Electrical fire and the fire of greed kindle economies. In that flux, nations become digitized commodities on stock-exchange floors and on investors’ rating screens. A country becomes a product to be rated for its obedience to paying of deficits and debts.
B. W. POWENo rebellious heart is ever at ease with paths established by others.
More B. W. Powe Quotes
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If our dreams can last, then we could turn our time and place to gold.
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Here I find a puzzle of great beauty: Canada works well in practice, but just doesn’t work out in theory.
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No rebellious heart is ever at ease with paths established by others.
B. W. POWE -
Canada is like several puzzles that we are all working on at the same time. Everyone has a part to add, but no one has seen the whole picture yet.
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The corporatist-economic model of society appears to be governing us. Economists, often in the pay of transnationals, are deciding, for us, what democracy is, and will be.
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The Trojan War without Homer was nothing more than a battle over trade routes.
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Democracies should be a delirium of choices – more options, not fewer; more avenues to travel, not fewer.
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Each voice carries a portion of value, no matter how unpalatable or distasteful that voice may be: no one person, government, ideology, transnational, or religious institution can own and dominate the whole.
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The origin of corruption in politics is surely in the thought that you are the bearer of ultimate virtue.
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Charisma is a sign of the calling. Saints and pilgrims are defiantly moved by it.
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Certainty is usually a sign of pathology.
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A just society will appear less spectacular, and less clearly defined, than a society with totalitarian leadership, theocratic goals.
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Alienation and loneliness plant the seeds for rebellion and consciousness.
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We have to learn how to contact one another over an enormous land space, across five-and-a-half time zones, in what as once a wilderness of scattered settlements, in what is now a sprawl of suburban edge cities and satellite towns. Technology forges connections and disconnections here.
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There is, it seems, an unbridgeable chasm between the concerns of a Sri Aurobindo and a Pat Robertson.
B. W. POWE