Movements Quotes

Quotes tagged as "movements" Showing 1-30 of 72
Eric Hoffer
“Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket.”
Eric Hoffer, The Temper of Our Time

Abhaidev
“Revolutions are the things of the past. The current generation believes we get one life, and we should enjoy and live it to the fullest. That’s why they don’t know what sacrifice means. Revolution requires sacrifices and the people of today are neither willing nor capable of sacrifice. Therefore, we can’t have revolutions today. All we can have now are movements.”
Abhaidev, The Gods Are Not Dead

Dorothy L. Sayers
“But it is the mark of all movements, however well-intentioned, that their pioneers tend, by much lashing of themselves into excitement, to lose sight of the obvious.”
Dorothy L. Sayers, Are Women Human? Penetrating, Sensible and Witty Essays on the Role of Women in Society

Pauli Murray
“One person plus one typewriter constitutes a movement.”
Pauli Murray

Lisa Ann Sandell
“I watch her as she leaves. Everything about her is fluid as a river. Her messy hair, her xylophone voice, the strokes of her paintbrush. Even her camouflage army jacket hangs loose, flowing like ribbons.”
Lisa Ann Sandell, A Map of the Known World

Prem Jagyasi
“You know that if you want to become a master, you have to spend hours every day working on the same movements.”
Dr Prem Jagyasi

Gloria Steinem
“People now ask me if I'm passing the torch. I always explain that no, I'm keeping my torch, thank you very much. And I'm using it to light the torches of others.

Because the truth is that the old image of one person with a torch is part of the problem, not the solution. We each need a torch if we are to see where we're going.

And together, we create so much more light.”
Gloria Steinem, Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions

Shane Arbuthnott
“Identifying who began something like this is like picking out the stone that began an avalanche. It began somewhere, true enough [...] but once it well and truly begins, we are all just stones moving together. One stone rolling down a mountain changes nothing unless others move with it.”
Shane Arbuthnott, Terra Nova

Nikki Giovanni
“In order to have a happy ending, in order to be triumphant, in order to be heroic, you have to tell your own story. The women's movement knows that; black people know that; brown people know that; yellow people know that. You have to be able to tell your own story in order to show that you are worthy--that you belong.”
Nikki Giovanni, Shimmy Shimmy Shimmy Like My Sister Kate: Looking At The Harlem Renaissance Through Poems

Jan Rehmann
“Whether social movements take off or not, whether they maintain momentum or subside, depends on multiple conditions, not least on the actual actors and their capacities to seize the opportunities available to them, to invent creative forms of action and to build convincing alliances. A significant factor in the hegemonic relations of force is, for example, whether or not there exists an independent and non-sectarian leftist party or leftist formation which is able to articulate and connect different initiatives and movements.”
Jan Rehmann, Theories of Ideology: The Powers of Alienation and Subjection

Suzanne F. Stevens
“A mission leader recognizes that while she can progress independently, momentum only occurs when people align with, act on, and amplify a message. The amplification makes a messenger’s mission multiply and eventually creates a movement worth following.”
Suzanne F. Stevens, Make your contribution count for you, me , we: An evolutionary journey inspired by the wisdom of pioneering African women

“If we didn’t catch enough fish, or fish of high enough quality, too bad. That’s life. No one has the right to win. Victory has to be fought for. It needs a Fight Club, not a Flight Club.”
Brother Abaris, The Illuminist Army

“The difference between a person of action and person of inaction is DIVINITY.”
Brother Spartacus, The Citizen Army

“This is not a tree-sitting Buddhist Movement. You have go get up from under the tree and do something! You have to get off Facebook and do something!”
Brother Spartacus, The Citizen Army

“Never forget, when you come to AC/GS, you are entering the dark, mysterious, complex, daunting, forbidding – but infinitely inspiring and perfect world – of INTJs. We can take you from Cimmeria to Hyperborea. Do not expect an easy ride. Don’t bring emotionalism and irrationalism. Let the most powerful ideas in the world wash over you and enlighten you. And then help us make our vision even brighter, enough to light up this whole benighted world.”
Brother Spartacus, The Citizen Army

Anthony T. Hincks
“Time is made up of movements.”
Anthony T. Hincks

Kenneth S. Cohen
[Why waste energy with wasted movements?]
Very commonly, tightening and furrowing the brow while concentrating... Is the brain a muscle that works better by tensing the skull?”
Kenneth S. Cohen, The Way of Qigong: The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healing

Umberto Eco
“The recovery of the outcasts demanded reduction of the privileges of the powerful, so the excluded who became aware of their exclusion had to be branded as heretics, whatever their doctrine. And for their part, blinded by their exclusion, they were not really interested in any doctrine. This is the illusion of heresy. Everyone is heretical, everyone is orthodox. The faith a movement proclaims doesn't count: what counts is the hope it offers. All heresies are the banner of a reality, an exclusion... Every battle against heresy wants only this: to keep the leper as he is.”
Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

Wajahat Ali
“You don't have to be a super soldier like Captain America or infused with photon energy like Captain Marvel to make an impact. In fact, deferring to a solitary hero or leader to save us from all our problems brings us authoritarians and strongmen. We tap out, wait on the sidelines, and outsource all the work.

When people come together around shared values, investing their time and talents to create solutions to a problem, that's when movement and change happen.”
Wajahat Ali, Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American

Marvin Cheung
“Movements are not merely an aggregation of individuals, but rather the outcome of a complex process of negotiation between individual and collective identities, contradictory pressures, as well as changing environments. They signal a transformation in the logic and processes that guide society, give shape to an emerging force, and challenge the legitimacy of power.”
Marvin Cheung, 5 Ideas from Global Diplomacy: System-wide Transformation Methods to Close the Compliance Gap and Advance the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals

SunDeep Mehra
“The most powerful movements the world will ever see haven't begun yet.”
SunDeep Mehra

Lawrence Nault
“Anger is quick, easy, and destructive. Rage waits like a mine—deadly if stepped on, but powerful if directed. Movements don’t rise from silence. They rise from fire.”
Lawrence Nault

Thomas Lu
“They have stopped to move and use their body in a way that a small child would do — and as a result have stopped to possess a body that a small child would own.”
Thomas Lu, The Personal Sustainability Handbook: 60+ Practices to Sustainabilize Your Health, Finances, Relationships and Beyond

Thomas Lu
“By staying true to your physical needs and keeping your five limbs active, you’d become closer to an embodiment of health rather than an embodiment of frailty.”
Thomas Lu, The Personal Sustainability Handbook: 60+ Practices to Sustainabilize Your Health, Finances, Relationships and Beyond

Martin Luther King Jr.
“The biggest job in getting any movement off the ground is to keep together the people who form it. The task requires more than a common aim: it demands a philosophy that wins and holds the people's allegiance; and it depends upon open channels of communication between the people and their leaders.”
Martin Luther King Jr., Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story

Martin Luther King Jr.
“A mass movement of a militant quality that is not at the same time committed to nonviolence tends to generate conflict, which in turn breeds anarchy. The support of the participants and the sympathy of the uncommitted are both inhibited by the threat that bloodshed will engulf the community. This reaction in turn encourages the opposition to threaten and resort to force. When, however, the mass movement repudiates violence while moving resolutely toward its goal, its opponents are revealed as the instigators and practitioners of violence if it occurs. Then public support is magnetically attracted to the advocates of nonviolence while those who employ violence are literally disarmed by overwhelming sentiment against their stand.”
Martin Luther King Jr., Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story

Martin Luther King Jr.
“To become the instruments of a great idea is a privilege that history gives only occasionally.”
Martin Luther King Jr., Stride Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story

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