“There is always the right of the strong to take the weak and the rich to take the poor and the powerful to take those who have no power. UrLeyn may have written down our laws and changed a few of them, but the laws that still bind us to the animals cut the deepest. Men compete for power, they strut and parade and they impress their fellows with their possessions and they take the women they can. None of that has changed. They may use weapons other than their hands and teeth, they may use other men and they may express their dominance in money, not other symbols of power and glamour, but…”

Source: Culture series, Inversions (1998), Chapter 20 (p. 335)

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

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Iain Banks 139
Scottish writer 1954–2013

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