Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America
We Will Not Be Terrorized (December 2015), Naturalization Ceremony speech (December 2015)
2015, Naturalization Ceremony speech (December 2015)
Context: On days like today, we need to resolve never to repeat mistakes like that again. We must resolve to always speak out against hatred and bigotry in all of its forms -- whether taunts against the child of an immigrant farmworker or threats against a Muslim shopkeeper. We are Americans. Standing up for each other is what the values enshrined in the documents in this room compels us to do -– especially when it’s hard. Especially when it’s not convenient. That’s when it counts. That’s when it matters -- not when things are easy, but when things are hard.
Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America
We Will Not Be Terrorized (December 2015), Naturalization Ceremony speech (December 2015)
Barack Obama (1961) 44th President of the United States of America
2015, Naturalization Ceremony speech (December 2015)
John Updike (1932–2009) American novelist, poet, short story writer, art critic, and literary critic
Source: My Father's Tears and Other Stories
Spider Robinson (1948) Canadian author
God Is An Iron (1977)
Context: Call it… joy. The thing like pleasure that you feel when you've done a good thing or passed up a real tempting chance to do a bad thing. Or when the unfolding of the universe just seems especially apt. It's nowhere near as flashy and intense as pleasure can be. Believe me! But it's got something going for it. Something that can make you do without pleasure, or even accept a lot of pain, to get it.
“Because I don’t do things in halves, Mom. Especially when it comes to love.”
Richelle Mead book Silver Shadows
Source: Silver Shadows
“man's heart is a wonderful thing, especially when carried in the purse”
Karl Marx book Das Kapital
Vol. I, Ch. 9, pg. 252.
Das Kapital (Buch I) (1867)
Voltairine de Cleyre (1866–1912) American anarchist writer and feminist
keep it when the storm roars and there is a white-streaked sky and blue thunder before, and one's eyes are blinded and one's ears deafened with the war of opposing things; and keep it under the long leaden sky and the gray dreariness that never lifts. Hold unto the last: that is what it means to have a Dominant Idea, which Circumstance cannot break. And such men make and unmake Circumstance.
The Dominant Idea (1910)
Oskar Morgenstern (1902–1977) austrian economist
Source: National Security: Political, Military, Economic Strategies Decade Ahead, (1963), p. 678.
“Why is it so hard to do a thing Now, at the moment when one thinks of it.”
Yoshida Kenkō (1283–1350) japanese writer
Source: Tsurezure-Gusa (Essays in Idleness), p. 92