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  • #1
    Harlan Ellison
    “You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. No one is entitled to be ignorant.”
    Harlan Ellison

  • #2
    Harlan Ellison
    “Why let them order you about? Why let them tell you to hurry and scurry like ants or maggots? Take your time! Saunter a while! Enjoy the sunshine, enjoy the breeze, let life carry you at your own pace! Don't be slaves of time, it's a helluva way to die, slowly, by degrees...down with the Ticktockman!”
    Harlan Ellison, "Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman

  • #3
    Walter Lord
    “What troubled people especially was not just the tragedy—or even its needlessness—but the element of fate in it all. If the Titanic had heeded any of the six ice messages on Sunday … if ice conditions had been normal … if the night had been rough or moonlit … if she had seen the berg 15 seconds sooner—or 15 seconds later … if she had hit the ice any other way … if her watertight bulkheads had been one deck higher … if she had carried enough boats … if the Californian had only come. Had any one of these “ifs” turned out right, every life might have been saved. But they all went against her—a classic Greek tragedy.”
    Walter Lord, A Night to Remember

  • #4
    Osamu Dazai
    “Now I have neither happiness nor unhappiness.

    Everything passes.

    That is the one and only thing that I have thought resembled a truth in the society of human beings where I have dwelled up to now as in a burning hell.

    Everything passes.”
    Osamu Dazai, No Longer Human

  • #5
    Jeff Vandermeer
    “Nothing that lived and breathed was truly objective—even in a vacuum, even if all that possessed the brain was a self-immolating desire for the truth.”
    Jeff VanderMeer, Annihilation

  • #6
    Homer
    “Few sons are like their fathers--most are worse, few better.”
    Homer, The Odyssey

  • #7
    Homer
    “Of all creatures that breathe and move upon the earth, nothing is bred that is weaker than man.”
    Homer, The Odyssey

  • #8
    Arthur C. Clarke
    “It was the mark of a barbarian to destroy something one could not understand.”
    Arthur C. Clarke, 2001: A Space Odyssey

  • #9
    Osamu Dazai
    “I am convinced that human life is filled with many pure, happy, serene examples of insincerity, truly splendid of their kind-of people deceiving one another without (strangely enough) any wounds being inflicted, of people who seem unaware even that they are deceiving one another.”
    Osamu Dazai, No Longer Human



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