Maxwell Despard > Maxwell's Quotes

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  • #1
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    “The human race is a monotonous affair. Most people spend the greatest part of their time working in order to live, and what little freedom remains so fills them with fear that they seek out any and every means to be rid of it.”
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther

  • #2
    Bob Black
    “The real enemy" is the totality of physical and mental constraints by which capital, or class society, or statism, or the society of the spectacle expropriates everyday life, the time of our lives. The real enemy is not an object apart from life. It is the organization of life by powers detached from it and turned against it. The apparatus, not its personnel, is the real enemy. But it is by and through the apparatchiks and everyone else participating in the system that domination and deception are made manifest. The totality is the organization of all against each and each against all. It includes all the policemen, all the social workers, all the office workers, all the nuns, all the op-ed columnists, all the drug kingpins from Medellin to Upjohn, all the syndicalists and all the situationists.”
    Bob Black, The Abolition of Work and Other Essays

  • #3
    Robert A. Heinlein
    “A poet who reads his verse in public may have other nasty habits.”
    Robert Heinlein

  • #4
    Raoul Vaneigem
    “Who wants a world in which the guarantee that we shall not die of starvation entails the risk of dying of boredom?”
    Raoul Vaneigem

  • #6
    Bob Black
    “You are what you do. If you do boring, stupid monotonous work, chances are you'll end up boring, stupid and monotonous. Work is a much better explanation for the creeping cretinization all around us than even such significant moronizing mechanisms as television and education.”
    Bob Black, The Abolition of Work and Other Essays

  • #7
    J. Krishnamurti
    “It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.”
    J. Krishnamurti

  • #8
    Bob Marley
    “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery.
    None but ourselves can free our minds.”
    Bob Marley

  • #9
    Kurt Cobain
    “I'd rather be hated for who I am, than loved for who I am not.”
    Kurt Cobain

  • #10
    Emma Goldman
    “Anarchism, then, really stands for the liberation of the human mind from the dominion of religion; the liberation of the human body from the dominion of property; liberation from the shackles and restraint of government.”
    Emma Goldman

  • #11
    Emma Goldman
    “The most violent element in society is ignorance. ”
    Emma Goldman

  • #12
    Utah Phillips
    “The state can't give you free speech, and the state can't take it away. You're born with it, like your eyes, like your ears. Freedom is something you assume, then you wait for someone to try to take it away. The degree to which you resist is the degree to which you are free...”
    Utah Phillips

  • #13
    Utah Phillips
    “Frying-Pan Jack and I were in that camp, that's where he said to me, he'd been tramping since 1927, 'I told myself in '27, if I cannot dictate the conditions of my labor, I will henceforth cease to work.' You don't have to go to college to figure these things out, no sir. He said, 'I learned when I was young that the only true life I had was the life of my brain. But if it's true that the only real life I had was the life of my brain, what sense does it make to hand that brain to someone for eight hours a day, for their particular use, on the presumption that at the end of the day they will give it back in an unmutilated condition? Fat chance!”
    Utah Phillips

  • #14
    Utah Phillips
    “I have a good friend in the East, who comes to my shows and says, you sing a lot about the past, you can't live in the past, you know. I say to him, I can go outside and pick up a rock that's older than the oldest song you know,
    and bring it back in here and drop it on your foot. Now the past didn't go anywhere, did it? It's right here, right now.
    I always thought that anybody who told me I couldn't live in the past was trying to get me to forget something that if I remembered it it would get them serious trouble. No, that 50s, 60s, 70s, 90s stuff, that whole idea of decade packaging, things don't happen that way. The Vietnam War heated up in 1965 and ended in 1975-- what's that got to do with decades? No, that packaging of time is a journalist convenience that they use to trivialize and to dismiss important events and important ideas. I defy that.”
    Utah Phillips

  • #15
    Utah Phillips
    “The big system can be pretty overwhelming. We know that we can’t beat them by competing with them. What we can do is build small systems where we live and work that serve our needs as we define us and not as they ‘re defined for us. The big boys in their shining armor are up there on castle walls hurling their thunderbolts. We’re the ants patiently carrying sand a grain at a time from under the castle wall. We work from the bottom up. The knights up there don’t see the ants and don’t know what we’re doing. They’ll figure it out only when the wall begins to fall. It takes time and quiet persistence. Always remember this: They fight with money and we resist with time, and they’re going to run out of money before we run out of time”
    Utah Phillips

  • #16
    Mikhail Bakunin
    “I reverse the phrase of Voltaire, and say that if God really existed, it would be necessary to abolish him. ”
    Mikhail Bakunin

  • #17
    Pyotr Kropotkin
    “Sometimes he would advise me to read poetry, and would send me in his letters quantities of verses and whole poems, which he wrote from memory. 'Read poetry,' he wrote: 'poetry makes men better.' How often, in my later life, I realized the truth of this remark of his! Read poetry: it makes men better.”
    Peter Kropotkin, Memoirs of a Revolutionist

  • #18
    Pyotr Kropotkin
    “I understand regicide as a means of obtaining vengeance for the ruin of our lives, but regicide as a means of obtaining political freedom I could never understand.”
    Peter Kropotkin, Memoirs of a Revolutionist

  • #19
    Karl Marx
    “The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it.

    [These words are also inscribed upon his grave]”
    Karl Marx, Eleven Theses on Feuerbach

  • #20
    Karl Marx
    “The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.”
    Karl Marx

  • #21
    Voltairine de Cleyre
    “Anarchism, to me, means not only the denial of authority, not only a new economy, but a revision of the principles of morality. It means the development of the individual as well as the assertion of the individual. It means self-responsibility, and not leader worship.”
    Voltairine de Cleyre

  • #22
    Voltairine de Cleyre
    “I die, as I have lived, a free spirit, an Anarchist, owing no allegiance to rulers, heavenly or earthly.”
    Voltairine de Cleyre

  • #23
    Mahatma Gandhi
    “Be the change that you wish to see in the world.”
    Mahatma Gandhi

  • #24
    Raoul Vaneigem
    “People who talk about revolution and class struggle without referring explicitly to everyday life, without understanding what is subversive about love and what is positive in the refusal of constraints, such people have a corpse in their mouth”
    Raoul Vaneigem

  • #25
    Hunter S. Thompson
    “So we shall let the reader answer this question for himself: who is the happier man, he who has braved the storm of life and lived or he who has stayed securely on shore and merely existed?”
    Hunter S. Thompson

  • #26
    Hunter S. Thompson
    “America...just a nation of two hundred million used car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make us uncomfortable”
    Hunter S. Thompson

  • #27
    Hunter S. Thompson
    “Freedom is something that dies unless it's used.”
    Hunter S. Thompson

  • #28
    Hunter S. Thompson
    “We cannot expect people to have respect for law and order until we teach respect to those we have entrusted to enforce those laws.”
    Hunter S. Thompson

  • #29
    Philip K. Dick
    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.”
    Philip K. Dick, I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon

  • #30
    Jeffrey McDaniel
    “I've had the wind knocked out of me, but never the hurricane”
    Jeffrey McDaniel

  • #31
    Zhuangzi
    “The wise man knows that it is better to sit on the banks of a remote mountain stream than to be emperor of the whole world.”
    Zhuangzi



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