First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"That was somewhere between a guess and a metaphor, but it helped her to think about it."
"The woman herself looked down at hem from where she was etched in stone. It was probably just his imagination, but she seemed amused. Like now that she was dead and not actually responsible for fixing any of the vast and secret shit show that was human history, she finally got the joke."
"It was a day with a lot of ways to die packed in it."
"âPeople trust what they already know. Having a new high consul would be difficult under any circumstances, but it would be less difficult if there were a story with it. A succession. I want to train you to be that, ifâGod forbidâsomething happened to me.â âBut why should I be good at it just because you were?â Teresa said. âThereâs no reason to think that. Thatâs dumb.â âIt is,â her father said. âBut itâs a mistake people have made all through history.â"
"âI feel stupid,â she said. âI really thought we were a scientific mission.â âArenât we?â She pointed one thumb toward the monitor. âThatâs not science. âLight shit on fire and see what happensâ isnât science. This is throwing dynamite into a pond to see if any fish float to the top.â âSoâŚnatural philosophy?â âMilitary bullshit. Solving every problem by trying to blow it up.â"
"Duarte was a thoughtful, educated, civilized man and a murderer. He was charming and funny and a little melancholy and, as far as Holden could tell, completely unaware of his own monstrous ambition. Like a religious fanatic, the man really believed that everything heâd done was justified by his goal in doing it."
"Itâd be a better world if there was always at least one right answer instead of a basket of fucked."
"The hardest thing was to trust his own people to do their jobs well, but it was what he had to do. He wondered if the high consul suffered the same thingâknowing that all the critical action would be taken by others who were guided by his orders, but in conditions he could only guess at, and in places where his intervention, even if it were possible, could only muddy the waters. It was a subtle and terrible insight. The powerlessness of control."
"âYouâre not picking a fight with the things that made the protomolecule. Youâre picking a fight with whatever killed them. Orders of magnitude above the things that were orders of magnitude above us. Youâve got to know this is going to escalate if we keep using these technologies.â âWe were always going to keep using these technologies. That was inevitable the moment we opened the gates,â Duarte said. âIf youâve studied any history at all, you know that. Never in human history have we discovered something useful and then chosen not to use it.â"
"In a fight like this, unless youâre willing to lose everything to win, you lose it all by losing."
"Naomi shook her head once, tightly, and held on to her anger like it was a vaccine against something worse."
"âThe important thing is that we get good data. One person. Lots of people. All the same. But bad experimental design? Thatâs what sin really is,â CortĂĄzar slurred. âThatâs not me either. Nature eats babies all the time.â"
"âEasy to make rules,â Emma said. âEasy to make systems with a perfect logic and rigor. All you need to do is leave out the mercy, yeah? Then when you put people into it and they get chewed to nothing, itâs the personâs fault. Not the rules. Everything we do thatâs worth shit, weâve done with people. Flawed, stupid, lying, rules-breaking people. Laconians making the same mistake as ever. Our rules are good, and theyâd work perfectly if it were only a different species.â âYou sound like someone I know,â Naomi said. âIâll die for that,â Emma said. âIâll die so that people can be fuckups and still find mercy.â"
"The bar was worse than shitty. Shitty had character. The place was generic. Fake stone meant to echo a tunnel on Ceres or Pallas marked with graffiti to make it look edgy until you noticed that the pattern of it repeated every couple meters. The appearance of counterculture as churned out by a corporate designer."
"âSo why do you hate us? If you donât mind my asking.â âYou personally? I donât. But this conquistador bullshit? Itâs true I donât think much of it.â Singh leaned back in his chair, cocked his head. âThis is all a conversation about politics for you, then? It matters to you that much whose vision guides the government, no matter what that vision is?â âNot that academic,â Holden said. âIâve spent a lot of years trying to get people to get along without anyoneâs boot being on anyoneâs neck. Your plan A is what Iâve spent a lifetime pushing against.â âDo you really think weâre so bad? Look at what weâve done, how weâve done it. We havenât opened fire on a single ship that didnât attack us first. In all of history, when has a conqueror been able to say that? We have embraced local rule. Any of the colony worlds that submits can make their own local government, keep their own local customsââ âUnless they conflict with your rules.â âOf course.â Holden sipped his coffee. âThatâs the thing. The people youâre controlling donât have a voice in how you control them. As long as everyoneâs on the same page, things may be great, but when thereâs a question, you win. Right?â âThere has to be a way to come to a final decision.â âNo, there doesnât. Every time someone starts talking about final anythings in politics, that means the atrocities are warming up. Humanity has done amazing things by just muddling through, arguing and complaining and fighting and negotiating. Itâs messy and undignified, but itâs when weâre at our best, because everyone gets to have a voice in it. Even if everyone else is trying to shout it down. Whenever thereâs just one voice that matters, something terrible comes out of it.â"
"An invisible line in space, unmarked by anything more than what people believed about it. And that was enough."
"âAh! I see what youâre doing,â Alex said. âYouâre trying to make flying out to Charon and dodging radiation flares sound like a good idea. Itâs that whole âIâll put a shitty idea next to a really shitty idea so the first one looks shiny by comparisonâ thing.â"
"âYou think he may be a triple agent?â âIt wouldnât be the first time something like that had happened. The one thing you know about someone whoâs willing to compromise his allies is that heâs willing to compromise his allies.â"
"âItâs the reward of old age,â Avasarala said. âYou live long enough, and you can watch everything you worked for become irrelevant.â âYouâre not selling it,â Drummer said. âFuck you, then. Die young. See if I care.â"
"Everything changed, and it went right on changing. A terrible thought when things were good, a comforting one now. Whatever happened, she could be certain that things wouldnât stay the way they were now. And if she stayed smart and clever and lucky, sheâd be able to affect how the next change came. Or take advantage of it."
"Pacifism only works when your enemy has a conscience."
"It was like a Chihuahua threatening an office building."
"Thatâs the thing about autocracy. It looks pretty decent while it still looks pretty decent. Survivable, anyway. And it keeps looking like that right up until it doesnât. Thatâs how you find out itâs too late."
"âI donât know what the win look like.â âWell, for me, it looks like dying with the knowledge that humanityâs a little bit better off than it would have been if Iâd never been born. A little freer. A little kinder. A little smarter. That the bullies and bastards and sadists got their teeth into a few less people because of me. Thatâs got to be enough.â"
"But all the stories about the devil making a deal and then cheating missed the point. The real horror was that once the bargain was struck, the devil didnât cheat. He gave you exactly and explicitly all that had been promised. And the price was your soul."
"âHow to achieve a more robust homeostasis. Just because itâs difficult to do doesnât make the principal science unsolvable.â âSo not unnatural at all,â Holden said, tipping a little more wine from the bottle into the doctorâs glass. âMeaningless term,â CortĂĄzar said. âHumans arose inside nature. Weâre natural. Everything we do is natural. The whole idea that we are different in category is either sentimental or religious. Irrelevant from a scientific perspective.â âSo if we get to a place that we can all live forever, thatâs not unnatural? Holden sounded genuinely curious. CortĂĄzar leaned in toward the prisoner, gesturing with his left hand while he swirled his glass in his right. âThe only limits on us are what we can do. Itâs perfectly natural to seek personal benefit. Itâs perfectly natural to give advantages to your own offspring and withhold them from others. Itâs perfectly natural to kill your enemies. Thatâs not even outlier behavior. Thatâs all in the middle of the bell curve all the time.â"
"âSorry,â Bobby saidâŚâIâm pissed at you right now and itâs not your fault.â âWhat can I stop not doinâ so it ainât my fault anymore?â"
"What youâre really doing is trying to win back what youâve lost by going all in. Itâs shitty poker, and even worse as a battle strategy."
"âWeâre all here for our own reasons,â Naomi said. âWhat they are isnât as important as the fact that we came.â âTrue,â Emma said. Naomi laughed, and it was a hard, bitter sound. âAnyway, I spent too much time already with people telling me theyâd shoot me if I didnât do what they said. That tankâs empty for this lifetime.â âMay it never refill,â Emma said."
"Distributed responsibility is the problem. One person gives the order, another carries it out. One can say they didnât pull the trigger, the other that they were just doing what they were told, and everyone lets themselves off the hook."
"âWhen we get out,â she said. âNot if. When. Weâre going to need a plan. If every ship just bolts off on its own, weâll lose contact. They shouldnât know where we went, but we should. At the very least, we should have a record of who went where. This every-man-for-himself-and-God-against-all shitâs romantic, but we have to plan for something past just this.â"
"âWeâll get him,â Alex said. âWeâll always get him back.â âSure we will. Until the time we donât,â she said. âItâs like this for everyone. Thereâs always going to be a last time, eventually.â"
"âThe high consul is a very wise, very thoughtful man,â he said. âI have perfect faith thatââ âNo. Stop. âPerfect faithâ really tells me everything I need to know,â Holden said. âYou think this is a gentle, bloodless conquest, donât you?â âIt is, to the degree that you allow it to be.â âI was there for the war Duarte started to cover his tracks. I was there for the starving years afterward. Your empireâs hands look a lot cleaner when you get to dictate where history begins and what parts of it donât count.â"
"Nothing degraded morale like the sense that the potential for excellence was being denied."
"The universe owed her a little slice of luck like that."
"Every revolution needed its mad bombers, apparently."
"ââThe predictable limits of a conceptual framework,ââ Bobbie said. A phrase from her classroom on Olympus Mons. âItâs always where to hit the enemy. Whoever they turn out to be. When I learned how to do things like this, we were thinking about Earthers and pirates.â Katria laughed. âWhen I taught myself how to do this, I was thinking of people like you. Strange how the wheel turns.â"
"Her heart was pounding. Her muscles ached. Sheâd just killed two of the enemy. There would always be a little somethingâthat tug on her humanity that came from doing violence. There was a satisfaction too. It didnât mean she was a good woman or a bad one. It meant she was a Marine."
"âAll right,â Bobbie said. âNew orders. Donât die until I say so.â"
"He lifted the gun. âWait!â Singh said. âWait. Do you believe all that? About what killing me is supposed to achieve?â âI am an officer of the Laconian Empire, Governor Singh. I believe what Iâm told to believe.â"
"The fight for survival made everything either resilient or forgotten."
"âThe founding impulse of Freehold is sticking it to the government.â âLoses some of its shine after you get elected.â"
"The people who have power over you are weak too. They shit and bleed and worry that their children donât love them anymore. Theyâre embarrassed by the stupid things they did when they were young that everyone else has forgotten. And so theyâre vulnerable. We all define ourselves by the people around us, because thatâs the kind of monkey we are. We canât transcend it. So when they watch you, they hand you the power to change what they are too."
"The universe wasnât just stranger than you knew, it was stranger than you could know."
"There had to have been a moment when this had become the new normal."
"Alex worried about that. Jillian was mean as a snake. When heâd told Bobbie that, sheâd responded, I just make sure she never runs out of mice. He still didnât know quite what that meant."
"âPrimary mission is fucked, but secondary is a win.â âA moral victory, I guess,â Bobbie sighed. âYou know who talks about moral victories?â Jillian asked as she floated out of the room. âThe team that lost.â"
"Routine was what kept the darkness at bay, when anything did."
"Growing older was a falling away of everything that didnât matter. And a deepening appreciation of all the parts that were important enough to stay."
"This was the problem with thousand-year Reichs. They came and they went like fireflies."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.