“The male has a negative Midas Touch - everything he touches turns to shit.”
Valerie Solanas book SCUM Manifesto
Source: SCUM MANIFESTO (1967), p. 5 (hyphen (not en- or em-dash) so in original).
Prison Memoirs of an Anarchist (1912), Ch. 18: "The Solitary".
“The male has a negative Midas Touch - everything he touches turns to shit.”
Valerie Solanas book SCUM Manifesto
Source: SCUM MANIFESTO (1967), p. 5 (hyphen (not en- or em-dash) so in original).
Nick Herbert (1936) American physicist
Source: Quantum Reality - Beyond The New Physics, Chapter 10, Quantum Realities: Four More, p. 194
Ilya Somin (1973) American law school professor
Source: Democracy and Political ignorance: Why smaller government is better (2013), p. 6
Context: In the same way, it is not necessarily paternalistic to advocate the restriction of air pollution. Individual citizens and firms may produce more air pollution than any of them actually want because they know that there is little to be gained from uncoordinated individual restraint. If I avoid driving a gas-guzzling car, the impact on the overall level of air pollution w ill be utterly insignificant. So I have no incentive to take it into account in making my driving decisions even if I care greatly about reducing air pollution. Widespread public ignorance is a type of pollution that infects the political system rather than our physical environment.
Gottfried Feder (1883–1941) German economist and politician
"Manifesto for the Abolition of Enslavement to Interest on Money" (1919)
Arthur D. Hall (1925–2006) American electrical engineer
Source: A methodology for systems engineering, 1962, p. 61 cited in: Clute, Whitehead & Reid (1967) Progressive architecture. Vol.48, Nr. 7-9. p. 106
Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) Canadian educator, philosopher, and scholar-- a professor of English literature, a literary critic, and a …
Source: 1970s, Take Today : The Executive as Dropout (1972), p. 152
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882) American philosopher, essayist, and poet
Letter to Thomas Carlyle (30 October 1841)
Paul Krugman (1953) American economist
"The Gold Bug Variations", Originally published in Slate (Nov. 23, 1996)
The Accidental Theorist: And Other Dispatches From The Dismal Science (1998)