Lena > Lena's Quotes

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  • #1
    Eliza  Clark
    “She liked Harry Styles a few years ago, and now she likes that white-bread, absolute fucking baguette of a lad from Call Me by Your Name.”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #2
    Eliza  Clark
    “Was it my idea to have him hurt me, or did he just let me think it was?”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #3
    Eliza  Clark
    “You want to think you're not like other women, but you are, you know. You're still... that's still how the rest of the world, how men are going to see you. Like, I know you hate labels, but you like... You live in a woman's body. You're vulnerable. No matter what you think, you're vulnerable...”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #4
    Eliza  Clark
    “Do you like it rough? I think so. I think I must. Men are rough, aren't they? Have I always had a taste for rough stuff, or did I acquire that? In the back of Lesley's car, on the floor of a friend's house, half-conscious with my underwear around my ankles? Was it my idea to have him hurt me, or did he just let me think it was?”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #5
    Eliza  Clark
    “My mam always used to tell me that you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. And Eddie from Tesco is a fly, but he's got a taste for vinegar. It's like vinegar is all he's ever had from people, and now he doesn't even know what honey tastes like.”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #6
    Eliza  Clark
    “I don't know if you realise how you speak to people sometimes, the way you feed people table scraps. I know that's that what I get from you, table scraps, but because it's scraps from your table, it's better than a 3 course meal with someone else. And you've given me glimpses into your life, your real life, and I wonder if it's your fault. I wonder if you've got anything but scraps to give.”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #7
    Eliza  Clark
    “Do I have to smash a glass over the head of every single man I come into contact with, just so I leave a fucking mark?”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #8
    Eliza  Clark
    “There’s a Susan Sontag book called Regarding the Pain of Others, which Frank made me read — there’s a bit where Sontag talks about how when people see terrible things happen, they used to say it felt like a dream, but now they say it feels like a movie. Movies have supplanted dreams in the popular consciousness, and have become our benchmark for the unreal, and the almost real. Today has been a movie, playing on an old, warped videotape.”
    Eliza Clark, Boy Parts

  • #9
    Andreas Malm
    “At what point do we escalate? When do we conclude that the time has come to also try something different? When do we start physically attacking the things that consume our planet and destroy them with our own hands? Is there a good reason we have waited this long?”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #10
    Andreas Malm
    “non-violence is not to be treated as a holy covenant or rite, then one must adopt the explicitly anti-Gandhian position of Mandela: ‘I called for non-violent protest for as long as it was effective’, as ‘a tactic that should be abandoned when it no longer worked.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #11
    Andreas Malm
    “Climate fatalism is for those on top; its sole contribution is spoilage. The most religiously Gandhian climate activist, the most starry-eyed renewable energy entrepreneur, the most self-righteous believer in veganism as panacea, the most compromise-prone parliamentarian is infinitely preferable to the white man of the North who says, ‘We’re doomed – fall in peace.’ Within the range of positions this side of climate denial, none is more despicable.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #12
    Andreas Malm
    “So here is what this movement of millions should do, for a start: announce and enforce the prohibition. Damage and destroy new CO2-emitting devices. Put them out of commission, pick them apart, demolish them, burn them, blow them up. Let the capitalists who keep on investing in the fire know that their properties will be trashed.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #13
    Andreas Malm
    “Protest is when I say I don’t like this. Resistance is when I put an end to what I don’t like. Protest is when I say I refuse to go along with this anymore. Resistance is when I make sure everybody else stops going along too’, as one West German columnist wrote in 1968, relaying the words of a visiting Black Power activist.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #14
    Andreas Malm
    “If SUV drivers were a nation, in 2018 they would have ranked seventh for CO2 emissions.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #15
    Andreas Malm
    “The oil being taken out of the ground and the machinery that does it and the infrastructure which supports it – this is violent’,”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #16
    Andreas Malm
    “The commitment to the endless accumulation of capital wins out every time. After the past three decades, there can be no doubt that the ruling classes are constitutionally incapable of responding to the catastrophe in any other way than by expediting it; of their own accord, under their inner compulsion, they can do nothing but burn their way to the end.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline

  • #17
    Andreas Malm
    “Property destruction still happens – it’s just done by the wrong people for very wrong causes.”
    Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline



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