincoln. And so didn't Lincoln use force and violence, and on a massive scale, on behalf of the mystique of the sacred "Union," to prevent the South from seceding? Indeed he did, and on the foundation of mass murder and oppression, Lincoln crushed the South and outlawed the very notion of secession (based on the highly plausible ground that since the separate states voluntarily entered the Union they should be allowed to leave). But not only that: for Lincoln created the monstrous unitary nation-state from which individual and local liberties have never recovered.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
What compels me to fight this society is, of course, outrage over injustice, a love of freedom, and a feeling of responsibility for perpetuating and enlarging the human spirit β its beauty, creativity, and latent capacity to improve the world. I do not care to come to terms with an irrational society that corrodes all that is valuable in humanity, that eats away at all that is beautiful and noble in the human experience.
β
β
Murray Bookchin
β
Itβs true: greed has had a very bad press. I frankly donβt see anything wrong with greed. I think that the people who are always attacking greed would be more consistent with their position if they refused their next salary increase. I donβt see even the most Left-Wing scholar in this country scornfully burning his salary check. In other words, "greed" simply means that you are trying to relieve the nature given scarcity that man was born with. Greed will continue until the Garden of Eden arrives, when everything is superabundant, and we donβt have to worry about economics at all. We havenβt of course reached that point yet; we havenβt reached the point where everybody is burning his salary increases, or salary checks in general.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
β
Briefly stated, the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect is as follows. You open the newspaper to an article on some subject you know well. In Murray's case, physics. In mine, show business. You read the article and see the journalist has absolutely no understanding of either the facts or the issues. Often, the article is so wrong it actually presents the story backwardβreversing cause and effect. I call these the "wet streets cause rain" stories. Paper's full of them.
In any case, you read with exasperation or amusement the multiple errors in a story, and then turn the page to national or international affairs, and read as if the rest of the newspaper was somehow more accurate about Palestine than the baloney you just read. You turn the page, and forget what you know.
That is the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect. I'd point out it does not operate in other arenas of life. In ordinary life, if somebody consistently exaggerates or lies to you, you soon discount everything they say. In court, there is the legal doctrine of falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus, which means untruthful in one part, untruthful in all. But when it comes to the media, we believe against evidence that it is probably worth our time to read other parts of the paper. When, in fact, it almost certainly isn't. The only possible explanation for our behavior is amnesia.
β
β
Michael Crichton
β
Until one is committed there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initative or creation, there is one elementary truth...that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves. too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would otherwise never have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in ones's favor all manner of incidents and meetings and material assistance which no man would have believed would have come his way.
Whatever you think you can do or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, grace, and power in it.
β
β
W.H. Murray
β
The Lord gave the wonderful promise of the free use of His Name with the Father in conjunction with doing His works. The disciple who lives only for Jesus' work and Kingdom, for His will and honor, will be given the power to appropriate the promise. Anyone grasping the promise only when he wants something very special for himself will be disappointed, because he is making Jesus the servant of his own comfort. But whoever wants to pray the effective prayer of faith because he needs it for the work of the Master will learn it, because he has made himself the servant of his Lord's interests.
β
β
Andrew Murray (With Christ in the School of Prayer (Christian Classics))
β
Moreover, in the system of criminal punishment in the libertarian world, the emphasis would never be, as it is now, on "society's" jailing the criminal; the emphasis would necessarily be on compelling the criminal to make restitution to the victim of his crime. The present system, in which the victim is not recompensed but instead has to pay taxes to support the incarceration of his own attacker β would be evident nonsense in a world that focuses on the defense of property rights and therefore on the victim of crime.
β
β
Murray N. Rothbard
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Any attempt to solve the ecological crisis within a bourgeois framework must be dismissed as chimerical. Capitalism is inherently anti-ecological. Competition and accumulation constitute its very law of life, a law β¦ summarised in the phrase, βproduction for the sake of production.β Anything, however hallowed or rare, βhas its priceβ and is fair game for the marketplace. In a society of this kind, nature is necessarily treated as a mere resource to be plundered and exploited. The destruction of the natural world, far being the result of mere hubristic blunders, follows inexorably from the very logic of capitalist production.
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Murray Bookchin
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Unless we realize that the present market society, structured around the brutally competitive imperative of βgrow or die,β is a thoroughly impersonal, self-operating mechanism, we will falsely tend to blame technology as such or population growth as such for environmental problems. We will ignore their root causes, such as trade for profit, industrial expansion, and the identification of βprogressβ with corporate self-interest. In short, we will tend to focus on the symptoms of a grim social pathology rather than on the pathology itself, and our efforts will be directed toward limited goals whose attainment is more cosmetic than curative.
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Murray Bookchin
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We may test the hypothesis that the State is largely interested in protecting itself rather than its subjects by asking: which category of crimes does the State pursue and punish most intenselyβthose against private citizens or those against itself?
The gravest crimes in the Stateβs lexicon are almost invariably not invasions of private person or property, but dangers to its own contentment, for example, treason, desertion of a soldier to the enemy, failure to register for the draft, subversion and subversive conspiracy, assassination of rulers and such economic crimes against the State as counterfeiting its money or evasion of its income tax.
Or compare the degree of zeal devoted to pursuing the man who assaults a policeman, with the attention that the State pays to the assault of an ordinary citizen. Yet, curiously, the Stateβs openly assigned priority to its own defense against the public strikes few people as inconsistent with its presumed raison dβetre.
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Murray N. Rothbard (Anatomy of the State)
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He is thinking about asymmetry. This is a world, he is thinking, where you can lie in bed, listening to a song as you dream about someone you love, and your feelings and the music will resonate so powerfully and completely that it seems impossible that the beloved, whoever and wherever he or she might be, should not know, should not pick up this signal as it pulsates from your heart, as if you and the music and the love and the whole universe have merged into one force that can be chanelled out into the darkness to bring them this message. But, in actuality, not only will he or she not know, there is nothing to stop that other person from lying on his or her bed at the exact moment listening to the exact same song and thinking about someone else entirely-from aiming those identical feelings in some completely opposite direction, at some totally other person, who may in turn be lying in the dark thinking of another person still, a fourth, who is thinking of a fifth, and so on, and so on, so that rather than a universe of neatly reciprocating pairs, love and love-returned fluttering through space nicely and symmetrically like so many pairs of butterfly wings, instead we get chains of yearning, which sprawl and meander and culminate in an infinite number of dead ends.
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Paul Murray (Skippy Dies)