Anita Thornton > Anita's Quotes

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  • #1
    Alexis de Tocqueville
    “Democracy extends the sphere of individual freedom, socialism restricts it. Democracy attaches all possible value to each man; socialism makes each man a mere agent, a mere number. Democracy and socialism have nothing in common but one word: equality. But notice the difference: while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude.”
    Alexis de Tocqueville

  • #2
    Alexis de Tocqueville
    “When the taste for physical gratifications among them has grown more rapidly than their education . . . the time will come when men are carried away and lose all self-restraint . . . . It is not necessary to do violence to such a people in order to strip them of the rights they enjoy; they themselves willingly loosen their hold. . . . they neglect their chief business which is to remain their own masters.”
    Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America: Volume 2

  • #4
    Alexis de Tocqueville
    “Men cannot abandon their religious faith without a kind of aberration of intellect and a sort of violent distortion of their true nature; they are invincibly brought back to more pious sentiments. Unbelief is an accident, and faith is the only permanent state of mankind.”
    Alexis de Tocqueville

  • #5
    Criss Jami
    “Today's zealots are mostly those pretending to be anti-religious.”
    Criss Jami, Healology

  • #6
    E. Nesbit
    “Therefore I would plead with all those who have to do with children to resist and to denounce uglification wherever they may meet with it, and to remember that there is knowledge which goes hand in hand with beauty. To show a child beautiful things, and to answer as well all the questions he will ask about them, to charm and thrill his imagination with pictures and statues and models of the wonders of the world, to familiarise the child with beauty, so that he knows ugliness when he meets it, and hates it for the outrage it is to the beauty he has known and loved ever since he was very little—this is worth doing. If we would make beauty the dear rule of a man's life, and ugliness the hated exception, we should make beauty as familiar to the child as the air he breathes, and if we associate knowledge with beauty the child will love them both.”
    E. Nesbit, Wings and the Child or, the Building of Magic Cities

  • #7
    Wendell Berry
    “We live the given life, and not the planned.
    - 1994 III”
    Wendell Berry, This Day: Collected & New Sabbath Poems



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