Jay Ayre > Jay's Quotes

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  • #1
    Yvonne Korshak
    “Temples are for the gods,” Thucydides said. “No city has the hubris to put her own citizens on a temple.” Phidias promised, “The Athenians will look like gods.”
    Yvonne Korshak, Pericles and Aspasia: A Story of Ancient Greece

  • #2
    Todor Bombov
    “Just like the myth of the people’s or popular capitalism, which was propagated since the mid1950s in the countries to the west of Berlin Wall, to the east and the north of it, since the same time it was introduced the myth of the people’s or popular socialism. But the suggestion is always the same. Under any “people’s” power—from people’s capitalism to people’s socialism—the greatest illusion suggested to the oppressed classes is that the people are sovereign, i.e., that all the people dominate over themselves. In this respect, even John Kenneth Galbraith makes Marxist conclusions, which even in the Internet epoch have the same power: “Young people are suggested that in a democracy the entire power belongs to the people!” (“The Anatomy of Power”)
    Yet, old people know that this is not true!”
    Todor Bombov, Socialism Is Dead! Long Live Socialism!: The Marx Code-Socialism with a Human Face

  • #3
    Michael G. Kramer
    “John F Kennedy (President Elect) was at the White house in order to confer with his predecessor Dwight Eisenhower. He was told to wait while the President of the United States of America attended to some necessary items. After a time, John was escorted into the Oval Office, and he found himself directly in front of the out-going president. So it was that the conversation between two of the most powerful men on earth began.”
    Michael G. Kramer, A Gracious Enemy & After the War Volume One

  • #4
    William Kely McClung
    “No one knew more than he how fast life could change. He pulled a trigger and four seconds later the life of a man a thousand meters away was over.”
    William Kely McClung, Black Fire

  • #5
    “I don't want to be caught with my pants down.”
    March Lions, The Last Sunset

  • #6
    Richard Wright
    “Why were some people fated, like Job, to live a never-ending debate between themselves and their sense of what they believed life should be? Why did some hearts feel insulted at being alive, humiliated at the terms of existence? It was as though one felt that one had been promised something and when that promise had not been kept, one felt a sense of loss that made life intolerable; it was as though one was angry, but did not know toward what or whom the anger should be directed; it was as though one felt betrayed, but could never determine the manner of the betrayal.”
    Richard Wright, The Outsider

  • #7
    Barack Obama
    “What makes a man is not the ability to have a child but having the courage to raise one.”
    OBAMA BARACK

  • #8
    Walter Isaacson
    “Falling in love is not the most stupid thing that people do,” Einstein scribbled on the letter, “but gravitation cannot be held responsible for it.”
    Walter Isaacson, Einstein: His Life and Universe

  • #9
    Abraham   Verghese
    “Forgive me,” she says now. “For what?” “For everything. Sometimes we can wound each other in ways we don’t intend.”
    Abraham Verghese, The Covenant of Water

  • #10
    Émile Zola
    “He wept for truth which was dead, for heaven which was void. Beyond the marble walls and gleaming jewelled altars, the huge plaster Christ had no longer a single drop of blood in its veins.”
    Émile Zola, Pot Luck

  • #11
    Richard Carlson
    “لقد سأل الكاتب ستيفن ليفين السؤال التالي: لو تبقى من عمرك ساعة واحدة، ولم يكن أمامك سوى مكالمة هاتفية واحدة فمن الذي تحب أن تكلمه عبر الهاتف؟ وماذا ستقول له؟
    ولماذا تنتظر حتى الآن!؟”
    Richard Carlson



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