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aprilie 10, 2026
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"The more rules you impose on a creative intelligence, of course, the fewer problems it can solve."
"Other people say that their parents are the same way whenever thereâs bad news from whatever patch of dirt they came from, but being common still doesnât mean it makes any sense. After all, it was twenty years ago, and if the adults were going to get so upset about having everything smashed up, they shouldnât have had a war or tolerated AIDS for so long that they gave it the chance to turn into mutAIDS, or allowed the climate disequilibration to get so far out of hand. Honestly, they remind me of the three-year-olds in the nursery, smashing things to bits and then crying because theyâre broken. I certainly hope Iâm not that kind of a moron when Iâm that old."
"Mother had been talking in that bizarre way a lot lately; it sounded like the Olsen novels, âback when men were full of manliness, fields were full of soybeans, small towns were full of hicks, and life was full of deeply significant aching empty meaningless existential nothingness,â as Tom liked to put it."
"You thought you could treat me the way you did everybody else and beat me up for being smarter than you. Because youâve always been the big king of the class, havenât you, Your Majesty? Well, youâre not anymore. You were never anything but the plain old class bully, and now youâre the ex-bully. And the only reason people are bullies is because theyâre stupid."
"Papa always says thereâs room for everyone, but some people certainly take theirs up without making it interesting."
"He wasnât as dumb as I thought, I realizedâjust not interested in the same things I was."
"Writing about yourself is addictive. I hope all you kids noticed that. If you feel like autobiography, try heroin. Lots safer and easier to controlâŚ"
"Finally I asked, âUm, Tomâare the uh, Alien Artifacts really art, or did you just say that to hassle Mother?â âThey have to be art. Remember the First Law of Anthropology: if theyâre doing something you donât understand, itâs either an isolated lunatic, a religious ritual, or art.â"
"Brains donât exactly run in that familyâthey sort of dribble slowly away."
"You canât really win an argument against somebodyâs feeling that something is just plain wrong."
"âSee, if youâre on top, itâs easy to think that whatâs good for you is whatâs good for the organization. In the short run it might even beâa company does better if it gets more work for less wages paid, or if it spends less on health and safety. âIn the longer run, though, workers do the work. Management doesnât. If workers are sick, hurt, pissed off, or broke, they donât work as well.â As Papaâs daughter, Iâm a pretty good debater myself, and cross ex is one of my strong points. âBut then thereâs no problem. Doesnât the company have an interest in keeping the workers working?â âSureâbut for as little as possible. Suppose a manager got us all to work two extra hours per day for half pay. Who would get the added profit?" âNAC,â I admitted. âWell, thatâs what Iâm trying to say. Management works for the employer, and at least in the short run your employerâs interests are exactly opposite yours. No matter how nice a guy your manager is, he still gets paid to be your enemy. âBut thatâs not the whole story. Otherwise I suppose they just make slaves of us or weâd kill them. The fact is, they donât dare winâbecause if they destroy the worker, who will make the product or buy it? The union limits how much management can win. So in a sense the union looks after the long run. Or justice, which might be the same thing.â"
"I burst into tears. Itâs the best defense ever found against well-meaning people who are telling you something stupid âfor your own good.â"
"âI never get into arguments between people of opposite gender,â he said. âPart of why Iâm still healthy and vigorous at my age.â"
"When all else fails, admit youâre an idiot."
"People who put principles before people are people who hate people. They wonât much care about how well it works, just about how right it isâŚthey may even like it better if it inflicts enough pain."
"Itâs usually just ambition that puts them into itâand like any group of people selected for ambition and nothing else, they turn out to be a pretty bad lot. Like mandarins in China, colonial administrators in the British Empire, lawyers in old North America, or the reconstruction agencies after the Slaughterâindividually there are decent people who do some good, but as a class theyâre amoral, vicious leeches with a good cover story."
"The way you can tell thereâs democracy going on is that nothing gets done."
"How he must have been astonished to see people behaving decently when what they believed was absolute anathema to him."
"Thereâs just no fight left in her; thatâs what happens when you really believe in something, and find out that it was never true."
"Justice has a way of not arriving where and when you wish it."
"I know I pretend to be the apolitical businessman a lot, but the reality is that like anybody whoâs interested in getting people together with the things they need and want, I have an agenda. I want people to get what they want, and I want them ideally to get it from me, but most of all I want them to be free to want it and to make offers to get it. Those poor stupid fanatics have been sold on the idea that what they want is the ability to give themselves little priggish congratulations over having done the right thing. Theyâd rather be right than happy. More importantly, theyâd rather that I be right than happy and theyâre not about to leave the choice up to me. I say, let âem die, and I hope itâs slow and it hurts."
"After a long interval, Margaret said, âSorry. Effects of upbringing.â âWe none of us escape them,â I said."
"Heâs stunned numb when she takes his hand and says, âLetâs give it a try. Iâve been thinking maybe I donât bend enough or try to see anyone elseâs point of view.â"
"Work does not cause money; getting paid causes money."
"Philosophic clarity has been a key to his life in business, and he doesnât fall for facile or self-flattering descriptionsânot even, usually, for the self-flattery of thinking he is immune to self-flattery."
"Donât get mad, and donât waste time getting even. Get ahead."
"Yeats fussed about things falling apart and the center not being able to hold. What really happened was that the center ceased to exist altogether."
"Most people think the world is out to get them, because they have all the evidence they needâthey donât get enough of what they want. But that doesnât make it so."
"Itâs a game against the clock, but what isnât?"
"It is characteristic of information that it can be stolen an all but unlimited number of times."
"Itâs a long step down the road to paranoia, but itâs been a proverb for a hundred years that being paranoid does not mean that they arenât out to get you."
"Too bad about all those people, but as Hassan says, compassion speaks well of its holder but does little for its recipient."
"The only thing Carla has ever learned to like about dealing with power is how easy it is to embarrass people who have it."
"Experimentally she thinks about dumping toxic waste in pristine wilderness and killing the last great apes on earth with a club. She still finds both those thoughts disgusting. This is a relief; it seems to her that sheâs just selfish, not evil. She was always taught theyâre the same thing. She hopes she remembers, when she gets out of all this, that theyâre not."
"Once Iâm dead, I can afford to be patient."
"Once you understand what money can do it gets harder to live without it."
"Are you up to faking being sincere underneath faking being fake?"
"âJesse, news for the masses, whether itâs XV or all the way back to the old newspapers, is entertainment. People donât follow the news to stay informed, no matter what they tell you in school, they watch or experience to be entertained. If it were like they teach in school, theyâd put the congressional budget, scientific research, and bios of every important bureaucrat in the opening slot, and theyâd do special editions for the Nobel Prizes and the World Health Organizationâs annual report. Thatâs not what itâs about. They cover crime, sports, famous people having sex, funny animal stories, what itâs like to stay in an expensive hotel in a resort area. Because thatâs whatâs interesting and fun and entertaining. âIt wouldnât matter so much except that peopleâs lives are so dull they believe their entertainmentâand for a hundred years weâve been telling them that the world is very dangerous, that there are violent thugs everywhere, war is constantly imminent, sex is their most important need, all that crap. âWell shit, Jesse, if you were a shrink and you had a patient who only wanted to talk about violence, extravagance, cruelty, and his sexual fantasiesâwhat would you suggest? More of the same?â Jesseâs a bit startled, but he asks, âWhatever happened to freedom of the press?â She snorts, a funny, ugly noise. Then she says, âSorry, Jesse, but what does that have to do with the present day? You think the broadcast nets are like Ben Franklin, turning out little pamphlets for a few to read and most to ignore? Look, a few huge private corporations are making all their money by spreading fear, hate, depression, and an exploitive attitude. Justice would demand public hangings.â"
"He wonders if there is some requirement that you have to be an idiot to be a politician."
"Heâs always known the real way to money is not through production but through control; âThe hotel owner gets rich owning the keys, the maids stay poor keeping the toilets clean,â as one of his biz profs back at Madison used to say."
"One reason nature pleases us is its endless use of a few simple principles: the cube-square law; fractals; spirals; the way that waves, wheels, trig functions, and harmonic oscillators are alike; the importance of ratios between small primes; bilateral symmetry; Fibonacci series, golden sections, quantization, strange attractors, path-dependency, all the things that show up in places where you donât expect them...these rules work with and against each other ceaselessly at all levels, so that out of their intrinsic simplicity comes the rich complexity of the world around us. That tensionâbetween the simple rules that describe the world and the complex world we seeâis itself both simple in execution and immensely complex in effect. Thus exactly the levels, mixtures, and relations of complexity that seem to be hardwired into the pleasure centers of the human brainâor are they, perhaps, intrinsic to intelligence and perception, pleasant to anything that can see, think, create?âare the ones found in the world around us."
"The beautiful earth is being crapped up by an excess of peopleâlovely as individuals, towns, and cultures, but hideous in such profusion."
"The drive to see whatâs over the next hill is in part the fear that one may never know, that if one doesnât go over the hill today, one may never get farther than the village graveyard."
"With diligent effort he has established that there is no statistical basis for Murphyâs Law. He has also established that he believes in it anyway."
"Finally she resorts to the oldest tactic of all, telling the truth."
"It's a good idea for diplomats to keep their word in small matters. It makes the later complete betrayals more of a surprise."
"Almost every culture in the Thousand Cultures had some wisdom literature, and much of it was the same between any two cultures. . . . Cultures tend to be alike in much of what they think are the basic virtues, but one of the ones they are most alike in, though it rarely appears in their book of wisdom, is: Distrust strangers, fear foreigners, dread novelty."
"And just like this, all of a sudden, your people and mine will begin to talk?" "It only looks sudden from some places. Running off a cliff is sudden if you don't know it's there, even if you have been running toward it for days." "That's not a reassuring metaphor." "It isn't meant to be."
"Shan had always said that in any multiple choice about human motivation, the real answer was always "all of the above.""
"If you want to learn a culture, you have to learn how to like what it likes, rather than go looking for something that you like."