-
Zeal without knowledge is fire without light. - Thomas Fuller,
M.D. (1732)
-
What we say to dogs: "Okay Ginger! I've had it! You stay out
of the garbage! Understand Ginger? Stay out of the garbage or
else!"
What they hear: "blah blah Ginger blah blah blah blah blah
Ginger blah blah blah blah blah blah" - The Far Side, Gary
Larson
-
You can not manage what you can not measure. - anon.
-
A bad decision is better than no decision at all. - anon.
-
If 50 million people say a foolish thing, it is still a
foolish thing. - Anatole France
-
People can be divided into three groups: Those who make things
happen, those who watch things happen, and those who wonder what
happened. - John W. Newbern
-
If a society can not help the many who are poor, it can not
save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy (1961)
-
You cannot shake hands with a clenched fist. - Indira
Ghandi
-
You don't win a war by dying for your country. You win it by
making the other poor dumb bastard die for his. - Gen. George S.
Patton (paraphrased)
-
Courage is not the absence of all fear, rather it is instead
the overcoming of that fear. - dks
-
Friends come and go, but enemies accumulate. - dks
-
It's not what you accomplish in this life that matters, it's
what you overcome. - Golfer Jonny Miller
-
If a person has no cause for which he is willing to give his
life, he stands for nothing. - Quentin Aanenson
-
The most important step in arriving at the right answer is in
asking the right question - Albert Einstein (paraphrased)
-
All change is not growth, as all movement is not forward. -
Ellen Glasgow
-
Bureaucracy is not an obstruction to democracy, but an
inevitable compliment to it. - Economist Joseph A. Schumpter
-
If you are going to sin, sin against God, not the bureaucracy.
God will forgive you, but the bureaucracy will not. - Admiral
Hyman Rickover
-
There are three roles that are required for things to get
done. The Visionary, to come up with the ideas. The Implementer,
to get things done. And the Chaplain, to put back the pieces of
people that the first two took apart. - Gen. Colin Powell
(paraphrased).
-
Never ascribe to malice that which is adequately explained by
incompetence. - Napoleon Bonaparte
-
The only freedom which deserves the name [is one that leaves]
each person as the proper guardian of his own health... - John
Stuart Mill
-
It's not that smart people don't make mistakes. It's that they
learn from them when they do. Stupid people just keep repeating
the same ones. - dks
-
I'm not a member of any organized political party. I'm a
Democrat. - Will Rogers
-
...[non-violent] non-cooperation with evil is as much a moral
obligation as is cooperation with good. - Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
-
Ignorance may be bliss, but it isn't a virtue. - Bob Lewis
(1999)
-
My mind is terribly wasted. - Quayle for President 2000 as
quoted by Spencer F. Katt
-
The best way to predict the future is to invent it. - Alan
Kay
-
Linux is free only if your time has no value. - Jamie
Zawinski
-
You are grownup not when you can take care of yourself, but
rather when you can take care of others. - anon.
-
Be not the first by whom the new are tried, nor yet the last
to lay the old aside. - Alexander Pope (1709)
-
Decisions are tools to remove confusion. - Brian Valentine,
Microsoft
-
You must be an intellectual. No ordinary person would believe
that. - George Orwell
-
Knowing the difference between right and wrong is the easy
part. It's the choosing of right over wrong that is so difficult.
- dks
-
Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice;
it is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved.
- William James Bryant
-
You may fly over a land forever; you may bomb it, atomize it,
pulverize it and wipe it clean of life -- but if you desire to
defend it, protect it, and keep it for civilization, you must do
this on the ground, the way the Roman legions did, by putting
your young men in the mud. - T.R. Fehrenbach
-
A great many people think they are thinking when they are
merely rearranging their prejudices. - William James
(1842-1910)
-
A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a
superficial appearance of being right. - Thomas Paine - Common
Sense
-
A people that values its privileges above its principles soon
loses both. - Dwight D. Eisenhower
-
Christianity has not been tried and found wanting. It has been
found difficult and left untried. - G. K. Chesterton
-
A good plan, violently executed now, is better than a perfect
plan next week. - George S. Patton, General
-
Every major horror of history was committed in the name of an
altruistic motive. - Ayn Rand
-
I don't know with what weapons World War III will be fought,
but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. - Albert
Einstein
-
Discovery consists in seeing what everyone else has seen and
thinking what no one else has thought. - Albert Szent-Gyorgi,
1937 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine
-
The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology
look respectable. - John Kenneth Galbraith
-
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then is not an act,
but a habit. - Aristotle
-
I have come to the conclusion that one useless man is called a
disgrace, two men are called a law firm, and three or more become
a Congress. - Attributed to John Adams in the play "1776"
-
Truth -- and we could say freedom -- is seldom found in
extremes. - Anon.
-
The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he
must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war. -
General Douglas MacArthur
-
Production is making things. Yield is making things that work.
- Robert X. Cringely (2000).
-
...the way to maximize yields is not to aim for zero defects
but for zero variation. - Robert X. Cringely (2000).
-
We suffer as a society and a culture when we don't pay the
true value of goods and services delivered. We create a lack of
production. Less good music is recorded if we remove the
incentive to create it. - Singer Courtney Love (2000)
-
Four things belong to a judge: to hear courteously; to answer
wisely; to consider soberly; and to decide impartially. -
Socrates
-
...it [advertising] takes real needs and desires and says they
are only satisfied by purchasing products. So what's real about
advertising is its appeals. What's false about advertising is the
answers it provides to those appeals. - Sut
Jhally (2000)
-
Let us speak, though we show all our faults and weaknesses -
for it is a sign of strength to be weak, to know it, and out with
it... - Herman Melville
-
...the future business of businesses that have a future will
be about subtle differences, not wholesale conformity; about
diversity, not homogeneity; about breaking rules, not enforcing
them; about pushing the envelope, not punching the clock; about
invitation, not protection; about doing it first, not doing it
"right"; about making it better, not making it perfect; about
telling the truth, not spinning bigger lies; about turning people
on, not "packaging" them; and perhaps above all, about building
convivial communities and knowledge ecologies, not leveraging
demographic sectors. - The Cluetrain
Manifesto : The End of Business As Usual by Christopher
Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger
-
Good programmers know what to write. Great ones know what to
rewrite (and reuse). -
Eric S. Raymond
-
Perfection (in design) is achieved not when there is nothing
more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away.
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
-
In politics, you are who you pretend to be. - Michael Kinsley
(2000)
-
Restlessness and discontent are the first necessities of
progress. - Thomas Edison
-
You've got to get to the stage in life where going for it is
more important than winning or losing. - Arthur Ashe
-
I not only use all the brains I have, but all I can borrow. -
Woodrow Wilson
-
Eating words has never given me indigestion. - Winston
Churchill
-
It takes less time to do a thing right than it does to explain
why you did it wrong. - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
-
Nothing exists except atoms and empty space; everything else
is opinion. - Diogenes Laertius
-
...for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen
is eternal. - II Corinthians 4:18
-
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc
-
Cogito ergo sum - Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
-
We don't ask who is your boss, we ask to whom you are
reporting. - Nokia's Director of Technology Policy - Erkki
Ormala
-
To the man who wants to use a hammer badly, a lot of things
look like nails that need hammering. - Mark Twain (1835-1910)
-
You make the road by walking it. - Puanani Burgess
-
The nation behaves well if it treats the natural resources as
assets which it must turn over to the next generation increased,
and not impaired, in value. - Theodore Roosevelt
-
The success of America has never been proven by cities of
gold, but by citizens of character. Men and women who work hard,
dream big, love their family, serve their neighbor. Values that
turn a piece of earth into a neighborhood, a community, a chosen
nation. - George W. Bush
-
A child doesn't learn a lesson because parents get upset and
talk, but because parents do something. - A Mother
-
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics
are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of
doubts. - Bertrand Russell, quoted in the book A Word a Day
-
Comfort the troubled; trouble the comfortable. - Dietrich
Bonhoeffer
-
Knowledge itself is power (Ipsa scientia potestas
est). - Francis Bacon
-
A people who mean to be their own governors must arm
themselves with the power that knowledge gives. A popular
government without popular information or the means of acquiring
it is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy or perhaps both. -
Letter from James Madison to W. T. Barry, August 4, 1822 in
Padover 1953. Quoted in Carpenter 1995.
-
Man's capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man's
inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary. - Reinhold
Niebuhr
-
On norms of reciprocity: If you don't go to anybody's funeral,
they won't come to yours. - Yogi Berra
-
In a fight between a bear and an alligator, what determines
the victor is the terrain. - Marc Andreessen
-
All I know is that first you've got to get mad. You've got to
say, I'm a human being, goddammit! My life has value! So I want
you to get up now. I want all of you to get up out of your
chairs. I want you to get up right now and go to the window, open
it, and stick your head out, and yell, 'I'm as mad as hell, and
I'm not going to take this anymore! - Howard Beale, in "Network",
by Paddy Chayevsky
-
Quality is determined not by what the consumer is willing to
pay for; rather, quality is determined by the competition. Only
if there is economic incentive to do so will a company build a
better mouse trap. -
Brent Melson, senior test designer at NSTL (formerly National
Software Test Lab).
-
For everyday work, my Linux client is 99% promise and 1%
delivery. - Doc Searls, Senior Editor, Linux Journal
-
To realize that our knowledge is ignorance, this is a noble
insight. To regard our ignorance as knowledge, this is mental
sickness. -- Tao Teh Ching
-
Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid
people... it is true that most stupid people are conservatives. -
John Stuart Mill
-
Good organization is a technology in its own right, is as
powerful a force multiplier as any machine - and far cheaper,
too! - Shafritz and Russell (1997)
-
Downsizing [in and of itself] is like removing grains from a
pile of sand: afterward, it's still a pile of sand. Reinvention
is like mixing the sand with carbon or magnesium and blasting it
with intense heat: afterward, it is pure silicon. - David Osborne
and Peter Plastrik in Banishing Bureaucracy
-
If the press is not free, if speech is not independent and
untrammeled, if the mind is shackled or made impotent through
fear, it makes no difference under what form of government you
live, you are a subject and not a citizen. - William E. Borah, US
Senator, Idaho(R) from 1903 to his death in 1940.
-
I'm describing in a paragraph what took 14 hours to figure out
[CSS implementation to replace tables]. You may want to sniff
glue for a while, then reread this when you get out of rehab. -
Jeffrey
Zeldman
-
When one door closes, another opens: but we often look so long
and regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one
which has opened for us. - Alexander Graham Bell
-
He who lives must be prepared for change. - Goethe
-
I never gain by sacrifice that which I can gain by strategy. -
General Douglas McArthur.
-
It isn't the changes that do you in, it's the transitions.
Change is not the same as transition. Change is
situational: the new site, the new boss, the new team roles, the
new policy. Transition is the psychological process
people go through to come to terms with the new situation. Change
is external, transition is internal. - William Bridges
-
Conservatism is the worship of dead revolutions. - Clinton
Rossiter
-
One doesn't discover new lands without consenting to lose
sight of the shore for a very long time. - Andre Gide
-
Form ever follows function. - Louis Henri Sullivan as quoted
in "Seamless Government", by Russell M. Linden
-
Success in the future will depend on businesses that produce
products and services that give an innovative and unique response
to the customer or client in the market place. - Peter Block in
Stewardship
-
At some point each of us has to discover that our
self-interest is better served by doing good work than getting
good things. - Peter Block, ibid.
-
The promise of America is opportunity, not guarantee. --
Abraham Lincoln
-
In business, men do not arrive at totalitarian methods because
they are evil, but because they wish to do the good in what seems
to them the most efficient way, or because they wish merely to
survive, or with no more evil intent than to prosper. - Earl
Shorris in Scenes from Corporate Life
-
The customer is the purpose of our work, and not an
interruption to it. -- anon.
-
It is a myth that people resist change. People resist what
other people make them do, not what they themselves choose to do.
. . . That's why companies that innovate successfully year after
year seek their people's ideas, let them initiate new projects
and encourage more experiments." Rosabeth Moss Kanter, in The
Vineyard Gazette, Summer, 1997.
-
A financial analyst once asked me if I was afraid of losing
control of our organization. I told him I've never had control
and I never wanted it. If you create an environment where the
people truly participate, you don't need control. They know what
needs to be done, and they do it. And the more that people will
devote themselves to your cause on a voluntary basis, a willing
basis, the fewer hierarchs and control mechanisms you need...I
have always believed that the best leader is the best server. And
if you're a servant, by definition you're not controlling.
My best lesson in leadership came during my early days as a
trial lawyer. Wanting to learn from the best, I went to see two
of the most renowned litigators in San Antonio try cases. One sat
there and never objected to anything, but was very gentle with
witnesses and established a rapport with the jury. The other was
an aggressive, thundering hell-raiser. And both seemed to win
every case. That's when I realized there are many different
paths, not one right path. That's true of leadership as well.
People with different personalities, different approaches,
different values succeed not because one set of values or
practices is superior, but because their values and practices are
genuine. And when you and your organization are true to
yourselves -- when you deliver results and a singular experience
-- customers can spot it from 30,000 feet. -
Herb Kelleher, Southwest Airlines
-
Nothing is more certain than the indispensable necessity of
government, and it is equally undeniable, that whenever and
however it is instituted, the people must cede to it some of
their natural rights in order to vest it with requisite powers.
It is well worthy of consideration therefore, whether it would
conduce more to the interest of the people of America that they
should, to all general purposes, be one nation, under one federal
government, or that they should divide themselves into separate
confederacies, and give to the head of each the same kind of
powers which they are advised to place in one national
government. - John Jay, Federalist Papers No. 2
-
Yamato damashi - "Go for broke"
-
The game plan here is not to get more people in prison. The
game plan here is to try to reduce crime. - Kentucky Rep. Robert
D. Wilkey
-
A truly brilliant man would find a way not to go to war. -
Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, after being congratulated on
his brilliant attack on Pearl Harbor. Quoted from the film,
Pearl Harbor
-
Our dignity as persons is wrapped up in our autonomy and our
ability to control who has access to us, whether physical contact
or video surveillance. If we cannot live our daily lives without
our every innocent and trivial movement being recorded and
analyzed by government agents, then we have lost something
significant. To the extent that the government spies on us, it
can control us. -
Carlton Vogt
-
If we think [the people] not enlightened enough to exercise
their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to
take it from them, but to inform their discretion. - Thomas
Jefferson.
-
Those who deny freedom to others, deserve it not themselves. -
Abraham Lincoln, April 1856
-
Contemporary public servants are neither martyrs nor saints;
they are simply individuals charged with making collective
decisions and enforcing previous decisions on behalf of the
public interest. - B. Guy Peters, The Future of
Governing, pg. 2
-
The failure to understand the logical basis of reforms and to
make them compatible with what else is being tried in a
government is a prescription for failure, and perhaps even worse.
That is, implementing incompatible reforms can lead to negative
synergy as easily as it can to positive synergy, or more easily,
and with that to an actual reduction in the effectiveness of
government. - ibid, pg 64
-
Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept
from others. - Jon Postel
-
The public good, is in nothing more essentially interested
than in the protection of every individual's private rights. -
Blackstone
-
[s]ocial intervention becomes a race between the ingenuity of
the regulatee and the loophole closing of the regulator, with a
continuing expansion in the volume of regulations as the outcome.
- economist Charles Schultze in Public Use of Private
Interest, pg. 57
-
The costs of bureaucracy - a preference for procedure over
purpose or seeking the lowest common denominator - may emerge in
a different light when viewed as part of the price paid for
predictability of agreement over time among diverse groups. -
Jeffrey Pressman and Aaron Wildavsky in Implementation
pg. 133
-
When a place gets crowded enough to require IDs, social
collapse is not far away. - the character "Lazarus Long" in
Robert A. Heinlein's Time Enough for Love
-
Once one agrees to share a canoe with a bear, it is extremely
difficult to get him out without obtaining his agreement or
getting wet. - A old proverb.
-
No single actor, public or private, has all [the] knowledge
and information required to solve complex dynamic and diversified
problems; no actor has sufficient overview to make the
application of needed instruments effective. - Jan Koomiman in
Governance and Governability: Using Complexity, Dynamics and
Diversity. 1993
-
Start where you are; use what you have; do what you can. -
Arthur Ashe
-
Qu'ils mangent de la brioche. Let them eat cake.
-
When you can measure what you are speaking about and express
it in numbers, you know something about it. - British physicist
Lord Kelvin (1824-1907)
-
We specialize because we can't know everything. We delegate
because we can't run everything. Today it's important that we
abstract because recent history has forced us to accept that
everything is temporary. That's neither deep nor bleak, just
true. People change jobs, companies change hands, customers
change loyalties, partnerships are broken and made, and the
vendor you favor today could do something stupid tomorrow. Except
in rare and unpredictable cases, your company's individual
technology choices will not change how your customers, partners,
and suppliers behave. - Tom
Yager
-
We have gone forth from our shores repeatedly over the last
hundred years and we've done this as recently as the last year in
Afghanistan and put wonderful young men and women at risk, many
of whom have lost their lives, and we have asked for
nothing except enough ground to bury them in, and
otherwise we have returned home to seek our own, you know, to
seek our own lives in peace, to live our own lives in peace. But
there comes a time when soft power or talking with evil will not
work where, unfortunately, hard power is the only thing that
works. US Secretary of State
Colin Powell before the World Economic Forum
-
For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear,
simple, and wrong. - H. L. Mencken
-
The advantage of a free market is that it allows millions of
decision-makers to respond individually to freely determined
prices, allocating resources - labor, capital and human ingenuity
- in a manor that can't be mimicked by a central plan, however
brilliant the central planner. - Freidrich von Hayek
-
It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once. -
David Hume
-
Life is a battle with the phantoms of the mind. - Isben
-
Six rules for winning people to your side: 1. Treat everyone
you meet as though he or she is important. 2. Be friends. 3. Let
the other person do the talking. Be a good listener. 4. Don't
argue. You may win a point, but you will lose a friend. 5. Put
yourself in the person's shoes. 6. Practice finding good in
others.
-
Commandments for parents: 1. You will break no promises. 2.
You will not be over-protective, but allow your child to learn
from his own mistakes. 3. You will teach your child by example,
as well as by precepts. 4. You will instill no fears in your
child. 5. You will try to earn his love by being fair, with humor
and understanding. 6. You will not force your child to develop
into your own image, but allow him to become the best person his
own nature permits.
-
We thank Thee for this place in which we dwell; for the love
that unites us; for the peace accorded us this day; for the hope
with which we expect the morrow; for the health, the work, the
food and bright skies that make our lives delightful; for our
friends in all parts of the earth and our friendly helpers in
this isle. Give us courage and gaiety and the quiet mind. - A
prayer by Robert Louis Stevenson, written while in Honolulu.
-
Information without argument, is meaningless - and it produces
a culture of satisfied sheep. - unknown
-
I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one
who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket
fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who
hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed. This
world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the
sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of
its children. This is not a way of life at all in any true sense.
Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a
cross of iron. - U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower
-
If you want to go in one direction, the best route may involve
going in the other. Paradoxical as it sounds, goals are more
likely to be achieved when pursued indirectly. So the most
profitable companies are not the most profit-oriented, and the
happiest people are not those who make happiness their main aim.
The name of this idea? Obliquity - John
Kay
-
We try never to forget that medicine is for the people. It is
not for the profits. The profits follow, and if we have
remembered that, they have never failed to appear. The better we
have remembered it, the larger they have been. - George Merck
-
Those only are happy who have their minds fixed on some object
other than their own happiness... aiming thus at something else,
they find happiness by the way. - John Stuart Mill
-
Bad news travels First Class, good news walks. - dks
-
The central conservative truth is that it is culture, not
politics, that determines the success of a society. The central
liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it
from itself. - Pat Moynihan
-
The central debate in advertising is not "creative vs
strategic". The debate is "quality vs quantity". What kind of
conversation do you want to have with whom, and how much is it
going to cost? -
Hugh Macleod
-
War, including and especially technological war, is an
operation primarily against the will of the opponent. - Colonel
Francis X. Kane, USAF (Ret) in
The Technological War , Air University Review, July-August
1972.
-
"Why, of course, the people don't want war. Why would some
poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best
that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one
piece. Naturally, the common people don't want war; neither in
Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in
Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of
the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple
matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a
fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist
dictatorship."
"There is one difference," I pointed out. "In a democracy the
people have some say in the matter through their elected
representatives, and in the United States only Congress can
declare wars."
"Oh, that is all well and good, but, voice or no voice, the
people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That
is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked
and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing
the country to danger. It works the same way in any country."
Reich-Marshall Hermann Göring in Gilbert, G.M.
Nuremberg Diary. New York: Farrar, Straus and Company,
1947 (pp. 278-279) as quoted in Snopes.com.
-
I believe God made me for a purpose. But He also made me fast.
And when I run, I feel His pleasure. To win is to honor Him. -
Scottish Olympian Eric Liddell from the movie Chariots of
Fire.
-
The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the
federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain
in the State governments are numerous and indefinite. . . . The
powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the
objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the
lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal
order, improvement, and prosperity of the State. - The Federalist
No. 45, pp. 292-293 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (J. Madison).
-
The real evil isn't the Hitler. The evil is the good German.
The evil is all those people who could've...stopped it. - Law
professor Larry Lessig (referring to an alleged pedophile).
-
In the last few years, we've stumbled. We stumbled at the
death of the president, the war, and on and on. When you stumble
a lot you tend to look at your feet. Now we have to make people
lift their eyes back to the horizon and see the line of ancestors
behind us saying, "Make my life have meaning," and to our
inheritors before us saying, "create the world we will live in."
Commander of Babylon 5 - John Sheridan.
Preach the gospel at all times. Use words if necessary. - St. Francis