Leslie Deeb > Leslie's Quotes

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  • #1
    Ashlee Vance
    “Elon es así: triunfar o morir, pero jamás rendirse”.»”
    Ashlee Vance, Elon Musk: El empresario que anticipa el futuro (BIOGRAFÍA Y MEMORIAS)

  • #2
    Tanya Thompson
    “Prisons are full of sociopaths and psychopaths, but when questioned, the imprisoned sociopath will honestly admit that they will commit any number of crimes to help a friend.

    A friend will help you move; a true friend will help you move a body.

    A friend will bail you out of jail; a true friend will be sitting beside you.


    Who wouldn’t want to have a true friend? But they sound a lot like a sociopath.”
    Tanya Thompson, Assuming Names: A Con Artist's Masquerade

  • #3
    “I have never seen any indication that Powell discussed on his AOL account information that was classified at the time, but there were numerous examples of Secretary Clinton having done so.”
    James Comey, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership

  • #4
    Barbara Kingsolver
    “The most important thing about a person is always the thing you don't know.”
    Barbara Kingsolver, The Lacuna

  • #5
    Peter Wohlleben
    “It appears that nutrient exchange and helping neighbors in times of need is the rule, and this leads to the conclusion that forests are superorganisms with interconnections much like ant colonies.”
    Peter Wohlleben, The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World

  • #6
    Bryan Stevenson
    “Of course innocent mistakes occur, but the accumulated insults and indignations caused by racial presumptions are destructive in ways that are hard to measure. Constantly being suspected, accused, watched, doubted, distrusted, presumed guilty, and even feared is a burden borne by people of color that can't be understood or confronted without a deeper conversation about our history of racial injustice.”
    Bryan Stevenson, Just Mercy

  • #7
    Jared Diamond
    “Writers find it tempting to draw analogies between those trajectories of human societies and the trajectories of individual human lives – to talk of a society's birth, growth, peak, senescence, and death – and to assume that the long period of senescence that most of us traverse between our peak years and our deaths also applies to societies.”
    Jared Diamond, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

  • #8
    Hillary Rodham Clinton
    “I'm sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and disagree with this administration, somehow you're not patriotic. We need to stand up and say we're Americans, and we have the right to debate and disagree with any administration.”
    Hillary Rodham Clinton

  • #9
    Jonathan Safran Foer
    “She wants to know if I love her, that's all anyone wants from anyone else, not love itself but the knowledge that love is there, like new batteries in the flashlight in the emergency kit in the hall closet.”
    Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

  • #10
    Brené Brown
    “To become fully human means learning to turn my gratitude for being alive into some concrete common good. It means growing gentler toward human weakness. It means practicing forgiveness of my and everyone else's hourly failures to live up to divine standards. It means learning to forget myself on a regular basis in order to attend to the other selves in my vicinity. It means living so that "I'm only human" does not become an excuse for anything. It means receiving the human condition as blessing and not curse, in all its achingly frail and redemptive reality.”
    Brené Brown, The Gifts of Imperfection

  • #12
    Stephanie Marie Thornton
    “Years ago, Re had raged against humans for violating Ma’at, so he had sent Hathor to destroy mankind. She transformed into the lion goddess Sekhmet and Egypt’s fields ran red with the blood of her rampage. Seeing this, Re realized his mistake and ordered Sekhmet to stop, but she was too gone with bloodlust to listen. Knowing he had to halt her some other way, Re stained seven thousand jugs of beer with pomegranate juice and poured the red liquid into her path. Believing the beer to be blood, Sekhmet gorged herself and passed out in a drunken stupor. When she awoke, her bloodlust had passed and she returned to being Hathor. Thus the goddesses of love and violence shared a common history.”
    Stephanie Thornton, Daughter of the Gods: A Novel of Ancient Egypt

  • #13
    Ashlee Vance
    “But there is now a degree to which you have to ask whether his success is an indictment on the rest of us who have been working on much more incremental things. To the extent that the world still doubts Elon, I think it's a reflection on the insanity of the world and not on the supposed insanity of Elon. - Peter Thiel on Elon Musk”
    Ashlee Vance, Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future

  • #14
    Eric Schlosser
    “The birth of the fast food industry coincided with Eisenhower-era glorifications of technology, with optimistic slogans like “Better Living through Chemistry” and “Our Friend the Atom.” The sort of technological wizardry that Walt Disney promoted on television and at Disneyland eventually reached its fulfillment in the kitchens of fast food restaurants. Indeed, the corporate culture of McDonald’s seems inextricably linked to that of the Disney empire, sharing a reverence for sleek machinery, electronics, and automation. The leading fast food chains still embrace a boundless faith in science—and as a result have changed not just what Americans eat, but also how their food is made.”
    Eric Schlosser, Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal

  • #15
    Hans Rosling
    “Every group of people I ask thinks the world is more frightening, more violent, and more hopeless”
    Hans Rosling, Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World—and Why Things Are Better Than You Think

  • #16
    Jared Diamond
    “Besides justifying the transfer of wealth to kleptocrats, institutionalized religion brings two other important benefits to centralized societies. First, shared ideology or religion helps solve the problem of how unrelated individuals are to live together without killing each other—by providing them with a bond not based on kinship. Second, it gives people a motive, other than genetic self-interest, for sacrificing their lives on behalf of others.”
    Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs and Steel

  • #17
    A.J. Jacobs
    “Her passion is hard to forget. I still remember one dinner at my grandfather's house. The whole extended family was there, and Marti, at the time, refused to eat at the same table where flesh was being served. Half the family was fine with that. But the other half wanted chicken. The solution? We had to set up two separate tables in the dining room--a meat table and a nonmeat table. My diplomatic grandparents didn't want to take sides, so they sat at a third table in the middle, a dietary DMZ/”
    A.J. Jacobs
    tags: humor

  • #18
    Vincent Bugliosi
    “little Squeaky.”
    Vincent Bugliosi, Helter Skelter

  • #20
    Stephanie Marie Thornton
    “Ankh, udja, seneb!”
    Stephanie Thornton, Daughter of the Gods: A Novel of Ancient Egypt

  • #21
    “Ethical leaders care deeply about those they lead, and offer them honesty and decency, commitment and their own sacrifice. They have a confidence that breeds humility. Ethical leaders know their own talent but fear their own limitations — to understand and reason, to see the world as it is and not as they wish it to be. They speak the truth and know that making wise decisions requires people to tell them the truth. And to get that truth, they create an environment of high standards and deep consideration —“love” is not too strong a word—that builds lasting bonds and makes extraordinary achievement possible. It would never occur to an ethical leader to ask for loyalty.”
    James Comey, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership

  • #22
    Harold Schechter
    “It makes perfect sense that if human beings are raised in warm, loving households; if they are brought up to believe that the world is a secure and decent place, then they will grow up with a healthy relationship toward themselves and other people. - able to give love freely and receive it in return. Conversely, if a person is severely mistreated from his earliest years, subjected to constant psychological and physical abuse, he or she will grow up with a malignant view of life. To such a person, the world is a hateful place where all human relationships are based, not on love and respect, but on power, suffering, and humiliation.”
    Harold Schechter, The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World's Most Terrifying Murderers

  • #23
    Timothy Ferriss
    “Don’t confuse the complex with the difficult. Most situations are simple – many are just emotionally difficult to act upon.”
    Tim Ferriss

  • #24
    Carrie Fisher
    “I think I am Princess Leia and Princess Leia is me. It's like a Mobius Striptease.”
    Carrie Fisher



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