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Thought

David Barker

The law of supply and demand applies to tomatoes and also to ideas. Demand for research that bolsters arguments for bad policy leads to supply of research. Truth provides some constraints but doesn’t always prevail.

David Barker, “Climate Alarmists’ Bad Science,” Wall Street Journal (April 3, 2024.
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Thought

Friedrich Schlegel

There are people with whom everything they consider a means turns mysteriously into an end.

Friedrich Schlegel, Philosophical Fragments, P. Firchow, trans. (1991) § 428.
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Thought

Fernando Pessoa

Having touched Christ’s feet is no excuse for punctuation mistakes.

Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet, Richard Zenith, translator.
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Thought

Georg Simmel

The series of natural phenomena could be described in their entirety without mentioning the value of things; and our scale of valuation remains meaningful, whether or not any of its objects appear frequently or at all in reality. Value is an addition to the completely determined objective being, like light and shade, which are not inherent in it but come from a different source.

Georg Simmel, this passage translated by David Frisby, The Philosophy of Money (1978), § ““Freedom as the articulation of the self in the medium of things” from the chapter “Synthetic Part: Individual Freedom.”
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James Howard Kunstler

The two traditional political divisions, liberal and conservative died with Covid. Now there are simply the sane versus the insane. The sane have had enough of being pushed around by the insane. The insane don’t register much of what reality tries to tell them. They have a body of insane ideas to comfort and protect them from reality’s rigors. To call that body of ideas an “ideology” is way too polite.

James Howard Kunstler, “Wake-up Call,” March 22, 2024.
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Thought

Bob Hope

No one party can fool all of the people all of the time; that’s why we have two parties.