Posted on 01/03/2002 5:33:02 AM PST by stevio
I know this is pure vanity, but here it is.
I'm joining a new company and they have a "Get to know your fellow employee" kind of thing. They ask your name, marital status, favorite book (The Bible), movie (Road Warrior), music (Jazz), web site (Free Republic), etc..
My dilemma is I need a favorite quote. Some quotes are good for certain situations and some are not. As I respect and admire my Freeper family, I ask for your help.
P.S. When asked; "what you want your co-workers to know about you", I penned a very pro-Second Amendment statement.
(Grab them by the balls
And their hearts and minds will follow)
Courtesy of G. Gordon Liddy
~~ Ronald Reagan
"The Earth is the Cradle of the Mind, but you cannot stay in the cradle forever." -- Konstantin Tsiolkovsky
"Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing." -- Werner Von Braun
"Problems worthy of attack
Prove their worth by hitting back."--Piet Hein
"The Heights by great men reached and kept
Were not attained by sudden flight;
But they, while their companions slept,
Were toiling upward in the night."
--Wordsworth (I think)
"The quest of the Inner Ring will break your hearts unless you break it. But if you break it, a surprising result will follow. If in your working hours you make the work your end, you will presently find yourself all unawares inside the only circle in your profession that really matters. You will be one of the sound craftsmen, and other sound craftsmen will know it.
"This group of craftsmen will by no means coincide with the Inner Ring or the Important People or the People in the Know. It will not shape that professional policy or work up that professional influence which fights for the profession as a whole against the public: nor will it lead to those periodic scandals and crises which the Inner Ring produces. But it will do those things which that profession exists to do and will in the long run be responsible for all the respect which that profession in fact enjoys and which the speeches and advertisements cannot maintain."
--C.S. LEWIS
Oration at University of London, 1944
THE INNER RING
"All things, by immortal power,
Near or far, hiddenly to each other linked are;
That thou canst not touch a flower
Without troubling a star."
--Francis Thompson, The Mistress of Vision
--Boris
Dean Vernon Wormer
"What do you use, a dipstick?"
-Roy Scheider / Blue Thunder on checking his sanity with a stopwatch.
- Lord Humungous
"The menu is not the meal." - Watts
"What I say is more than, and less than, what you hear" - my Semantics 101 professor (I'm not sure where he got it from)
You will always be suprised how much can get accompolished when no one cares who gets the credit.
Delta 21
"One day it will have to be officially admitted that what we have christened reality is an even greater illusion than the world of dreams." ~Salvador Dali
"Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain."
--Freiderich von Schiller, The Maid of Orleans
My guess is that you just reduced the traffic past your office or cube by 95%. Especially if you are deemed to be having a bad day.
No joking, this is a true assertion. I have an FN FAL as a desktop wallpaper on my computer (I'm a software developer). Haven't seen hide nor hair of any "structural support specialists" since I put it up. Now I can get work done
More Aahnold sounds
"I think that Clueless was very deep. I think it was deep in the way that it was very light. I think lightness has to come from a very deep place if it is true lightness." Alicia Silverstone
I don't know about you, but I don't trust a government that doesn't want me to be euphoric." Woody Harrelson
"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle." Edmund Burke, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents
History is made up of juggernauts, revolting to human feeling in their blindness, supremely humorous in their stupidity. Lewis Namier, England in the Age of the American Revolution
An armed society is a polite society" Robert A. Heinlein, Beyond This Horizon
One of the great things about the U.S. Constitution is that it outlines a republic limited in scope and able to operate in spite of damnable officials and a chowderhead electorate as 222 years of American history prove. P.J. ORourke, Eat the Rich
You can break a mans skull. You can arrest him. You can throw him into a dungeon but how do you control what's up here? How do you fight an idea? Sextus, Ben-Hur
Any age that does not exalt courage will be confounded by the Alamo, and baffled by the men who stayed in it. Any age that fears war more than servitude, or death more than honor, must denigrate the Alamo. Ages that do not honor the concept of liberty or death will fight no Alamos. Ages that do not cling to the great values of love, honor, courage, sacrifice, the soldier values, will not only fail to remember the Alamo, they may not long endure. T. R. Fehrenbach, Texas historian.
"Journalism is popular, but it is popular mainly as fiction. Life is one world, and life seen in the newspapers is another." - G. K. Chesterton
Book lovers are thought by unbookish people to be gentle and unworldly, and perhaps a few of them are so. But there are others who will lie and scheme and steal to get books as wildly and unconscionably as the dope-taker in pursuit of his drug. They may not want the books to read immediately, or at all; they want them to possess, to range on their shelves, to have at command. They want books as a Turk is thought to want concubines -- not to be hastily deflowered, but to be kept at their master's call, and enjoyed more often in thought than in reality. Robertson Davies (b.1913), Tempest-Tost, 1951
A room without books is like a body without a soul. Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC)
This novel is not to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force. Dorothy Parker (1893-1967) In a book review, Quoted in The Algonquin Wits, 1968, Edited by Robert E. Drennan
...it is not through sin that he opposes God. The Devil's strategy for our times is to make trivial human existence and to isolate us from one another while creating the delusion that the reasons are time pressures, work demands, or economic anxieties. C.S. Lewis (1898-1963)
Tolerance is an admirable intellectual gift; but it is of little worth in politics. Politics is a war of causes; a joust of principles. Government is too serious a matter to admit of meaningless courtesies. Woodrow Wilson
Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum. Vegetius
Oderint dum metuant the Emperor Tiberius
Damn me if with a heavier weapon I do not tickle your asss head Lord Macdonald to James Boswell, 27 November, 1785
"It does not matter how small the sins are provided that their cumulative effect is to edge the man away from the Light and out into the Nothing. Murder is no better than cards if cards can do the trick. Indeed the safest road to Hell is the gradual one - the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts." C. S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters
With regard to Pizza Hut's delivery to the ISS: "The pizza rode to the station with space tourist Dennis Tito, inspiring the editors of the NASA Watch website (www.nasawatch.com) to muse: "What a success story: a self-made American multimillionaire, born to a working class family, pays $20 million to fly on a Russian spacecraft and ends up as a pizza delivery boy."
"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves money from the public treasure. From that moment on the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most money from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world's great civilizations has been two hundred years. These nations have progressed through the following sequence: from bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to selfishness, from selfishness to complacency from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency, from dependency back to bondage." -- Alexander Tyler
"To educate a man in mind, and not in morals, is to educate a menace to society" ~~Teddy Roosevelt~~
"I will be leaving soon, for the Planet Mongo, in a rocket-ship, of my own design." -- DOCTOR ZARKHOV
"She had a face of such immovable stupidity that it amounted to a sort of strange beauty." -- Malcolm Muggeridge, on Rosa Luxemburg
"The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion" - Edmund Burke
"The true danger is when liberty is nibbled away, for expedience, and by parts." - Edmund Burke, letter, April 3, 1777, to the Sheriffs of Bristol
"Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could only do a little." - EDMUND BURKE
Q: "What has recording alone taught you?"
Paul McCartney: "That to make your own decisions about what you do is easy, and playing with yourself is very difficult but satisfying."
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