Divisions Quotes

Quotes tagged as "divisions" Showing 1-9 of 9
Michael Ondaatje
“I come from Divisadero Street. Divisadero, from the Spanish word for ‘division,’ the street that at one time was the dividing line between San Francisco and the fields of the Presidio. Or it might be derived from the word divisar, meaning ‘to gaze at something from a distance.’ (There is a ‘height’ nearby called El Divisadero.) Thus a point from which you can look far into the distance”
Michael Ondaatje, Divisadero

Iris Murdoch
“The past and the present are after all so close, so almost one, as if time were an artificial teasing out of a material which longs to join, to interpenetrate, and to become heavy and very small like some of those heavenly bodies scientists tell us of.”
Iris Murdoch, The Sea, the Sea

Marcel Proust
“...every social class has its own pathology...”
Marcel Proust, The Captive / The Fugitive

Michael Crichton
“What she was looking for was a way to shape the story so that it unfolded now, in a pattern that the viewer could follow. The best frames engaged the viewer by presenting the story as conflict between good and bad, a morality story. Because the audience got that. If you framed a story that way, you got instant acceptance. You were speaking their language.

But because the story also had to unfold quickly, this morality tale had to hang from a series of hooks that did not need to be explained. Things the audience already knew to be true. They already knew big corporations were corrupt, their leaders greedy sexist pigs. You didn't have to prove that; you just had to mention it. They already knew that government bureaucracies were inept and lazy. You didn't have to prove that, either. And they already knew that products were cynically manufactured with no concern for consumer safety. From such agreed-upon elements, she must construct her morality story. A fast-moving morality story, happening now.”
Michael Crichton, Airframe

Gift Gugu Mona
“Great leaders have grand visions. Even where there are divisions, they do not abandon their mission.”
Gift Gugu Mona, The Effective Leadership Prototype for a Modern Day Leader

“Absent an external unifying force like a war, the divisions—or worse—we see today will prove the norm, while the depolarized politics of mid-twentieth-century America will prove the exception. And if we can't reverse polarization, as I suspect, then the path forward is clear: we need to reform the political system so it can function amid polarization.”
Ezra Klein, Why We're Polarized

Neelam Saxena Chandra
“The divisions, the biases, the differences
Oh Lord! There is no end at all!
Human beings are all but one
Why do we create so many fences and walls?”
Neelam Saxena Chandra, misty moments

Michael Bassey Johnson
“When you behold the increasing hate in the heart of humanity, you can't help but wonder what happened to love.”
Michael Bassey Johnson, These Words Pour Like Rain

George S. Schuyler
“During his period of idleness and soft living, he had followed the news and opinion in the local daily press and confessed himself surprised at the antagonistic attitude of the newspapers toward Black-No-More, Incorporated. From the vantage point of having formerly been a Negro, he was able to see how the newspapers were fanning the color prejudice of the white people. Business men, he found, were also bitterly opposed to Dr. Crookman and his efforts to bring about chromatic democracy in the nation.

The attitude of these people puzzled him. Was not Black-No-More getting rid of the Negroes upon whom all of the blame was placed for the backwardness of the South? Then he recalled what a Negro street speaker had said one night on the corner of 138th Street and Seventh Avenue in New York: that unorganized labor meant cheap labor; that the guarantee of cheap labor was an effective means of luring new industries into the South; that so long as the ignorant white masses could be kept thinking of the menace of the Negro to Caucasian race purity and political control, they would give little thought to labor organization. It suddenly dawned upon Matthew Fisher that this Black-No-More treatment was more of a menace to white business than to white labor.”
George S. Schuyler, Black No More