Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech (2012)
Context: Are we not still guilty, if to a less violent degree, of recklessness, of improvidence with regard to our future and our humanity? War is not the only arena where peace is done to death. Wherever suffering is ignored, there will be the seeds of conflict, for suffering degrades and embitters and enrages.
“War was never so careful as to inflict suffering only where it was merited.”
Source: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Heartfire (1998), Chapter 2.
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Orson Scott Card 586
American science fiction novelist 1951Related quotes
“Where would be the merit if heroes were never afraid?”
Où serait le mérite, si les héros n’avaient jamais peur?
Source: Tartarin de Tarascon (1872), P. 204; translation p. 80.
“Vegan Diet Damages Baby's Brain—Sensationalism!,” in VegNews (March–April 2003), p. 10; as quoted in Will Tuttle, The World Peace Diet (Lantern Books, 2005), p. 66 https://books.google.it/books?id=BTqLjAOwsSMC&pg=PA66.
A Prescription for Hope (1985)
Context: As no national interest would justify inflicting genocide on the victim and suicide on the aggressor, a prevalent misconception is that nuclear war will never be fought. But the realities of our age compel an opposite assessment. In no previous epoch were adversaries so continuously and totally mobilized for instant war. It is a statistical certainly that hair-trigger readiness cannot endure as a permanent condition. Furthermore, the unrelenting growth in nuclear arsenals, the increasing accuracy of missiles, and the continuing computerization of response systems all promote instabilities which court nuclear war by technical malfunction; by miscalculation, human aberration or criminal act.
“Poetry in War and Peace”, p. 129
Kipling, Auden & Co: Essays and Reviews 1935-1964 (1980)
“The suffering inflicted by this present order invariably produces a struggle to overcome it.”
Conclusion, p. 275
Another World Is Possible : Globalization and Anti-capitalism (2002)
“History does not care about the suffering of the individual. Only the outcome of their struggles.”
Source: Eona: The Last Dragoneye
Cited in: Dudley Miles (1988), Francis Place, 1771-1854: the life of a remarkable radical. p. 49