Peer Nyberg > Peer's Quotes

Showing 1-30 of 41
« previous 1
sort by

  • #1
    Robert  Stone
    “I’ve been waiting my whole life to fuck up like this.”
    Robert Stone, Dog Soldiers

  • #2
    Robert  Stone
    “It’s hard to stay away from religion when you mess with acid.”
    Robert Stone

  • #3
    Robert  Stone
    “That's the great thing about literature -- it makes the world less lonely.”
    Robert Stone

  • #4
    Robert  Stone
    “The term [Americanization] invokes the transformation of the landscape into unnatural mechanical shapes, of night into day, of speed for its own sake, an irrational passion for novelty at the expense of quality, a worship of gimmickry.”
    Robert Stone

  • #5
    Robert  Stone
    “But Moby-Dick is the explanation of America. It’s not just a novel. It is a book of prophecy. It is the book. It is the book of America.”
    Robert Stone

  • #6
    Robert  Stone
    “The richest fuckin' people in the richest country in the world - you gonna tell them some little guy in a hole in South America can have something they can't? Like shit, man. If the little guy in the hole can be a revolutionary, they can be revolutionaries too.”
    Robert Stone, Dog Soldiers

  • #7
    Robert  Stone
    “Like many visitors, they had been unnerved by the inimitable creepiness of the Holy Sepulchre, a grimly gaudy, theopathical Turkish bathhouse where their childhood saints glared like demented spooks from every moldering wall.”
    Robert Stone, Damascus Gate

  • #8
    Thomas Pynchon
    “What goes around may come around, but it never ends up exactly the same place, you ever notice? Like a record on a turntable, all it takes is one groove's difference and the universe can be on into a whole 'nother song.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #9
    Thomas Pynchon
    “What, I should only trust good people? Man, good people get bought and sold every day. Might as well trust somebody evil once in a while, it makes no more or less sense.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #10
    Thomas Pynchon
    “Yeah, but nowadays it's all you see anymore is cops, the tube is saturated with fucking cop shows, just being regular guys, only tryin to do their job, folks, no more threat to nobody's freedom than some dad in a sitcom. Right. Get the viewer population so cop-happy they're beginning to be run in. Good-bye Johnny Staccato, welcome and while you're at it please kick my door down, Steve McGarrett.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #11
    Thomas Pynchon
    “. . . yet there is no avoiding time, the sea of time, the sea of memory and forgetfulness, the years of promise, gone and unrecoverable, of the land almost allowed to claim its better destiny, only to the claim jumped by evildoers known all too well, and taken instead and held hostage to the future we must live in now forever.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #12
    Thomas Pynchon
    “It had been dark at the beach for hours, he hadn't been smoking much and it wasn't headlights – but before she turned away, he could swear he saw light falling on her face, the orange light just after sunset that catches a face turned to the west, watching the ocean for someone to come in on the last wave of the day, in to shore and safety.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #13
    Thomas Pynchon
    “People in this town saw only what they'd all agreed to see, they believed what was on the tube or in the morning papers half of them read while they were driving to work on the freeway, and it was all their dream about being wised up, about the truth setting them free.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #14
    Thomas Pynchon
    “You can only cruse the boulevards of regret so far, and then you've got to get back up onto the freeway again.”
    Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice

  • #15
    James Risen
    “During the darkest years of the Iraq war, between 2004 and 2008, there were at least thirty-five convictions in the United States and more than $17 million in fines, forfeitures, and restitution payments made in fraud cases in connection with the American reconstruction of Iraq. But the midlevel officers, enlisted personnel, contractors, and others who have been caught account for only a tiny slice of the billions that have gone missing in Iraq. The biggest thieves have been far more elusive.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #16
    James Risen
    “KBR went on to become far and away the largest single Pentagon contractor of the entire war, receiving a combined total of $39.5 billion in contracts, according to calculations by the Financial Times in 2013.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #17
    James Risen
    “The drone is the ultimate imperial weapon, allowing a superpower almost unlimited reach while keeping its own soldiers far from battle.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #18
    James Risen
    “Today, at least $11.7 billion of the approximately $20 billion the CPA ordered sent to Iraq from New York is either unaccounted for or has simply disappeared.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #19
    James Risen
    “Mitchell and Jessen’s great achievement was to bend the accepted narrative of how SERE affects the mind and body. They made two important and related claims—that SERE could force prisoners to tell the truth, and that SERE did not constitute torture. The CIA, based in part on the notion that SERE was safe, told the Justice Department that the enhanced interrogation techniques were safe. Based on those assurances, in turn, the Justice Department provided the intelligence community with secret legal opinions stating that the techniques did not constitute torture and were legal.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #20
    James Risen
    “Between May 2003 and June 2004, while the CPA was in operation, Basel was in charge of all the cash flights and said he never lost a single dollar. All of the cash that arrived at the Baghdad airport got to its destination downtown, he insisted. “Absolutely, all the money I guarded got to where it was supposed to go,” Basel said, emphatically.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #21
    James Risen
    “President Obama’s decision to launch airstrikes against ISIS in the summer of 2014 raised the potential for a completely new war on terror, without ever having declared an end to the previous one. It also signified a questionable “whack-a-mole” strategy, in which the U.S. targets Islamic militant insurgencies before they ever attack the United States, just in case they might do so in the future. That strategy would almost guarantee that those groups will eventually turn against us, and that the endless war on terror would remain endless.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #22
    James Risen
    “KBR won its coveted role in Iraq while it was a subsidiary of Halliburton, the company Vice President Dick Cheney ran before the 2000 presidential campaign. KBR was later spun off from Halliburton, but by then, it was well entrenched with a virtual monopoly over basic services for American troops in Iraq. At the height of the war, KBR had more than fifty thousand personnel and subcontractors working for it in Iraq, making the company’s presence in Iraq larger than that of the British Army.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #23
    James Risen
    “The object of terrorism is to use violence or the threat of violence to create fear and alarm,” says Jenkins. “And so terrorism has worked. Certainly, we have been the major contributors to that. We have scared the hell out of ourselves.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #24
    James Risen
    “To most of America, war has become not only tolerable but profitable, and so there is no longer any great incentive to end it.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #25
    James Risen
    “Barack Obama has had a love affair with drones. By 2012, the CIA had conducted six times more drone strikes in Pakistan during the three years of the Obama administration than the agency had conducted under the entire eight years of George W. Bush,”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #26
    James Risen
    “He shook his head no and said, “It is now among us.” Roark also pressed him on the limits of the program, and Hayden suggested that the only real limit had been imposed by Rep. Nancy Pelosi in exchange for going along with the program and maintaining her silence about it. Hayden told Roark that “Pelosi had repeatedly warned him not to go beyond the CT [counterterrorism] target, and for now they were adhering to that.” In other words, the Bush administration and NSA eventually wanted to use the domestic spying program for purposes that had nothing to do with the global war on terror.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #27
    James Risen
    “One of the most baleful consequences of the toxic combination of fear and money in the post-9/11 era has been the constriction of the physical landscape of the United States. Freedom of movement—one of the greatest attributes of life in the expanse of the United States—has been curtailed. Money has flowed from Washington and corporate America to finance security guards, security gates, metal detectors, and Jersey barriers; bit by bit, the United States has become a nation whose watchwords are now “authorized access only.”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #28
    James Risen
    “Money from taxpayers in Wichita and Denver and Phoenix gets routed through the Pentagon and CIA and then ends up here, or in Baghdad or Dubai, or Doha or Kabul or Beirut, in the hands of contractors, subcontractors, their local business partners, local sheikhs, local Mukhabarat officers, local oil smugglers, local drug dealers—money that funds construction and real estate speculation in a few choice luxury districts, buildings that go up thanks to the sweat of imported Filipino and Bangladeshi workers”
    James Risen, Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War

  • #29
    Eduardo Galeano
    “I don't believe in charity. I believe in solidarity. Charity is so vertical. It goes from the top to the bottom. Solidarity is horizontal. It respects the other person. I have a lot to learn from other people.”
    Eduardo Galeano

  • #30
    Eduardo Galeano
    “Utopia lies at the horizon.
    When I draw nearer by two steps,
    it retreats two steps.
    If I proceed ten steps forward, it
    swiftly slips ten steps ahead.
    No matter how far I go, I can never reach it.
    What, then, is the purpose of utopia?
    It is to cause us to advance.”
    Eduardo Galeano



Rss
« previous 1