“I look to the future because that's where I'm going to spend the rest of my life.”
George Burns (1896–1996) American comedian, actor, and writer
Source: On the Jellicoe Road
“I look to the future because that's where I'm going to spend the rest of my life.”
George Burns (1896–1996) American comedian, actor, and writer
Donald J. Trump (1946) 45th President of the United States of America
On an interview on why he hates Rosie O'Donnell (28 August 2011)
2010s, 2011
Grace Jones (1948) Jamaican singer, actress and model
As quoted in NME (June 1983); later in NME Rock 'N' Roll Years (1992) by John Tobler, p. 381
“Maybe if I looked in my heart, I could find a back door.”
Brandon Boyd (1976) American rock singer, writer and visual artist
Lyrics, Make Yourself (1999)
“I don't care if I fall as long as someone else picks up my gun and keeps on shooting.”
Ernesto Che Guevara (1928–1967) Argentine Marxist revolutionary
Variant: I don't care if I fall as long as someone else picks up my gun and keeps on shooting.
George Alec Effinger book When Gravity Fails
Source: When Gravity Fails (1986), Chapter 2 (p. 13).
Caitlín R. Kiernan (1964) writer
Unfit for Mass Consumption (blog entries), 2010
Context: I'm wondering how the new crop of teens and twentysomethings became so afraid of emotion and the expression thereof.* Did their parents teach them? Did they learn it somewhere else? Is this a spontaneous cultural phenomenon? Are they afraid of appearing weak? Is this capitalism streamlining the human psyche to be more useful by eliminating anything that might hamper productivity? Is it a sort of conformism? I don't know, but I could go the rest of my life and never again hear anyone whine about someone else being "emo," and it would be a Very Good Thing.