Future Forum - Germany's discussion board for Drum & Bass and urban music  

Zurück   Future Forum > Sonstiges > Sonstiges, offtopic...

Antwort
 
Themen-Optionen Thema durchsuchen Ansicht
Alt 23.12.2005, 00:19   #1
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
tolle signaturen

signaturen sind ein vielseitiges thema

hab zb die hier ganz lustig gefunden:

Zitat:
Zitat von C-Wee
Halten Sie sich doch aus meiner Psychose raus!
und irgendwo hab ich dazu auch folgendes gelesen:

Zitat:
Zitat von Silent Darkness
also mit deiner signatur haste eh keine chance.....zwerg

ziemlich kontrovers

Zitat:
Signatur
aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche
Der Begriff Signatur (von lateinisch: signatura) bezeichnet

eine Unterschrift,
einen kurzen Textabschnitt unter E-Mails und Usenet-Beiträgen, siehe Signature,
eine Aufschrift, auch: ein auf das Rezept oder die Verpackung geschriebener Hinweis zum Gebrauch einer Arznei,
im Bibliothekswesen und Archivwesen die Standortbezeichnung einer Bestandseinheit: Signatur (Dokumentation),
geschäftlich ein Kurzzeichen anstelle einer vollständigen Unterschrift,
in der Kartographie ein Kartenzeichen zur Angabe von Art und Lage von topographischen Objekten oder anderen mit der Erdoberfläche in Zusammenhang stehenden Erscheinungen, siehe Signatur (Kartographie),
in der Kunst die Urheberangabe eines Künstlers auf seinem Werk,
im Druckwesen eine als Hilfe beim Setzen dienende Markierung (in Form einer Einkerbung) an einer Drucktype,
im Buchwesen eine Ziffer oder Buchstabe auf dem unteren Rand eines Druckbogens zur Bezeichnung der beim Binden zu beachtenden Reihenfolge der Bogen,
in der frühneuzeitlichen Signaturenlehre als Zeichen verstandene Eigenschaften natürlicher Phänomene,
in der Mathematik (Lineare Algebra) bezeichnet die Signatur einer Matrix ein Zahlentripel, dessen Elemente von den Eigenwerten der Matrix abhängen, siehe Signatur (Lineare Algebra),
in der Datenverarbeitung ist eine digitale „Signatur“ eine elektronische Unterschrift, mit der Integrität und Authentizität digitaler Dokumente nachgewiesen werden können,
im Zusammenhang mit Computerviren ein eindeutiges Merkmal zur Identifizierung derselben, siehe Virensignatur,
in der Programmierung die Definition einer Methode oder Funktion, die aus Methodenname und Parametern besteht. In der objektorientierten Programmierung beschreibt die Menge aller öffentlichen Signaturen die Schnittstelle einer Klasse.
die Apostolische Signatur ist das höchstes Gericht der römischen Kurie.
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Sponsored Links
Alt 23.12.2005, 00:22   #2
Silent Darkness
Guest
 
Beiträge: n/a
?????

  Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 00:25   #3
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
Zitat:
Zitat von Silent Darkness

nönö

nix langweilig

oder n bissl

spielen grad durak
und ich bin schon wieder als erster fertig
nur gut dass mir das sonst nie passiert
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 00:30   #4
~miss~d~a~
Platinum Head
 
Benutzerbild von ~miss~d~a~
 
Registriert seit: 03.07.2002
Ort: In The Heart of Manhattan and Hamburch City, Baby!
Beiträge: 4.646
gibts hier zwar nicht, aber trotzdem toll:


irgendwann ist jeder mann ein jedermann



__________________
NATURAL BORN CORE

(¯`·._.· music is taking you from everyday life`s darkness into the brightness of eternity ·._.·´¯)
~miss~d~a~ ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 00:31   #5
Chris1202
Moderator
 
Benutzerbild von Chris1202
 
Registriert seit: 25.07.2002
Ort: Frankfurzt
Beiträge: 8.646
gute n8
__________________
http://www.nsf-music.de/


Einen Ohrgasmus erkennst Du am rhythmischen Zucken der Muschel beim Eindringen ganz spezieller Klänge.
Chris1202 ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 01:10   #6
baze.djunkiii
Guest
 
Beiträge: n/a
keine sig. aber n altes klograffito aus den frühen 80ern

nur weil du nicht paranoid bist, heisst das nicht das sie nicht doch hinter dir her sind
  Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 01:14   #7
cygn
Platinum Head
 
Benutzerbild von cygn
 
Registriert seit: 03.07.2003
Beiträge: 4.483
Zitat:
"Was ist der Sinn einer Sig.?" - "Tja. Das kann ich Dir jetzt auch
gerade nicht sagen. Aber eine Gute Frage. Darf ich die als Signatur
verwenden?" (Joachim Jäger und Nils Ketelsen in de.newusers.questions)
Zitat:
Oft frage ich mich, ob meine Erinnerung sich nicht im Laufe der Zeit
verklärt und früher wirklich vieles besser war. Dann setze ich mich hin,
recherchiere und stelle meist fest: "Mist! Es war wirklich besser!".
[Benedict Mangelsdorff in ger.ct]
Zitat:
Es ist schwierig, mit pauschalisiernden Gesprächspartern zu
kommunizieren. (Lutz Donnerhacke, de.soc.netzkultur, 29.1.1999)
Zitat:
2. Gesetz der Themendynamik: Zwei Themen koennen nicht gleichzeitig
denselben Raum einnehmen. Versuchen sie es, so ist dem aelteren Thema
der Sitzplatz anzubieten. (Horst Hoffmann in de.talk.jokes.d)
Zitat:
Cut and Paste ersetzt kein Denken. (Holger Koepke in de.alt.arnooo)
Zitat:
Eine Hälfte der Netzteilnehmer versteht die Ironie nicht, die zweite
Hälfte sieht Ironie ungern, weil dann ja die erste falsch reagieren
könnte, und der Rest ist dünn gesät. (Ulrich F. Heidenreich in dang)
Zitat:
Spammer sind nicht unbedingt dumm, sie sind nur ausgeprägt asozial. Es
gibt hochintelligente Arschlöcher, aber deshalb bleiben sie trotzdem
ein Arschloch. [Hanno Müller in dan-am, 22.10.2002]
Zitat:
Du gottverdammter Dummfick und Dreckslügner!
[Klaus "D.A.G." Ketelaer, dag°, 29.9.2003]
Zitat:
Da denkt man sich nichts dabei, wenn man etwas in den Tastertur gibt
und ehe man sich versieht, taucht dieses dann in irgendeiner Sig auf. (Mickey Kottenhahn in detebe)
Zitat:
Manche Leute siggen auch jeden Scheiß.
[Michael Hoffmann, dag°, 4.6.2001]
Zitat:
Wenn's dir nicht paßt, dann wirst du pampig und bekommst Copy+Paste-
Anfälle. (Michael Briel zu Guenter Lelarge)
Zitat:
> Nicht alles, was hinkt, ist ein Vergleich.
Und nicht alles, was blöd klingt, ist ein Argument.
[Sabine Schulz + Thomas Hühn, de.admin.net-abuse.news, 9.10.2003]
Zitat:
Selbst Optimisten müssen irgendwann eingestehen, dass Murphy Recht
hatte. [Can Filip Sakrak, de.alt.recovery.webauthor, 25.10.2003]
Zitat:
Bald werden die Lehrer sogar auf DVD umschwenken müssen, weil
nachwachsende Schülergenerationen ihnen den Umgang mit dem
Videorecorder nicht mehr erklären können.
[Michael Hemmer, de.etc.sprache.deutsch, 22.12.2003]
Der Text, den du eingegeben hast, ist zu kurz. Bitte erweitere den Text auf die minimale Länge von 5 Zeichen.
cygn ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 11:17   #8
soundsurfer
Hardcore Head
 
Benutzerbild von soundsurfer
 
Registriert seit: 15.01.2004
Beiträge: 8.534
nichts ist so schlimm, das hemmt, wie ein furz, der klemmt.
soundsurfer ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 12:06   #9
Mr.Ez
Silver Head
 
Registriert seit: 10.09.2004
Beiträge: 678
Mr.Ez ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.12.2005, 16:33   #10
AlexJungle
Diamond Head
 
Benutzerbild von AlexJungle
 
Registriert seit: 17.10.2002
Ort: Köln - Pfalz
Beiträge: 6.609
Wenn du trinkst dem fettarme Milsch kriegst du konkrete Fettarm
__________________
░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░
::JUNGLE SURFER KRU::
░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░░
AlexJungle ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 24.12.2005, 13:48   #11
fileas
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 17.10.2003
Ort: B
Beiträge: 2.484
Zitat:
Zitat von dawn.d
spielen grad durak und ich bin schon wieder als erster fertig

das geile russenspiel!!! schäää



habe vor kurzem eine signatur aus zeichen gesehen, mit 2 stilisierten händen die den mittelfinger zeigen... weiß nicht mehr vom wem, aber ist die geilste die ich kenn...
__________________
Niños del Sol
Rave ist kein Hobby
und ich hab nochn andern job
fileas ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 12.03.2006, 19:36   #12
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
grad beim s_move


Zitat:
__________________

it's now safe to turn of your government....
Zitat:
Zitat von Aeolho
wenn du ne taschenlampe nimmst und die ganz schnell hin und her schwenkst sieht der spot an der wand auch schnell aus wie ne linie / strich. das heisst noch lange nicht dass du deswegen ein lichtschwert in den händen hältst.

wo bei ich denke dass in dem fall eigentlich off heißen müsste
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 12.03.2006, 20:00   #13
saschberT
Metal Head
 
Registriert seit: 30.11.2005
Ort: Erfurt / Thuringia
Beiträge: 412
Mr.EZ seine signatur is auch nich schlecht.
__________________
... bist du HIGH???
hm ...heut is mittwoch ... nee da bin ich zu!
saschberT ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 12.03.2006, 20:00   #14
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
und kürzlich hab ich sogar einen gesehen
der hatte folgendes als signatur:

"#1597. Everything is deemed possible except that which is impossible in the nature of things." ~ California Civil Code, "Object of a Contract"


"#3528. The law respects form less than substance." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3529. That which ought to have been done is to be regarded as done." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3530. That which does not appear to exist is to be regarded as if it did not exist." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3532. The law neither does nor requires idle acts." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3533. The law disregards trifles." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3535. Contemporaneous exposition is in general the best." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3537. Superfluity does not vitiate." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"#3547. A thing continues to exist as long as is usual with things of that nature." ~ California Civil Code, "Maxims of Jurisprudence"


"'All holy piety in public, and all peeled grapes and self-indulgence in private.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"'He says gods like to see an atheist around. Gives them something to aim at.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"'I must've seen it in a USENET posting;' that's sort of like hearsay evidence from Richard Nixon..." ~ Blair Houghton


"'I'd like to know if I could compare you to a summer's day. Because ~ well, June 12th was quite nice, and...'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Wyrd Sisters_


"'If you put butter and salt on it, it tastes like salty butter.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, concerning popcorn, _Moving Pictures_


"'Right, you bastards, you're... you're geography.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Guards! Guards!_


"'That's right,' he said. 'We're philosophers. We think, therefore we am.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"'Who do you trust?' ~ depends on what you've got to lose." ~ mjr


"'Why do you bother with him? He's had thousands of people killed!'" "'Yes, but perhaps he thought that you wanted it.'" ~ Terry Pratchett


"'You are all a lost generation,' Gertrude Stein said. We weren't lost. We knew where we were, all right, but we wouldn't go home." ~ James Thurber


"'You can't trample infidels when you're a tortoise. I mean, all you could do is give them a meaningful look.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"'You pay for it before you eat it? What happens if it's dreadful?' 'That's why.'" ~ Terry Pratchett, _Moving Pictures_


"(My favorite version is on bagpipe, but you shouldn't be led by other people's perversions.)" ~ Dani Zweig


"... it is important to realize that any lock can be picked with a big enough hammer." ~ Sun System & Network Admin manual


"... nothing wrong with Southern California that a rise in the ocean level wouldn't cure." ~ Ross Macdonald


"...Yes, the lectures are optional. Graduation is also optional." ~ Professor Brian Quinn


"...and always remember the last words of my grandfather, who said 'A truck!'..." ~ Emo Philips


"...only drugs make you feel as good as people in TV ads appear to be." ~ Hakim Bey


"A book of quotations... can never be complete." ~ Robert M. Hamilton


"A book should serve as an axe to the ice inside us." ~ Franz Kafka


"A candour affected is a dagger concealed." ~ Marcus Aurelius


"A celibate clergy is an especially good idea, because it tends to suppress any hereditary propensity toward fanaticism." ~ Carl Edward Sagan


"A chic type, a rough type, an odd type ~ but never a stereotype." ~ Jean-Michel Jarre


"A city is a large community where people are lonesome together." ~ Herbert Prochnow


"A conservative is a man who sits and thinks, mostly sits." ~ Woodrow Wilson


"A critic is a gong at a railroad crossing clanging loudly and vainly as the train goes by." ~ Christopher Morley


"A critic is a man who knows the way but can't drive the car." ~ Kenneth Tynan


"A cult is a religion with no political power." ~ Tom Wolfe


"A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything, and the value of nothing." ~ Oscar Wilde


"A doctor can bury his mistakes but an architect can only advise his client to plant vines." ~ Frank Lloyd Wright


"A facility for quotation covers the absence of original thought." ~ Dorothy Leigh Sayers


"A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject." ~ Winston Churchill


"A fool's brain digests philosophy into folly, science into superstition, and art into pedantry. Hence University education." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"A free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular." ~ Adlai Stevenson


"A good bookshop is just a genteel Black Hole that knows how to read." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Guards! Guards!_


"A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street." ~ Doug Linder


"A government that is big enough to give you all you want is big enough to take it all away." ~ Barry Goldwater


"A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices." ~ William James


"A halo has to fall only a few inches to become a noose." ~ Farmers Almanac


"A jest often decides matters of importance more effectively and happily than seriousness." ~ Quintus Horatius Flaccus


"A jury consists of twelve persons chosen to decide who has the better lawyer." ~ Robert Frost


"A lady is always grateful for a sincere compliment, so long as you don't try to knock her down with it." ~ Mark Twain


"A language is a dialect with an army and a navy." ~ Max Weinreich


"A large section of the intelligentsia seems wholly devoid of intelligence." ~ G. K. Chesterton


"A little inaccuracy sometimes saves tons of explanation." ~ H. H. Munro (Saki)


"A machine is as distinctively and brilliantly and expressively human as a violin sonata or a theorem in Euclid." ~ Gregory Vlastos


"A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and gets to bed at night, and in between he does what he wants to do." ~ Bob Dylan


"A man must properly pay the fiddler. In my case it so happened that a whole symphony orchestra had to be subsidized." ~ John Barrymore


"A paranoid is a man who knows a little of what's going on." ~ William Burroughs


"A promiscuous person is someone who is getting more sex than you are." ~ Victor Lownes


"A room without books is like a body without a soul." ~ Marcus Tullius Cicero


"A school should not be a preparation for life. A school should be life." ~ Elbert Green Hubbard


"A sect or party is an elegant incognito devised to save a man from the vexation of thinking." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures." ~ Daniel Webster


"A successful tool is one that was used to do something undreamed of by its author." ~ S. C. Johnson


"A thing is not necessarily true because a man dies for it." ~ Oscar Wilde


"A university is what a college becomes when the faculty loses interest in students." ~ John Ciardi


"A witty saying proves nothing." ~ Voltaire


"A woman who thinks she is intelligent demands the same rights as man. An intelligent woman gives up." ~ Sidonie Gabrielle Colette


"A word to the wise is unnecessary." ~ La Rouchefoucauld


"AAAAAAAAAAAGH." ~ Angie


"Abuse of words has been the great instrument of sophistry and chicanery, of party, faction, and division of society." ~ John Adams


"Advertising copy. Where sentences are replaced by participle phrases. Noun phrases. And dangling conjunctions. Bleah." ~ K


"Advertising is a valuable economic factor because it is the cheapest way of selling goods, especially if the goods are worthless." ~ Sinclair Lewis


"Advertising may be described as the science of arresting human intelligence long enough to get money from it." ~ Stephen Butler Leacock


"Advertising reaches out to touch the fantasy part of people's lives. and you know, most people's fantasies are pretty sad." ~ Frederik Pohl


"Against the Word the unstilled world still whirled About the center of the silent Word." ~ T.S. Eliot


"Age is a high price to pay for maturity." ~ Tom Stoppard


"Ah! How sweet coffee tastes! Lovelier than a thousand kisses, sweeter far than muscatel wine! I must have coffee..." ~ J. S. Bach


"Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp ~ or what's a heaven for?" ~ Robert Browning


"Ah, the curiosity of youth. On the road to ruin! May it ever be so adventurous!" ~ _Orgy of the Dead_


"All Bibles are man-made." ~ Thomas Alva Edison


"All I ask of my body is that it carry around my head." ~ Thomas Alva Edison


"All I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"All children are morbid. It is their one saving grace." ~ Truman Capote


"All dogmas perish the thinking mind, especially ones you agree with." ~ Adam Richardson


"All great truths begin as blasphemies." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"All movements go too far." ~ Bertrand Russell


"All progress is based upon the universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income." ~ Samuel Butler


"All that is human must retrograde if it do not advance." ~ Edward Gibbon


"Almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of those whom we cannot resemble." ~ Samuel Johnson


"Almost all our faults are more pardonable than the methods we resort to to hide them." ~ Francois de La Rochefoucald


"Aluminum was once a precious metal." ~ Jules Verne


"America has been discovered before, but it has always been hushed up." ~ Oscar Wilde


"America is a large friendly dog in a small room. Every time it wags its tail it knocks over a chair." ~ Arnold Toynbee


"America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between." ~ Oscar Wilde


"America wasn't founded so that we could all be better. America was founded so we could all be anything we damn well please." ~ P.J. O'Rourke


"Americans are benevolently ignorant about Canada, while Canadians are malevolently well informed about the United States." ~ J. Bartlett Brebner


"Among those whom I like or admire, I can find no common denominator, but among those whom I love, I can: all of them make me laugh." ~ W. H. Auden


"An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. An inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered." ~ G. K. Chesterton


"An artist is a creature driven by demons. He don't usually know why they chose him and he's usually too busy to wonder why." ~ William Faulkner


"An intellectual is someone whose mind watches itself." ~ Albert Camus


"An unimaginable evil is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is merely good manners."


"An unimaginable toy is useful for breaking other toys. And your little dog, too!"


"Anarchism is founded on the observation that since few men are wise enough to rule themselves, even fewer are wise enough to rule others." ~ Edward Abbey


"And if you give us any more trouble, I shall visit you in the small hours and put a bat up your nightdress." ~ Basil Fawlty


"And it came to pass that in the hands of the ignorant, the words of the Bible were used to beat plowshares into swords." ~ Alan Wilson Watts


"And that's the world in a nutshell, an appropriate receptacle." ~ Stan Dunn


"And the heat goes on...where the hand has been." ~ Byrne/Eno


"And what can a poor boy do?" ~ Rolling Stones


"Andrew is so incredibly reliable that almost any printing command will work, as long as it is long and complex enough..." ~ Nathaniel Borenstein


"Any body of men who believe in hell will persecute whenever they have the power." ~ Joseph M. McCabe


"Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain ~ and most fools do." ~ Dale Carnegie


"Any idiot can face a crisis; it is this day-to-day living that wears you out." ~ Chekhov


"Any movement in history which attempts to perpetuate itself, becomes reactionary." ~ Josip Broz Tito


"Any synopsis of a good book is a stupid synopsis." ~ Michel Eyquem de Montaigne


"Anybody can be good in the country. There are no temptations there." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Anybody who thinks of going to bed before 12 o'clock is a scoundrel." ~ Samuel Johnson


"Anyone can do any amount of work provided it isn't the work he's supposed to be doing at that moment." ~ Robert Benchley


"Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Applause is the spur of noble minds, the end and aim of weak ones." ~ Charles Caleb Colton


"Architecture in general is frozen music." ~ Friedrich von Schelling


"Art is either plagiarism or revolution." ~ Paul Guaguin


"Art should never try to be popular. The public should try to make itself artistic." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Art, like morality, consists of drawing the line somewhere." ~ G.K. Chesterton


"Artificial intelligences make mistakes too, only faster." ~ Larry Wall


"As blushing will sometimes make a whore pass for a virtuous woman, so modesty may make a fool seem a man of sense." ~ Jonathan Swift


"As empty vessels make the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest blabbers." ~ Plato


"As soon as questions of will or decision or reason or choice of action arise, human science is at a loss." ~ Noam Chomsky


"Assassination is the extreme form of censorship." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"At the core of all well-founded belief, lies belief that is unfounded." ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein


"Bad law is more likely to be supplemented than repealed." ~ Dalin B. Oaks


"Be regular and orderly in your life, that you may be violent and original in your work." ~ Clive Barker


"Be wiser than other people if you can; but do not tell them so." ~ Lord Chesterfield


"Become who you are." ~ Nietzshe


"Belief in God? An afterlife? I believe in rock: this apodictic rock beneath my feet." ~ Edward Abbey


"Belief in the supernatural reflects a failure of the imagination." ~ Edward Abbey


"Belief is not the beginning but the end of all knowledge." ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


"Believe me! The secret of reaping the greatest fruitfulness and the greatest enjoyment from life is to live dangerously!" ~ Nietzsche


"Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it." ~ Andre Gide


"Better to write for yourself and have no public, than to write for the public and have no self." ~ Cyril Connolly


"Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it." ~ Donald E. Knuth


"Beware when the great God lets loose a thinker on this planet." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Bigamy is having one wife too many. Monogamy is the same." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Bigmac's brother was reliably believed to be in the job of moving video recorders around in an informal way." ~ Terry Pratchett


"Blaming 'society' makes it awfully easy for a person of weak character to shrug off his own responsibility for his actions." ~ Stanley Schmidt


"Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving words in evidence of the fact." ~ George Elliot


"Books aren't written to be believed in, but to be questioned." ~ Umberto Eco


"Bore: a man who is never unintentionally rude." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Brevity is the soul of lingerie." ~ Dorothy Parker


"Bring the little ones unto me, and I will get a good price for them." ~ Dr. Fegg's Encyclopeadia of _All_ World Knowledge


"But that's what being an artist _is_ ~ feeling crummy before everyone else feels crummy." ~ The New Yorker


"By appreciation, we make excellence in others our own property." ~ Voltaire


"By definition, a government has no conscience. Sometimes it has a policy, but nothing more." ~ Albert Camus


"By doing just a little every day, I can gradually let the task completely overwhelm me." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"Capital letters were always the best way of dealing with things you didn't have a good answer to." ~ Douglas Adams


"Cat food?!? I thought it was love, but I wouldn't want to keep on eating!"


"Cats don't hunt seals. They would if they knew what they were and where to find them. But they don't, so that's all right." ~ Terry Pratchett


"Censorship, like charity, should begin at home, but unlike charity, it should end there." ~ Clare Boothe Luce


"Chance favors only the prepared mind." ~ Louis Pasteur


"Change is inevitable in a progressive country. Change is constant." ~ Benjamin Disraeli


"Channeling is just bad ventriloquism. You use another voice, but people can see your lips moving." ~ Penn Jillette


"Chaos is the score upon which reality is written." ~ Henry Miller


"Chaos often breeds life when order breeds habit." ~ Henry Brooks Adams


"Chastity always takes its toll. In some it produces pimples; in others, sex laws." ~ Karl Kraus


"Children are like TV sets. When they start acting weird, whack them across the eyes with a big rubber basketball shoe." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"Children should neither be seen nor heard from ~ ever again." ~ W. C. Fields


"Christianity makes suffering contagious." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Civilization is a limitless multiplication of unnecessary necessities." ~ Mark Twain


"Civilization is a movement, not a condition; it is a voyage, not a harbor." ~ Arnold Joseph Toynbee


"Civilization is just a temporary failure of entropy." ~ Christine Nelson


"Civilization is the art of living in towns of such size that everyone does not know everyone else." ~ Julian Jaynes


"Civilization is the distance man has placed between himself and his excreta." ~ Brian Aldiss


"Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society." ~ Mark Twain


"College isn't the place to go for ideas." ~ Hellen Keller


"Colleges are places where pebbles are polished and diamonds are dimmed." ~ R.S. Ingersoll


"Colonies do not cease to be colonies because they are independent." ~ Benjamin Disraeli


"Come to think of it, there are already a million monkeys on a million typewriters, and Usenet is NOTHING like Shakespeare." ~ Blair Houghton


"Commandment Number One of any truly civilized society is this: Let people be different." ~ David Grayson


"Common sense is that layer of prejudices which we acquire before we are sixteen." ~ Albert Einstein


"Communication across the revolutionary divide is inevitably partial." ~ Thomas S. Kuhn


"Communism is like one big phone company." ~ Lenny Bruce


"Competence, like truth, beauty and contact lenses, is in the eye of the beholder." ~ Dr. Laurence Peter and Raymond Hull


"Conceptions without experience are void; experience without conceptions is blind." ~ Albert Einstein


"Confession is good for the soul only in the sense that a tweed coat is good for dandruff ~ it is a palliative rather than a remedy." ~ Peter De Vries


"Confusion is a word we have invented for an order which is not understood." ~ Henry Miller


"Conscience is the inner voice that warns us somebody is looking." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Conscience...is merely instinct socialized into guilt." ~ Robert Coover


"Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Correct English is the slang of prigs who write history and essays. And the strongest slang of all is the slang of poets." ~ George Eliot


"Crash programs fail because they are based on the theory that, with nine women pregnant, you can get a baby a month." ~ Wernher von Braun


"Cream rises to the top. So does fat." ~ Kelvin Throop III


"Creative minds have always been known to survive any kind of bad training." ~ Anna Freud


"Cross country skiing is great if you live in a small country." ~ Steven Wright


"Culture is the arts elevated to a set of beliefs." ~ Tom Wolfe


"Curiosity is the very basis of education and if you tell me that curiosity killed the cat, I say only the cat died nobly." ~ Arnold Edinborough


"Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis." ~ Jack Handy


"Damn all expurgated books; the dirtiest book of all is the expurgated book." ~ Walt Whitman


"Dare to be naive." ~ Richard Buckminster Fuller


"Daring ideas are like chessmen moved forward; they may be beaten, but they may start a winning game." ~ Goethe


"Dave, this is your second warning. Turn off the MIME in your mailer or I'll threaten you." ~ Greg Morrow


"Death comes along like a gas bill one can't pay." ~ Anthony Burgess


"Defined in psychological terms, a fanatic is a man who consciously overcompensates a secret doubt." ~ Aldous Huxley


"Deleted code has fewer bugs." ~ Xibo


"Democracy is a form of government that substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"Democracy is being allowed to vote for the candidate you dislike least." ~ Robert Byrne


"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Destiny is an invention of the cowardly and the resigned." ~ Ignazio Silone


"Dictators ride to and fro upon tigers which they dare not dismount. And the tigers are getting hungry." ~ Winston Churchill


"Dinner theater is anti-culture." ~ John Simon


"Disobedience is the true foundation of liberty. The obedient must be slaves." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"Do not fear death so much but rather the inadequate life." ~ Bertolt Brecht


"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law. Love is the law, love under will." ~ Aleister Crowley


"Do you know about the Eleventh Commandment? It says, 'Thou shalt not bore God, or he will destroy your universe.'" ~ John Lilly


"Do you love any, do you love none, do you love many, can you love one, Do you love me?" ~ Suzanne Vega


"Doctor, we did good, didn't we?" "Perhaps. Time will tell. Always does." ~ Ace and The Doctor


"Documentation is like sex: when it is good, it is very, very good; and when it is bad, it is better than nothing." ~ Dick Brandon


"Documentation is the castor oil of programming. Managers know it must be good because the programmers hate it so much." ~ Anonymous


"Dogma does not mean the absence of thought, but the end of thought." ~ Gilbert Keith Chesterton


"Don't be so humble, you're not that great." ~ Golda Meir


"Don't confuse the water with the pump." ~ Tom Wolfe


"Don't join the book burners. Don't think you are going to conceal thoughts by concealing evidence that they ever existed." ~ Dwight David Eisenhower


"Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd." ~ Voltaire


"Drawing on my fine command of language, I said nothing." ~ Mark Twain


"Dreaming permits each and every one of us to be quietly and safely insane every night of our lives." ~ William Dement


"Dying is a very dull, dreary affair. And my advice to you is to have nothing whatever to do with it." ~ William Somerset Maugham


"Early morning cheerfulness can be extremely obnoxious." ~ William Feather


"Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists." ~ John Kenneth Galbraith


"Education is a method whereby one acquires a higher grade of prejudices." ~ Laurence J. Peter


"Education is a weapon, whose effect depends on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed." ~ Joseph Stalin


"Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Education...has produced a vast population able to read but unable to distinguish what is worth reading." ~ George Macaulay Trevelyan


"Egotism is the anesthetic given by a kindly nature to relieve the pain of being a damned fool." ~ Bellamy Brooks


"Either this man is dead or my watch has stopped." ~ Groucho Marx


"Enlightened people seldom or never possess a sense of responsibility." ~ George Orwell


"Europe was created by history. America was created by philosophy." ~ Margaret Thatcher


"Every age and generation must be as free to act for itself, in all cases, as the ages and generations which preceeded it." ~ Thomas Paine


"Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved the absolute rejection of authority." ~ Thomas Henry Huxley


"Every law is an infraction of liberty." ~ Jeremy Bentham


"Every man alone is sincere. At the entrance of a second person, hypocrisy begins." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag and begin slitting throats." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Every religion goes through a period of zealous expansion 700 years after its founding. Linux just speeds things up on Internet Time Squared." ~ cdr


"Every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy." ~ Franz Kafka


"Every time I try to define a perfectly stable person, I am appalled by the dullness of that person." ~ J. D. Griffin


"Everybody experiences far more than he understands. Yet it is experience, rather than understanding, that influences behavior." ~ Marshall McLuhan


"Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects." ~ Will Rogers


"Everybody winds up kissing the wrong person good night." ~ Andy Warhol


"Everyone complains of his memory, but no one complains of his judgement." ~ Duc De La Rochefoucauld


"Everyone is as God has made him, and oftentimes a great deal worse." ~ Miguel De Cervantes


"Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself." ~ Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy


"Everyone wants to be Cary Grant. Even I want to be Cary Grant." ~ Cary Grant


"Everyone, in some small sacred sanctuary of the self, is nuts." ~ Leo Calvin Rosten


"Everything has a boolean value, if you stand far enough away from it." ~ Galena Alyson Canada


"Everything that can be said can be said clearly." ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein


"Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time." ~ Steven Wright


"Excess on occasion is exhilarating. It prevents moderation from acquiring the deadening effect of a habit." ~ W. Somerset Maugham


"Excuse me. This life isn't working. I want to exchange it." "Have you tried plugging it in?"


"Exhilaration is that feeling you get just after a great idea hits you, and just before you realize what's wrong with it." ~ Anonymous


"Experience is not what happens to you, it is what you do with what happens to you." ~ Aldous Huxley


"Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again." ~ Franklin P. Jones


"External reality is sort of an affectation of the nervous system." ~ Jaron Lanier


"Faith is often the boast of the man who is too lazy to investigate." ~ F.M. Knowles


"Faith: not *wanting* to know what is true." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Fame is a vapor; popularity an accident; the only earthly certainty is oblivion." ~ Mark Twain


"Fame is proof that people are gullible." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Fanaticism consists in redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim." ~ George Santayana


"Fantasy, abandoned by reason, produces impossible monsters; united with it, she is the mother of the arts and the origin of marvels." ~ Goya


"Fascism in America will attempt to advance under the banner of Americanism and anti-Fascism." ~ Georgi Dimitrov


"Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Fast, fat computers breed slow, lazy programmers." ~ Robert Hummel


"Fear is the parent of cruelty." ~ James Anthony Froude


"Few people can be happy unless they hate some other person, nation, or creed." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Finding out what goes on in the C.I.A. is like performing acupuncture on a rock." ~ New York Times


"Finishing a book is just like you took a child out in the back yard and shot it." ~ Truman Capote


"First things first, but not necessarily in that order." ~ The Doctor


"Five exclamation marks, the sure sign of an insane mind." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Reaper Man_


"Fools admire, but men of sense approve." ~ Alexander Pope


"For NASA, space is still a high priority." ~ Dan Quayle


"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." ~ Richard P. Feynman


"For every problem, there is one solution which is simple, neat and wrong." ~ H. L. Mencken


"For every prohibition you create you also create an underground." ~ Jello Biafra


"For every vision there is an equal and opposite revision." ~ Kelvin Throop III


"For flavor, instant sex will never supercede the stuff you have to peel and cook." ~ Quentin Crisp


"For forms of government, let fools contest... what e're's best administered, is best." ~ Alexander Pope


"For non-deterministic read 'Inhabited by pixies.'" ~ Anonymous


"For the last time, I'm not male! I'm HUMAN!" ~ Curt Siffert


"For what a man would like to to be true, that he more readily believes." ~ Francis Bacon


"For what is liberty but the unhampered translation of will into act?" ~ Dante Alighieri


"Forgive him, for he believes that the customs of his tribe are the laws of nature!" ~ George Bernard Shaw


"France was a long despotism tempered by epigrams." ~ Thomas Carlyle


"Freedom comes from human beings, rather than from laws and institutions." ~ Clarence Seward Darrow


"Freedom is just chaos with better lighting." ~ Alan Dean Foster


"Freedom of opinion can only exist when the government thinks itself secure." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one." ~ Abbott Joseph Liebling


"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose." ~ Janis Joplin


"From fanaticism to barbarism is only one step." ~ Denis Diderot


"Genius may have its limitations, but stupidity is not thus handicapped." ~ Elbert Green Hubbard


"Get your facts first; then you can distort them as you please." ~ Mark Twain


"Getting out of bed in the morning is an act of false confidence." ~ Jules Feiffer


"Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown will never be uprooted." ~ Vladimir Ilyich Lenin


"Given the choice between the experience of pain and nothing, I would choose pain." ~ William Faulkner


"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." ~ Napoleon Bonaparte


"Go ahead and do it; it is easier to apologize than to get permission." ~ Admiral Grace Hopper


"God created sex. Priests created marriage." ~ Voltaire


"God created the world out of nothing, but the nothingness still shows through." ~ Soren Aabye Kierkegaard


"God is a comic playing to an audience that's afraid to laugh." ~ Voltaire


"God is dead, but fifty thousand social workers have risen to take his place." ~ J. D. McCoughey


"Goldilocks is about property rights. Little Red Riding Hood is a tale of seduction, rape, murder, and cannibalism." ~ Bernard J. Hibbits


"Golf may be played on Sunday, not being a game within the view of the law, but being a form of moral effort." ~ Stephen Leacock


"Good art is not what it looks like, but what it does to us." ~ Roy Adzak


"Good men must not obey the laws too well." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Government should be concerned with anti-social conduct, not with utterances." ~ Justice William Orville Douglas


"Gravity is a habit that is hard to shake off." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"Great art is a irrational as great music. It is mad with its own loveliness." ~ George Jean Nathan


"Great ideas need landing gear as well as wings." ~ C. D. Jackson


"Grief can take care of itself; but to get the full value of a joy you must have somebody to divide it with." ~ Mark Twain


"Grief knits two hearts in closer bonds than happiness ever can; and common sufferings are far stronger links than common joys." ~ Alphonse de Lamartine


"Grown men do not need leaders." ~ Edward Abbey


"Guilt was the grease in which the wheels of the authority turned." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"HELO. My $name is sendmail.cf. You filled my spooldir. Prepare to VRFY." ~ Phil Homewood


"Half of the American people never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half." ~ Gore Vidal


"Happiness is having a large, loving, caring, close-knit family in another city." ~ George Burns


"Happiness is not something you experience, it's something you remember." ~ Oscar Levant


"Happiness is the interval between periods of unhappiness." ~ Don Marquis


"Happiness is the longing for repetition." ~ Kundera


"Has anybody ever seen a drama critic in the daytime? Of course not. They come out after dark, up to no good." ~ P. G. Wodehouse


"Hatred is gained as much by good works as by evil." ~ Niccolo Machiavelli


"Have the courage to be ignorant of a great number of things, in order to avoid the calamity of being ignorant of everything." ~ Sydney Smith


"Have you ever dated someone because you were too lazy to commit suicide?" ~ Judy Tenuta


"He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it." ~ Douglas Adams


"He hadn't a single redeeming vice." ~ Oscar Wilde


"He is one of those peple who would be enormously improved by death." ~ H. H. Munro


"He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever." ~ Old Chinese saying


"He who desires, but acts not, breeds pestilence." ~ William Blake


"He who has never hoped can never despair." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that." ~ John Stuart Mill


"He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news." ~ Bertolt Brecht


"He who will not reason is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool; and he who dares not, is a slave." ~ William Drummond


"He'd never realized that, deep down inside, what he really wanted to do was make things go splat." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Reaper Man_


"He's simply got the instinct for being unhappy highly developed." ~ H.H. Munro


"Hell hath no fury like a bureaucrat scorned." ~ Milton Friedman


"Hell is other people." ~ Jean-Paul Sartre


"Heresy is only another word for freedom of thought." ~ Graham Greene


"His hair was perfect." ~ Warren Zevon


"History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it." ~ Winston Churchill


"Hollywood is a place where people from Iowa mistake each other for movie stars." ~ Fred Allen


"Hollywood is a place where they place you under contract instead of under observation." ~ Walter Winchell


"Hope is the lease of submission." ~ Raoul Vaneigem


"How can one conceive of a one party system in a country that has over 200 varieties of cheese?" ~ Charles de Gaulle


"However, never daunted, I will cope with adversity in my traditional manner...sulking and nausea." ~ Tom K. Ryan


"Human folly does not impede the turning of the stars." ~ Tom Robbins, _Skinny Legs and All_


"Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe." ~ Herbert George Wells


"Human salvation lies in the hands of the creatively maladjusted." ~ Martin Luther King, Jr.


"Humanity either makes, or breeds, or tolerates all its afflictions." ~ Herbert George Wells


"Humankind cannot stand very much reality." ~ T. S. Eliot


"Humility is no substitute for a good personality." ~ Fran Lebowitz


"Humor is a drug which it's the fashion to abuse." ~ W. S. Gilbert


"I am a fan of automation // And I never carry cash." ~ Engines of Aggression


"I am always sorry when any language is lost, because languages are the pedigrees of nations." ~ Samuel Johnson


"I am an agnostic; I do not pretend to know what many ignorant men are sure of." ~ Clarence Darrow


"I am as frustrated with society as a pyromaniac in a petrified forest." ~ A. Whitney Brown


"I am not part of the problem; I am a Republican." ~ Dan Quayle


"I am the only person in the world I should like to know thoroughly." ~ Oscar Wilde


"I am the winter of your discontent. I am a pithed frog. OK, I can do without the rock-n-roll."


"I believe in God, only I spell it Nature." ~ Frank Lloyd Wright


"I believe in compulsory cannibalism. If people were forced to eat what they killed, there would be no more wars." ~ Abbie Hoffman


"I believe that genius is an infinite capacity for taking life by the scruff of the neck." ~ Christopher Quill


"I call that a scumhead." ~ James Joyce


"I came from a disadvantaged home. They were Republicans." ~ Paul Tsongas


"I cannot believe in a God who wants to be praised all the time." ~ Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche


"I cannot live without books." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"I didn't claw my way to the top of the food chain just to eat leaves!" ~ Michael Rivero


"I didn't even know what to do about it is to lose a mind. Or not to have to paint it."


"I didn't think; I experimented." ~ Wilhelm Roentgen


"I didn't understand this at first, but YOUR CONVINCING USE OF CAPITAL LETTERS HAS MADE IT ALL CLEAR TO ME." ~ J. Nairn


"I do not believe in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance." ~ Thomas Carlyle


"I do not believe the expenditure of $2.50 for a book entitles the purchaser to the personal friendship of the author." ~ Evelyn Waugh


"I do not find in orthodox Christianity one redeeming feature." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"I don't believe in psychology. I believe in good moves." ~ Bobby Fischer


"I don't care who does the electing as long as I get to do the nominating." ~ Boss Tweed


"I don't have any solution, but I certainly admire the problem." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"I don't have to choose, nyaah, nyaaah, nah nyaah nyaah." ~ Sandra Hereld


"I don't know why I did it, I don't know why I enjoyed it, and I don't know why I'll do it again." ~ Bart Simpson


"I don't use drugs, my dreams are frightening enough." ~ M. C. Escher


"I either want less corruption, or more chance to participate in it." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"I expect nothing. I fear no one. I am free." ~ Nikos Kazantzakis


"I hate quotations. Tell me what you know." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"I hate to see things done by halves. If it be right, do it boldly; if it be wrong, leave it undone." ~ Bernard Gilpin


"I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library." ~ Jorge Luis Borges


"I have found some of the best reasons I ever had for remaining at the bottom simply by looking at the men at the top." ~ Frank Moore Colby


"I have found you an argument: but I am not obliged to find you an understanding." ~ Samuel Johnson


"I have learned to use the word 'impossible' with the greatest caution." ~ Wernher von Braun


"I have my wedding to prepare, my wife to murder, and Guilder to frame for it. I'm swamped." ~ Prince Humperdink, _Princess Bride_


"I have never found, in a long experience of politics, that criticism is ever inhibited by ignorance." ~ Harold Macmillan


"I have never seen anything fill up a vacuum so fast and still suck." ~ Rob Pike, commenting on The X Window System


"I have opinions of my own ~ strong opinions ~ but I don't always agree with them." ~ George Herbert Walker Bush


"I just need enough to tide me over until I need more." ~ Bill Hoest


"I know but one freedom, and that is the freedom of the mind." ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupery


"I know that poetry is indispensable, but to what I could not say." ~ Jean Cocteau


"I like the word 'indolence'. It makes my laziness seem classy." ~ Bern Williams


"I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves." ~ August Strindberg


"I love acting. It is so much more real than life." ~ Oscar Wilde


"I love children, especially when they cry, for then someone takes them away." ~ Nancy Mitford


"I love deadlines. I love the whooshing sound they make as they fly by." ~ Douglas Adams


"I may not be totally perfect, but parts of me are excellent." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"I must decline your invitation owing to a subsequent engagement." ~ Oscar Wilde


"I never make stupid mistakes. Only very, very clever ones." ~ The Doctor


"I never resist temptation, because I have found that things that are bad for me do not tempt me." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"I once said cynically of a politician, 'He'll doublecross that bridge when he comes to it.'" ~ Oscar Levant


"I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." ~ Lily Tomlin


"I respect faith, but doubt is what gives you and education." ~ Wilson Mizner


"I said I _liked_ being half-educated; you were so much more _surprised_ at everything when you were ignorant." ~ Gerald Durrell


"I saw a sign: 'Rest Area 25 Miles.' That's pretty big. Some people must be really tired." ~ Steven Wright


"I see music as the augmentation of a split second of time." ~ Erin Cleary


"I sometimes think that God in creating man somewhat overestimated his ability." ~ Oscar Wilde


"I support comp.lang.awk for a few reasons: [...] It is very satisfying to be able to disagree with Tim Pierce." ~ Janet Rosenbaum


"I swear, if you existed I'd divorce you." ~ Edward Albee


"I think it would be totally inappropriate for me to even contemplate what I am thinking about." ~ Don Mazankowski


"I think of life as a good book. The further you get into it, the more it begins to make sense." ~ Harold S. Kushner


"I think people snore because they don't have anything else to do while they're naked."


"I think that God in creating man somewhat overestimated his ability." ~ Oscar Wilde


"I think you should defend to the death their right to march, and then go down and meet them with baseball bats." ~ Woody Allen, on the KKK


"I understand your question and the answer is 'You're thinking too hard.'" ~ Jose Garcia


"I used to be disgusted; now I try to be amused." ~ Elvis Costello


"I used to look down on the world for being corrupt, but now I adore it for the utter magnificence of that corruption." ~ Richard J. Needham


"I want to know the truth, however perverted that may sound." ~ Stephen Wolfram


"I was not lying. I said things that later on seemed to be untrue." ~ Richard Nixon


"I went to a restaurant that serves 'breakfast at any time.' So I ordered French toast during the Renaissance." ~ Steven Wright


"I went to all that work to get him out of his shell, and he really *was* a spineless mollusc!" ~ Dame Enid Aurelia


"I wouldn't recommend sex, drugs or insanity for everyone, but they've always worked for me." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"I'd probably be famous now if I wasn't such a good waitress." ~ Jane Siberry


"I'd rather be rich than stupid." ~ Jack Handy


"I'll take Fucking Clues for $200." ~ Mark


"I'm a Leo. Leos don't believe in this astrology stuff." ~ Tom Neff


"I'm a genetic mutant." ~ Dan Aykroyd


"I'm a nymphomaniac of the heart." ~ Gabriel Garcia Marquez


"I'm a squid, I'm a born lever puller."


"I'm interested in the fact that the less secure a man is, the more likely he is to have extreme prejudice." ~ Clint Eastwood


"I'm living so far beyond my income that we may almost be said to be living apart." ~ e. e. cummings


"I'm not a breast man. I'm a breast *person*." ~ jwh


"I'm not against the police; I'm just afraid of them." ~ Alfred Hitchcock


"I'm the one that has to die when it's time for me to die, so let me live my life, the way I want to." ~ Jimi Hendrix


"I'm tired of all this nonsense about beauty being only skin-deep. That's deep enough. What do you want, an adorable pancreas?" ~ Jean Kerr


"I'm writing a book. I've got the page numbers done." ~ Steven Wright


"I've always wanted to be Brigitte Bardot." ~ Bob Dylan


"I've imagined great victories, and I've imagined great races. The races are better." ~ Mark Helprin


"Idealism increases in direct proportion to one's distance from the problem." ~ John Galsworthy


"Ideally, you should be your own hero, just as I am mine." ~ Bargepole


"If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for them Mexicans." ~ Some politician in Texas


"If I didn't have writing, I'd be running down the street hurling grenades in people's faces." ~ Paul Fussell


"If a book is worth reading, it is worth buying." ~ John Ruskin


"If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error." ~ John Kenneth Galbraith


"If all men knew what others say of them, there would not be four friends in the world." ~ Blaise Pascal


"If art is to nourish the roots of our culture, society must set the artist free to follow his vision wherever it takes him." ~ John Fitzgerald Kennedy


"If at first you don't succeed, failure may be your thing." ~ Warren Miller


"If ease of use is the highest goal, we should all be driving golf carts." ~ Larry Wall


"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." ~ Mario Andretti


"If little else, the brain is an educational toy." ~ Tom Robbins


"If man could be crossed with the cat, it would improve man but deteriorate the cat." ~ Mark Twain


"If people are good only because they fear punishment, and hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed." ~ Albert Einstein


"If there were a verb meaning 'to believe falsely,' it would not have any significant first person, present indicative." ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein


"If we spoke a different language, we would perceive a somewhat different world." ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein


"If you can't communicate clearly in writing, perhaps the Internet is not the best place for you, eh?" ~ Barb MacRae


"If you can't learn to do it well, learn to enjoy doing it badly." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"If you do not think about the future, you cannot have one." ~ John Galsworthy


"If you don't know who you are by now, you have no business trying to dominate Europe." ~ Eric McColm


"If you ever drop your keys into a river of molten lava, let 'em go, because, man, they're gone." ~ Jack Handey


"If you flattened out Wales, it would be bigger than killing everybody."


"If you speak the truth, have a foot in the stirrup." ~ Turkish proverb


"If you want me, you can find me, left of center, off of the strip." ~ Suzanne Vega


"If you want to know what god thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to." ~ Dorothy Parker


"If you wish to appear agreeable in society, you must consent to be taught many things which you know already." ~ Johann Kaspar Lavater


"If you're a young Mafia gangster out on your first date, I bet it's real embarrassing if someone tries to kill you." ~ Jack Handy


"If you're going to do something wrong, at least enjoy it." ~ Leo Rosten


"If your sexual fantasies were truly of interest to others, they would no longer be fantasies." ~ Fran Lebowitz


"Imagination is the one weapon in the war against reality." ~ Jules de Gaultier


"Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not; a sense of humor to console him for what he is." ~ Francis Bacon


"Imagine the Creator as a low comedian, and at once the world becomes explicable." ~ Henry Louis Mencken


"Imminent Death of the Net Predicted. GIFs at 11." ~ Carl Rigney


"In America sex is an obsession; in other parts of the world it is a fact." ~ Marlene Dietrich


"In America, through pressure of conformity, there is freedom of choice, but nothing to choose from." ~ Peter Alexander Ustinov


"In California everyone goes to a therapist, is a therapist, or is a therapist going to a therapist." ~ Truman Capote


"In Christianity neither morality nor religion come into contact with reality at any point." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"In Cyberspace, the 1st Amendment is a local ordinance." ~ John Perry Barlow


"In My Egotistical Opinion, most people's C programs should be indented six feet downward and covered with dirt." ~ Blair P. Houghton


"In a hierarchy, every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence." ~ Laurence Johnston Peter


"In a nation ruled by swine, all pigs are upward mobile." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"In all affairs it's a healthy thing now and then to hang a question mark on the things you have long taken for granted." ~ Bertrand Russell


"In each of us are places where we have never gone. Only by pressing the limits do you ever find them." ~ Dr. Joyce Brothers


"In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts; they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"In matters of conscience, the law of majority has no place." ~ Mahatma Gandhi


"In my music, I'm trying to play the truth of what I am. The reason it's difficult is because I'm changing all the time." ~ Charles Mingus


"In nature, there are neither rewards or punishments ~ there are consequences." ~ Robert Green Ingersoll


"In order to become the master, the politician poses as the servant." ~ Charles De Gaulle


"In the Beginning there was nothing, which exploded." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Lords and Ladies_


"In the U.S. you have to be a deviant or exist in extreme boredom...Make no mistake; all intellectuals are deviants in the U.S." ~ William Burroughs


"In the beginning, the universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry, and is generally considered to have been a bad move." ~ D. Adams


"In the fight between you and the world, back the world." ~ Frank Zappa


"In the future everyone will be world-famous for fifteen minutes." ~ Andy Warhol


"In times like these, it helps to recall that there have always been times like these." ~ Paul Harvey


"Indifference is isolation. In difference is texture and wonder." ~ Edwin Schlossberg


"Innocence is a spendid thing, only it has the misfortune of not keeping well." ~ Immanuel Kant


"Innovation is hard to schedule." ~ Dan Fylstra


"Inquiry is fatal to certainty." ~ Will Durant


"Instead of worrying about my clothes, I could be someone that nobody knows." ~ Stewart Copeland


"Intellectual brilliance is no guarentee against being dead wrong." ~ David Fasold


"Intellectuals solve problems; geniuses prevent them." ~ Einstein


"Internet is so big, so powerful and pointless that for some people it is a complete substitute for life." ~ Andrew Brown


"Irony is the hygiene of the mind." ~ Elizabeth Bibesco


"Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors." ~ Thomas Henry Huxley


"Is not life a hundred times too short for us to bore ourselves?" ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Is not the whole world a vast house of assignation to which the filing system has been lost?" ~ Quentin Crisp


"Is there life before death?" ~ Belfast Graffito


"Isn't it nice that people who prefer Los Angeles to San Francisco live there?" ~ Herb Caen


"It does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." ~ J. R. R. Tolkien


"It has yet to be proven that intelligence has any survival value." ~ Arthur C. Clarke


"It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." ~ Albert Einstein


"It is a sobering thought, for example, that when Mozart was my age, he had been dead for two years." ~ Tom Lehrer


"It is absurd to divide people into good and bad. People are either charming or tedious." ~ Oscar Wilde


"It is always the best policy to tell the truth, unless, of course, you are an exceptionally good liar." ~ Jerome K. Jerome


"It is better of course to know useless things than to know nothing." ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca


"It is better to be quotable than to be honest." ~ Tom Stoppard


"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." ~ Mark Twain


"It is better to prevent crimes than to punish them." ~ Cesare Bonesana di Beccaria


"It is clear that thought is not free if the profession of certain opinions makes it impossible to earn a living." ~ Bertrand Russell


"It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong." ~ Voltaire


"It is dangerous to be sincere unless you are also stupid." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"It is easier to fight for principles than to live up to them." ~ Alfred Adler


"It is error alone which needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"It is far more impressive when others discover your good qualities without your help." ~ Miss Manners (Judith Martin)


"It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets." ~ Voltaire


"It is impossible to begin to learn that which one thinks one already knows." ~ Epictetus


"It is much easier to be critical than to be correct." ~ Benjamin Disraeli


"It is my ambition to say in ten sentences what others say in a whole book." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"It is no longer my moral duty as a human being to achieve an integrated and unitary set of explanations for my thoughts and feelings." ~ Bronwyn Davies


"It is not enough to succeed. Others must fail." ~ Gore Vidal


"It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question." ~ Eugene Ionesco


"It is one of the superstitions of the human mind to have imagined that virginity could be a virtue." ~ Voltaire


"It is only the great men who are truly obscene. If they had not dared to be obscene, they could never have dared to be great." ~ Havelock Ellis


"It is sometimes expedient to forget who we are." ~ Publilius Syrus


"It is the confession, not the priest, that gives us absolution." ~ Oscar Wilde


"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." ~ Aristotle


"It is true greatness to have in one the frailty of a man and the security of a god." ~ Seneca


"It is well to remember that the entire population of the universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others." ~ John Andrew Holmes


"It is wrong always, everywhere and for everyone to believe anything upon insufficient evidence." ~ W.K. Clifford


"It isn't necessary to be rich and famous to be happy. It's only necessary to be rich." ~ Alan Alda


"It isn't premarital sex if you don't get married." ~ Michael Juster


"It was better, he thought, to fail in attempting exquisite things than to succeed in the department of the utterly contemptible." ~ Arthur Machen


"It's Hong Kong action. Anything you know about physics is just going to hold you back." ~ Robin D. Laws


"It's a scientific fact that if you stay in California you lose one point of your IQ every year." ~ Truman Capote


"It's amazing what ordinary people can do if they set out without preconceived notions." ~ Charles F. Kettering


"It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them." ~ Fred Adler


"It's good to know that if I behave strangely enough, society will take full responsibility for me." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"It's impossible to experience one's death objectively and still carry a tune." ~ Woody Allen


"It's interesting to live when you are angry." ~ Yevgeny Yevtushenko


"It's not peace I want, not mere contentment. It's boundless joy and ecstasy for me." ~ Kugell


"Jesus died too soon. If he had lived to my age he would have repudiated his doctrine." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Just because I don't care doesn't mean I don't understand." ~ Homer Simpson


"Just goes to show you. You can kill a guy, fold him up, stuff him in your trunk, and still you don't *really* know him." ~ The Kids in the Hall


"Justice is incidental to law and order." ~ J. Edgar Hoover


"K is for KENGHIS KHAN. _He_ was a very _nice_ person. History has no record of him. There is a moral in that, somewhere." ~ Harlan Ellison


"Kids! Bringing about Armageddon can be dangerous. Do not attempt it in your home." ~ Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman, _Good Omens_


"Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information on it." ~ Samuel Johnson


"Language is a city to the building of which every human being brought a stone." ~ Mark Twain


"Language is a virus from outer space." ~ William S. Burroughs


"Language shapes the way we think, and determines what we can think about." ~ Benjamin Whorf


"Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face." ~ Victor Hugo


"Laws are made for us; we are not made for the laws." ~ William Milonoff


"Laws don't work, unless they merely codify generally accepted behavior, in which case they are probably unnecessary." ~ tom~genie.slhs.udel.edu


"Lawyers are the only persons in whom ignorance of the law is not punished." ~ Jeremy Bentham


"Learning is not compulsory. Neither is survival." ~ W. Edwards Deming


"Legend ~ a lie that has attained the dignity of age." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Let a fool hold his tongue and he will pass for a sage." ~ anonymous


"Let us be thankful for the fools; but for them the rest of us could not succeed." ~ Mark Twain


"Let us overthrow the totems, break the taboos. Or better, let us consider them cancelled. Coldly, let us be intelligent." ~ Pierre Trudeau


"Let us treat men and women well; treat them as if they were real; perhaps they are." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"Life at the top is financially rewarding, spiritually draining, physically exhausting, and short." ~ Peter C. Newman


"Life is a great big canvas, and you should throw all the paint on it you can." ~ Danny Kaye


"Life is a zoo in a jungle." ~ Peter De Vries


"Life is either always a tight-rope or a featherbed. Give me a tight-rope." ~ Edith Wharton


"Life is like an overlong drama through which we sit being nagged by the vague memories of having read the reviews." ~ John Updike


"Life is not so bad if you have plenty of luck, a good physique and not too much imagination." ~ Christopher Isherwood


"Life is nothing but a competition to be the criminal rather than the victim." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Life is something to do when you can't get to sleep." ~ Fran Lebowitz


"Life's too short for chess." ~ H. J. Byron


"Life... is like a grapefruit. It's orange and squishy, and has a few pips in it, and some folks have half a one for breakfast." ~ Douglas Adams


"Like all dreamers, I mistook disenchantment for truth." ~ Jean-Paul Sartre


"Like its politicians and its wars, society has the teenagers it deserves." ~ J. B. Priestley


"Logic is like the sword: those who appeal to it shall perish by it." ~ Samuel Butler


"Look, man, all I am is a trumpet player." ~ Miles Davis


"Love is a hole in the heart." ~ Ben Hecht


"Love is much like a wild rose, beautiful and calm, but willing to draw blood in its defense." ~ Mark A. Overby


"Love is the triumph of imagination over intelligence." ~ Henry Louis Mencken


"Lying to ourselves is more deeply ingrained than lying to others." ~ Fyodor Dostoevsky


"Machines take me by surprise with great frequency." ~ Alan Turing


"Madam, there's no such thing as a tough child ~ if you parboil them first for seven hours, they always come out tender." ~ W. C. Fields


"Making fun of born-again christians is like hunting dairy cows with a high powered rifle and scope." ~ P.J. O'Rourke


"Man gazing at the stars is proverbially at the mercy of the puddles in the road." ~ Alexander Smith


"Man has made use of his intelligence; he invented stupidity." ~ Remy De Gourmant


"Man is ready to die for an idea, provided that idea is not quite clear to him." ~ Paul Eldridge


"Man is the only animal that can remain on friendly terms with the victims he intends to eat until he eats them." ~ Samuel Butler


"Man is the only animal that contemplates death, and also the only animal that shows any sign of doubt of its finality." ~ William Ernest Hocking


"Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of the time he will pick himself up and continue on." ~ Winston Churchill


"Many a man has fallen in love with a girl in a light so dim he would not have chosen a suit by it." ~ Maurice Chevalier


"Many a sober Christian would rather admit that a wafer is God than that God is a cruel and capricious tyrant." ~ Edward Gibbon


"Many a young lady does not realize just how strong her love for a young man is until he fails to pass the approval test with her parents."


"Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Many, if not all, of my presidential opponents are certifiable idiots." ~ Philippine presidential candidate Miriam Defensor Santiago


"Martyrdom has always been a proof of the intensity, never of the correctness of a belief." ~ Arthur Schnitzler


"Mate, this parrot would be bigger than England."


"Mathematics may humbly help in the market-place, but it also reaches to the stars." ~ Herbert Westren Turnbull


"Mathematics, rightly viewed, posses not only truth, but supreme beauty ~ a beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Maybe I'm lucky to be going so slowly, because I may be going in the wrong direction." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"Maybe this world is another planet's Hell." ~ Aldous Huxley


"Mediocrity requires aloofness to preserve its dignity." ~ Charles G. Dawes


"Meetings are indispensable when you don't want to do anything." ~ John Kenneth Galbraith


"Memory is like an orgasm. It's a lot better if you don't have to fake it." ~ Seymour Cray (on virtual memory)


"Men and women, women and men. It will never work." ~ Erica Jong


"Men are more apt to be mistaken in their generalizations than in their particular observations." ~ Machiavelli


"Men do not quit playing because they grow old; they grow old because they quit playing." ~ Oliver Wendell Holmes


"Men have fiendishly conceived a heaven only to find it insipid, and a hell only to find it ridiculous." ~ George Santayana


"Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction." ~ Blaise Pascal


"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened." ~ Winston Churchill


"Money is always there, but the pockets change." ~ Gertrude Stein


"Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo." ~ H. G. Wells


"Morality is simply the attitude we adopt to people we personally dislike." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Morality is the herd-instinct of the individual." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Most bad government has grown out of too much government." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"Most of us, when all is said and done, like what we like and make up reasons for it afterwards." ~ Soren F. Petersen


"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Most people want security in this world, not liberty." ~ H.L. Mencken


"Most reformers wore rubber boots and stood on glass when God sent a current of Commonsense through the Universe." ~ Elbert Hubbard


"Most religions do not make men better, only warier." ~ Elias Canetti


"My definition of an expert in any field is a person who knows enough about what's really going on to be scared." ~ P. J. Plauger


"My life has a superb cast but I can't figure out the plot." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"My own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we *can* suppose." ~ John Haldane


"My pessimism extends to the point of even suspecting the sincerity of other pessimists." ~ Jean Rostand


"My philosophy of life is that the meek shall inherit nothing but debasement, frustration, and ignoble deaths..." ~ Harlan Ellison


"My play was a complete success. The audience was a failure." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"My school colors were clear. We used to say, 'I'm not naked, I'm in the band.'" ~ Steven Wright


"My schoolmates would make love to anything that moved, but I never saw any reason to limit myself." ~ Emo Philips


"My sources are unreliable, but their information is fascinating." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"My specific goal is to revolutionize the future of the species. Mathematics is just another way of predicting the future." ~ Ralph Abraham


"My work always tried to unite the true with the beautiful; but when I had to choose one or the other, I usually chose the beautiful." ~ Hermann Weyl


"Mystical explanations are considered deep. The truth is that they are not even superficial." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Natural abilities are like natural plants that need pruning by study." ~ Francis Bacon


"Nature is a revelation of God; Art a revelation of man." ~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow


"Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves." ~ William Pitt


"Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves." ~ William Pitt


"Never before have I encountered such corrupt and foul-minded perversity! Have you ever considered a career in the Church?" ~ _Black Adder II_


"Never express yourself more clearly than you are able to think." ~ Neils Bohr


"Never judge a book by its movie." ~ J.W. Eagan


"Never keep up with the Joneses. Drag them down to your level." ~ Quentin Crisp


"Never lose your sense of the superficial." ~ Lord Northcliffe


"New York is the only city in the world where you can get deliberately run down on the sidewalk by a pedestrian." ~ Russell Baker


"New York: A third-rate Babylon." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Next to the originator of a good sentence is the first quoter of it. I hate quotations. Tell me what you know." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Next week your lesson will go into more detail about how USENET differs from reality, even if you aren't able to tell the difference." ~ Brian Reid


"Nicknames stick to people, and the most ridiculous are the most adhesive." ~ Thomas Chandler Haliburton


"No affectation of peculiarity can conceal a commonplace mind." ~ William Somerset Maugham


"No excellent soul is exempt from a mixture of madness." ~ Aristotle


"No man is exempt from saying silly things; the mischief is to say them deliberately." ~ Michel Eyquem de Montaigne


"No man really becomes a fool until he stops asking questions." ~ Charles Steinmetz


"No matter how hard you try, there is always going to be someone more underground than you." ~ Robert Fulford


"No one can make you feel inferior without your consent." ~ Eleanor Roosevelt


"Nobody can be exactly like me. Sometimes even I have trouble doing it." ~ Tallulah Bankhead


"Normal is not something to aspire to, it's something to get away from." ~ Jodie Foster


"Not to engage in this pursuit of ideas is to live like ants instead of like men." ~ Mortimer J. Adler


"Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Nothing is easier than to denounce the evildoer; nothing is more difficult than to understand him." ~ Fyodor Dostoyevski


"Nothing is more despicable than respect based on fear." ~ Albert Camus


"Nothing is more destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced." ~ Albert Einstein


"Nothing is so aggravating as calmness." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Nothing is too high for the daring of mortals: we storm heaven itself in our folly." ~ Horace


"Nothing is true. Everything is permitted." ~ Hassan I Sabbah


"Nothing succeeds like the appearance of success." ~ Christopher Lasch


"Nothing that is worth knowing can be taught." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Novelty is not necessarily a virtue." ~ Rita Mae Brown


"Now I'm lost in Arizona // On the highway of my mind." ~ Neraid Cluster


"Now is the time for all good men to come to." ~ Walt Kelly


"Of all the sexual aberrations, perhaps the most peculiar is chastity." ~ Remy de Gourmont


"Oh look, my brain just exploded! Cool idea, though." ~ Carl Rigney


"Oh, I don't blame Congress. If I had $600 billion at my disposal, I'd be irresponsible, too." ~ Lichty & Wagner


"Old age is the most unexpected of all the things that happen to a man." ~ Leon Trotsky


"On applause: They named it Ovation from the Latin _ovis_, a sheep." ~ Plutarch


"On the other hand, you have different fingers." ~ Stephen Wright


"On the whole human beings want to be good, but not too good and not quite all the time." ~ George Orwell


"Once a new technology rolls over you, if you're not part of the steamroller, you're part of the road." ~ Stewart Brand


"One form to rule them all, one form to find them, one form to bring them all and in the darkness rewrite the hell out of them." ~ DEC, sendmail.cf


"One grows tired of jelly babies, Castellan. One grows tired of almost everything, Castellan, except power." ~ The Doctor


"One is not superior merely because one sees the world as odious." ~ Chateaubriand


"One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly making new discoveries." ~ A. A. Milne


"One of the delights known to age, and beyond the grasp of youth, is that of Not Going." ~ J. B. Priestley


"One of the lessons of history is that nothing is often a good thing to do and always a clever thing to say." ~ Will Durant.


"One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important." ~ Bertrand Russell


"One who contends with immortals lives a very short life." ~ Homer


"Only a mediocre man is always at his best." ~ W. Somerset Maugham


"Optimism is the content of small men in high places." ~ F. Scott Fitzgerald


"Ordinarily he was insane, but he had lucid moments when he was merely stupid." ~ Heinrich Heine


"Organic chemistry is the chemistry of carbon compounds. Biochemistry is the study of carbon compounds that crawl." ~ Mike Adams


"Our American professors like their literature clear, cold, pure and very dead." ~ Sinclair Lewis


"Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." ~ John Adams


"Our chief want in life is somebody who shall make us do what we can." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Our liberty depends upon the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"Our love is God. Let's go grab a slushie" ~ J .D., _Heathers_


"Our passions are like convulsion fits, which, though they make us stronger for a time, leave us the weaker ever after." ~ Alexander Pope


"Outer space is no place for a person of breeding." ~ Lady Violet Bonham Carter


"Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional." ~ unknown


"Paper has a genius for multiplication that cannot be equalled anywhere else in nature." ~ Hugh Keenleyside


"Paradise is exactly like where you are right now... only much, much better." ~ Laurie Anderson


"Parties who want milk should not seat themselves on a stool in the middle of a field in hope that the cow will back up to them." ~ Albert Hubbard


"Passionate hatred can give meaning and purpose to an empty life." ~ Eric Hoffer


"Patriotism is a pernicious, psychopathic form of idiocy." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"Patriotism is an arbitrary veneration of real estate above principles." ~ George Jean Nathan


"Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel." ~ Samuel Johnson


"Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious." ~ Oscar Wilde


"People are much more willing to lend you books than bookcases." ~ Mark Twain


"People are much too solemn about things ~ I'm all for sticking pins into episcopal behinds." ~ Aldous Huxley


"People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading." ~ Logan Pearsall Smith


"People that are really weird can get into sensitive positions and have a tremendous impact on history." ~ J. Danforth Quayle


"People think love is an emotion. Love is good sense." ~ Ken Kesey


"People who like this sort of thing will find this the sort of thing they like." ~ Richard Nixon


"People who throw kisses are hopelessly lazy." ~ Bob Hope


"People who used magic without knowing what they were doing usually came to a sticky end. All over the entire room, sometimes." ~ Terry Pratchett


"Perfectionism is the enemy of creation, as extreme self-solicitude is the enemy of well-being." ~ John Updike


"Pessimism is only the name that men of weak nerve give to wisdom." ~ Mark Twain


"Philanthropy is the refuge of rich people who wish to annoy their fellow creatures." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Please don't lie to me, unless you're absolutely sure I'll never find out the truth." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"Pleasure is nature's test, her sign of approval." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Poison is in everything, and no thing is without poison. The dosage makes it either a poison or a remedy." ~ Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim


"Politics is made up largely of irrelevancies." ~ Dalton Camp


"Politics is the entertainment branch of industry." ~ Frank Zappa


"Posterity is as likely to be wrong as anybody else." ~ Heywood Broun


"Power corrupts. Absolute power is kind of neat." ~ John Lehman, Secretary of the Navy, 1981-1987


"Practice does not make perfect; perfect practice makes perfect." ~ Vince Lombardi


"Pre-Raphaelite cultists rock my world." ~ Kore


"Predicting the future, as we all know, is risky. Predicting the evolution of new technology is downright hazardous." ~ Leon Cooper


"Print is the sharpest and the strongest weapon of our party." ~ Joseph Stalin


"Prizes are for children." ~ Charles Edward Ives


"Propaganda is to democracy what violence is to totalitarianism." ~ Noam Chomsky


"Proper words in proper places make the true definiton of style." ~ Jonathan Swift


"Public opinion sets bounds to every government, and is the real sovereign in every free one." ~ James Madison


"Puritanism ~ The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Put on your hobbit costume and go ~ AAAAAAAGH! GET THE GODDAMN CAT OFF ME!"


"Put your talent into your work, but your genius into your life." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Que sera, seratonin! (Meep.)" ~ Mercy


"Read the best books first, or you may not have a chance to read them all." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man." ~ Francais Bacon


"Real Men are NOT afraid to say: 'Fuck OFF, you're Not my type.'" ~ Drieux


"Real education must ultimately be limited to men who insist on knowing. The rest is mere sheep-herding." ~ Ezra Loomis Pound


"Real happiness, in politics, is a wide-open hammer shot on some poor bastard who knows he's been trapped, but can't flee." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away". ~ Philip K. Dick


"Reality is the only word in the language that should always be used in quotes." ~ (My Life With The) Thrill Kill Cult


"Remember always that you not only have the right to be an individual, you also have an obligation to be one." ~ Eleanor Roosevelt


"Remember, folks. Street lights timed for 35 mph are also timed for 70 mph." ~ Jim Samuels


"Revolution is a trivial shift in the emphasis of suffering." ~ Tom Stoppard


"Rich bachelors should be heavily taxed. It is not fair that some men should be happier than others." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Ron and Nancy got the house, but Sid and Nancy rule." ~ Dar Williams


"Rough work, iconoclasm, but the only way to get at truth." ~ Oliver Wendell Holmes


"Saints should always be judged guilty until they are proved innocent." ~ George Orwell


"Science has made gods of us before we were even worthy of being men." ~ Jean Rostand


"Science has proof without any certainty. Creationists have certainty without any proof." ~ Ashley Montague


"Science is nothing but developed perception, interpreted intent, common sense rounded out and minutely articulated." ~ George Santayana


"Seek simplicity, and distrust it." ~ Alfred North Whitehead


"Self-improvement is a dangerous form of vanity." ~ Alan Watts


"Self-respect: the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious." ~ H. L. Mencken


"Self-sacrifice enables us to sacrifice other people without blushing." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live. It is asking other people to live as one wishes to live." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Seriousness is the only refuge of the shallow." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Sex education classes in our public schools are promoting incest." ~ Jimmy Swaggart


"Sex is the mathematics urge sublimated." ~ M. C. Reed


"Sex without love is an empty experience, but as empty experiences go it's one of the best." ~ Woody Allen


"Sex: the thing that takes up the least amount of time and causes the most amount of trouble." ~ John Barrymore


"She was beautiful, even though she was dead." ~ _Venus in Furs_


"She's a very dominant woman; she walks on the ground I worship." ~ Dennis Miller


"Short words are best and the old words when short are best of all." ~ Winston Churchill


"Shouldn't we be carefully placing these comics in plastic bags?" "No, we have lives." ~ MST3K


"Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy." ~ F. Scott Fitzgerald


"Show me the books he loves and I shall know the man far better than through mortal friends." ~ S. Weir Mitchell


"Simple pleasures are the last refuge of the complex." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Since when was genius found respectable?" ~ Elizabeth Barrett Browning


"Singing is a trick to get people to listen to music for longer than they would ordinarily." ~ David Byrne


"So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospels in praise of intelligence." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Society exists only as a mental concept; in the real world there are only individuals. ~ Charley Reese


"Society produces rogues, and education makes one rogue cleverer than another." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Solutions are not the answer." ~ Richard Nixon


"Some books are to be tasted; others swallowed; and some to be chewed and digested." ~ Francis Bacon


"Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers." ~ T. S. Eliot


"Some mornings it just doesn't seem worth it to gnaw through the leather straps." ~ Emo Philips


"Some of us are becoming the men we wanted to marry." ~ Gloria Steinem


"Some people are born mediocre, some people achieve mediocrity, and some people have mediocrity thrust upon them." ~ Joseph Heller


"Some people have so much respect for their superiors they have none left for themselves." ~ Peter Mcarthur


"Some people like my advice so much that they frame it upon the wall instead of using it." ~ Gordon R. Dickson


"Some people move in lesbian circles. I move in bisexual dodecahedrons." ~ R.K.


"Some would sooner die than think. In fact, they often do." ~ Bertrand Russell


"Sometimes I think we're alone. Sometimes I think we're not. In either case, the thought is quite staggering." ~ R. Buckminster Fuller


"Somewhere on this globe, every ten seconds, there is a woman giving birth to a child. She must be found and stopped." ~ Sam Levenson


"Sooner murder an infant in its cradle than nurse unacted desires." ~ William Blake


"Speak when you're angry and you'll make the best speech you'll ever regret." ~ Henry Ward Beecher


"Standing in the middle of the road is very dangerous; you get knocked down by the traffic from both sides." ~ Margaret Thatcher


"Stay away from that jazz man, Lisa. Nothing personal, I just fear the unfamiliar." ~ Marge Simpson


"Stoicism is the wisdom of madness and cynicism the madness of wisdom." ~ Bergen Evans


"Strip away the phony tinsel of Hollywood and you find the real tinsel underneath." ~ Oscar Levant


"Studying literature at Harvard is like learning about women at the Mayo Clinic." ~ Roy Blount, Jr.


"Stupidity has a certain charm ~ ignorance does not." ~ Frank Zappa


"Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them." ~ Bill Vaughan


"Success is the one unpardonable sin against one's fellows." ~ Ambrose Bierce


"Such is the audacity of man, that he hath learned to counterfeit nature, yea, and is so bold as to challenge her in her work." ~ Pliny The Elder


"Sure, there are dishonest men in local government. But there are dishonest men in national government too." ~ Richard M. Nixon


"Surely where there's smoke there's fire? No, where there's so much smoke there's smoke." ~ John A. Wheeler


"Tact is the ability to describe others as they see themselves." ~ Abraham Lincoln


"Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." ~ Anonymous


"Take away the right to say 'fuck' and you take away the right to say 'fuck the government.'" ~ Lenny Bruce


"Take care of the luxuries and the necessities will take care of themselves." ~ Dorothy Parker


"Take everything you like seriously, except yourselves." ~ Rudyard Kipling


"Talents are best nurtured in solitude; character is best formed in the stormy billows of the world." ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


"Television has lifted the manufacture of banality out of the sphere of handicraft and placed it in that of a major industry." ~ Nathalie Sarraute


"Television is a device that permits people who haven't anything to do to watch people who can't do anything." ~ Fred Allen


"Television is for appearing on ~ not for looking at." ~ Noel Coward


"Television is now so desperately hungry for material that they're scraping the top of the barrel." ~ Gore Vidal


"Television is to news as bumperstickers are to philosophy." ~ Richard M. Nixon


"Television: chewing gum for the eyes." ~ Frank Lloyd Wright


"That all men should be brothers is the dream of people who have no brothers." ~ Charles Chincholles


"That's a hell of an ambition, to be mellow. It's like wanting to be senile." ~ Randy Newman


"That's not a lie, it's a terminological inexactitude." ~ Alexander Meigs Haig, Jr.


"That's the problem with tradition, it's always dated." ~ Curt George Siffert


"The American people know what they want, and deserve to get it, good and hard." ~ Henry Louis Mencken


"The Bible doesn't forbid suicide. It's Catholic directive, intended to slow down their loss of martyrs." ~ Ellen Blackstone


"The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult, and left untried." ~ Gilbert Keith Chesterton


"The Christian resolution to find the world ugly and bad has made the world ugly and bad." ~ Friedrick Nietzsche


"The Earth is the cradle of human civilization, but one cannot live in the cradle forever." ~ Konstantin Tsiolkovskii


"The English instinctively admire any man who has no talent and is modest about it." ~ James Agate


"The Hitch Hiker's Guide has not been an opera. It has however been a tapestry, if you count a woven bath towel as a tapestry." ~ Douglas Adams


"The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it." ~ John Gilmore


"The United States is like the guy at the party who gives cocaine to everybody and still nobody likes him." ~ Jim Samuels


"The Web is bang equal to the Internet." "Bang equal?" "Yeah, if you claim the two are the same we'll shoot you." ~ Doug Sheppard


"The ability to quote is a serviceable substitute for wit." ~ Maugham


"The advantage of emotions is that they lead us astray." ~ Oscar Wilde


"The art of government is the organization of idolatry." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit that still carries any reward." ~ John Maynard Keynes


"The basic notion underlying USENET is the flame." ~ Chuq Von Rospach


"The basis of optimism is sheer terror." ~ Oscar Wilde


"The belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every wickedness." ~ Joseph Conrad


"The believer is happy; the doubter is wise." ~ Hungarian proverb


"The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education." ~ Paul Karl Feyerabend


"The bigger the information media, the less courage and freedom they allow. Bigness means weakness." ~ Eric Sevareid


"The brotherhood of man is not a mere poet's dream: it is a most depressing and humiliating reality." ~ Oscar Wilde


"The cat could very well be man's best friend but would never stoop to admitting it." ~ Doug Larson


"The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken." ~ Samuel Johnson


"The chief enemy of creativity is 'good' taste." ~ Pablo Picasso


"The chief product of an automated society is a widespread and deepening sense of boredom." ~ Cyril Parkinson


"The closing years of life are like the end of a masquerade party when the masks are dropped." ~ Arthur Schopenhauer


"The country has charms only for those not obliged to stay there." ~ Edouard Manet


"The covers of this book are too far apart." ~ Ambrose Bierce


"The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity." ~ Ellen Parr


"The defining function of the artist is to cherish consciousness." ~ Max Eastman


"The disappearance of a sense of responsibility is the most far-reaching consequence of submission to authority." ~ Stanley Milgram


"The discipline of desire is the background of character." ~ John Locke


"The doctrine of human equality reposes on this: that there is no man really clever who has not found that he is stupid." ~ G. K. Chesterton


"The drug user drowns in the same pool mystics swim in." ~ Joseph Campbell


"The dumber people think you are, the more surprised they're going to be when you kill them." ~ William Clayton


"The education of a man is never completed until he dies." ~ Robert Edward Lee


"The essence of intelligence is skill in extracting meaning from everyday experience." ~ unknown


"The extreme always seems to make an impression." ~ _Heathers_


"The face of a child can say it all, especially the mouth part of the face." ~ Jack Handy


"The faith that stands on authority is not faith." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"The fantastic advances in the field of communication constitute a greater danger to the privacy of the individual." ~ Earl Warren


"The fickleness of the women whom I love is only equalled by the infernal constancy of the women who love me." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"The final delusion is the belief that one has lost all delusions." ~ Maurice Chapelain


"The first duty of a revolutionary is to get away with it." ~ Abbie Hoffman


"The first thing to remember about Unix is that nothing is ever spelled correctly." ~ Steve Lidie (lusol~lehigh.edu)


"The function of socialism is to raise suffering to a higher level." ~ Norman Mailer


"The gambling known as business looks with austere disfavor upon the business known as gambling." ~ Ambrose Bierce


"The generation of random numbers is too important to be left to chance." ~ Robert R. Coveyou


"The government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion." ~ George Washington


"The great thing about human language is that it prevents us from sticking to the matter at hand." ~ Lewis Thomas


"The greater the ignorance the greater the dogmatism." ~ William Osler


"The greater the number of laws, the greater the number of offenses against them." ~ Havelock Ellis


"The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do." ~ Walter Bagehot


"The hardest thing to learn in life is which bridge to cross and which to burn." ~ David Russell


"The human mind treats a new idea the way the body treats a strange protein; it rejects it." ~ P. B. Medawar


"The imposition of stigma is the commonest form of violence used in democratic societies." ~ R. A. Pinker


"The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists ~ that is why they invented hell." ~ Bertrand Russell


"The ink of the scholar is more sacred than the blood of the martyr." ~ Muhammad


"The kind of man who wants the government to adopt and enforce his ideas is always the kind of man whose ideas are idiotic." ~ H.L. Mencken


"The larger the island of knowledge, the longer the shoreline of wonder." ~ Ralph W. Sockman


"The law will never make men free; it is men who have got to make the law free." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"The laws of probability, so true in general, so fallacious in particular." ~ Edward Gibbon


"The learned fool writes his nonsense in better language than the unlearned, but still 'tis nonsense." ~ Benjamin Franklin


"The life which is unexamined is not worth living." ~ Plato


"The main difference between men and women is that men are lunatics and women are idiots." ~ Rebecca West


"The man who does not read good books is at no advantage over the man that can't read them." ~ Mark Twain


"The man who insists on seeing with perfect clearness before he decides, never decides." ~ Henri Fredric Amiel


"The man who sets out to carry a cat by its tail learns something that will always be useful and which never will grow dim or doubtful." ~ Mark Twain


"The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if he knew he never would be found out." ~ Thomas Babington Macaulay


"The melancholy truth was that his glorious golden head had nothing in it." ~ Cecil Woodham Smith


"The mind of a bigot is like the pupil of the eye. The more light you shine on it, the more it will contract." ~ Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.


"The mind unlearns with difficulty what it has long learned." ~ Lucius Annaeus Seneca


"The more corrupt the republic, the more numerous the laws." ~ Cornelius Tacitus


"The most dangerous strategy is to jump a chasm in two leaps." ~ Benjamin Disraeli


"The most important thing in communication is to hear what isn't being said." ~ Peter F. Drucker


"The most merciful thing in the world...is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents." ~ H.P. Lovecraft


"The murals in restaurants are on a par with the food in museums." ~ Peter De Vries


"The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"The need of exercise is a modern superstition, invented by people who ate too much and had nothing to think about." ~ George Santayana


"The next best thing to knowing something is knowing where to find it." ~ Samuel Johnson


"The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from." ~ Andres S. Tannenbaum


"The older I grow the more I distrust the familiar doctrine that age brings wisdom." ~ Henry Louis Mencken


"The only interesting answers are those which destroy the questions." ~ Susan Sontag


"The only mystery about the cat is why it ever decided to become a domesticated animal." ~ Compton MacKenzie


"The only nice thing about being imperfect is the joy it brings to others." ~ Doug Larson


"The only possible form of exercise is to talk, not to walk." ~ Oscar Wilde


"The only thing that separates us from the animals is superstition and mindless rituals." ~ Daniel Klein


"The opposite of a correct statement is a false statement. But the opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth." ~ Niels Bohr


"The orgasm has replaced the Cross as the focus of longing and the image of fulfillment." ~ Malcolm Muggeridge


"The passions are the only orators that always persuade." ~ Francois La Rochefoucauld


"The passions often engender their contraries." ~ Francois La Rochefoucauld


"The paths of glory at least lead to the grave, but the paths of duty may not get you anywhere." ~ James Grover Thurber


"The people I distrust most are those who want to improve our lives but have only one course of action." ~ Frank Herbert


"The poets have been mysteriously silent on the subject of cheese." ~ G. K. Chesterton


"The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"The price one pays for pursuing any profession, or calling, is an intimate knowledge of its ugly side." ~ James Arthur Baldwin


"The probability is that tomorrow will not be an extrapolation of today." ~ Ernest C. Arbuckle


"The problem with X is that it's overadequate." ~ Dennis Ritchie


"The problem with people who have no vices is that generally you can be pretty sure they're going to have some pretty annoying virtues." ~ Elizabeth Taylor


"The progress toward totalitarianism arose, and keeps arising, because of society's refusal to be shit." ~ Kathy Acker


"The proverb warns that 'You should not bite the hand that feeds you.' But maybe you should if it prevents you from feeding yourself." ~ Thomas Szasz


"The radical invents the views. When he has worn them out, the conservative adopts them." ~ Mark Twain


"The rain has such a friendly sound to one who's six feet underground." ~ Edna St. Vincent Millay


"The real value of freedom is not to the minority that wants to talk, but to the majority, that does not want to listen." ~ Zechariah Chafee


"The real world is not user-friendly." ~ Kelvin Throop III


"The remarkable thing about Shakespeare is that he really is very good, in spite of all the people who say he is very good." ~ Robert Graves


"The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting drunk." ~ The Replacements.


"The right to be let alone is indeed the beginning of all freedom." ~ Supreme Court Justice William Orville Douglas


"The right to revolt has sources deep in our history." ~ Supreme Court Justice William Orville Douglas


"The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause." ~ Mark Twain


"The root of all superstition is that men observe when a thing hits, but not when it misses." ~ Francis Bacon


"The savage bows down to idols of wood and stone: the civilized man to idols of flesh and blood." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"The savage in man is never quite eradicated." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"The secret of being miserable is to have the leisure to bother about whether you are happy or not. The cure is occupation." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"The secret of the demagogue is to make himself as stupid as his audience so that they will believe they are as clever as he." ~ Karl Kraus


"The state calls its own violence law, but that of the individual crime." ~ Max Stirner


"The steady state of disks is full." ~ Ken Thompson


"The stone age was marked by man's clever use of crude tools; the information age, to date, has been marked by man's crude use of clever tools." ~ Anon.


"The strongest man in the world is he who stands alone." ~ Henrik Ibsen


"The superfluous is very necessary." ~ Voltaire


"The test of tolerance comes when we are in a majority; the test of courage comes when we are in a minority." ~ Ralph W. Stockman


"The thing about iron is that you generally don't have to think fast in dealing with it." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Lords and Ladies_


"The things I want to know are in books; my best friend is the man who'll get me a book I ain't read." ~ Abraham Lincoln


"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." ~ Bertrand Russell


"The trouble is that things *never* get better, they just stay the same, only more so." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Eric_


"The trouble was that he was talking in philosophy, but they were listening in gibberish." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"The trouble with being a god is that you've got no one to pray to." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Small Gods_


"The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it." ~ Terry Pratchett


"The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win you're still a rat." ~ Jane Wagner


"The trouble with us in America isn't that the poetry of life has turned to prose, but that it has turned to advertising copy." ~ Louis Kronenberger


"The two most common things in the Universe are hydrogen and stupidity." ~ Harlan Ellison


"The typewriting machine, when played with expression, is no more annoying than the piano when played by a sister or near relation." ~ Oscar Wilde


"The ultimate test of a relationship is to disagree but hold hands." ~ Alexander Penney


"The warning message we sent the Russians was a calculated ambiguity that would be clearly understood." ~ Alexander Haig


"The way of the portable computer user is as a stony path strewn with plugs and sockets, all the wrong size..." ~ Terry Pratchett


"The whole dream of democracy is to raise the proletarian to the level of stupidity attained by the bourgeois." ~ Gustave Flaubert


"The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places." ~ Hemingway


"The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who feel." ~ Horace Walpole


"The world is a very strange place, and the dice are always rolling." ~ Tom Robbins, _Skinny Legs and All_


"The world is complex. Sendmail.cf reflects this..." ~ Robbie Honerkamp


"The world's a stage and most of us are desperately unrehearsed." ~ Sean O'Casey


"Theory: when you have ideas. Ideology: when ideas have you." ~ anonymous


"There ain't no rules around here, we're trying to accomplish something." ~ Thomas Alva Edison


"There are few minds to which tyranny is not delightful." ~ Samuel Johnson


"There are really not many jobs that actually require a penis or a vagina, and all other occupations should be open to everyone." ~ Gloria Steinem


"There are things that are so serious that you can only joke about them." ~ Werner Karl Heisenberg


"There are three kinds of death in this world. There's heart death, there's brain death, and there's being off the network." ~ Guy Almes


"There are times when you have to choose between being a human and having good taste. " ~ Bertolt Brecht


"There are two good things in life, freedom of thought and freedom of action." ~ William Somerset Maugham


"There are two tragedies in life. One is to lose your heart's desire. The other is to gain it." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"There are two ways to slide easily through life; to believe everything or to doubt everything. Both ways save us from thinking." ~ Alfred Korzybski


"There are very few people who are not ashamed of having been in love when they no longer love each other." ~ La Rouchefoucauld


"There is a certain impertinence in allowing oneself to be burned for an opinion." ~ Anatole France


"There is a difference between art and life and that difference is readability." ~ Marian Engel


"There is a great difference between not wishing to do evil and not knowing how." ~ Seneca


"There is a level of cowardice lower than that of the conformist: the fashionable non-conformist." ~ Ayn Rand


"There is hope, but not for us." ~ Franz Kafka


"There is more simplicity in the man who eats caviar on impulse than in the man who eats Grapenuts on principle." ~ G. K. Chesterton


"There is much pleasure to be gained in useless knowledge." ~ Bertrand Russell


"There is no abstract art. You must always start with something. Afterward you can remove all traces of reality." ~ Pablo Picasso


"There is no cause so right that one cannot find a fool following it." Niven's Law #16


"There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval." ~ George Santayana


"There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion." ~ Francis Bacon


"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear."


"There is no great concurrence between learning and wisdom." ~ Francis Bacon


"There is no law that vulgarity and literary excellence cannot coexist." ~ A. Trevor Hodge


"There is no sin except for stupidity." ~ Oscar Wilde


"There is no such thing as a functional illiterate." ~ Kelvin Throop


"There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written, that is all." ~ Oscar Wilde


"There is no such thing as justice in the abstract; it is merely a compact between men." ~ Epicurus


"There is no wild beast so ferocious as Christians who differ concerning their faith." ~ William Edward Hartpole Lecky


"There is nothing more agreeable in life than to make peace with the establishment ~ and nothing more corrupting." ~ Alan John Percivale Taylor


"There is nothing more exhilarating than to be shot at without result." ~ Winston Churchill


"There is nothing outside the text." ~ Jacques Derrida


"There is nothing permanent except change." ~ Heraclitus


"There is nothing wrong with Southern California that a rise in the ocean level wouldn't cure." ~ Ross MacDonald


"There is this special biologist word we use for 'stable.' It is 'dead.'" ~ Jack Cohen


"There was never a genius without a tincture of madness." ~ Aristotle


"There's a big difference between kneeling down and bending over." ~ Frank Vincent Zappa


"There's nothing better than good sex. But bad sex? A peanut butter and jelly sandwich is better than bad sex." ~ Billy Joel


"There's nothing like desire to prevent the things one says from having any resemblance to the things in one's mind." ~ Marcel Proust


"There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself." ~ J. S. Bach


"They who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night." ~ Edgar Allen Poe


"They're *grumble* stupid *cuss* *grumble*." ~ Tanith


"This is *not* a football game, Netcom!" ~ The Opry House


"This is Usenet. We're all masturbating in public places." ~ Dawn


"This is a picture of the British High Command at the beginning of World War I. These aren't evil men ~ some of them aren't even stupid." ~ G. Dyer


"This is patently absurd; but whoever wishes to become a philosopher must learn not to be frightened by absurdities." ~ Bertrand Russell


"This is too perfect. It must be my date!"


"This time next year we'll be tanned muscle-bound aikido-master genius stud philosophers." ~ A. M. Heublein


"Those who control their passions do so because their passions are weak enough to be controlled." ~ William Blake


"Those who do not plan for the future will have to live through it anyway." ~ Len Fisher


"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ John Fitzgerald Kennedy


"Thud. Thud. Thud. Splat." ~ Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman, _Good Omens_


"Time is a great teacher, but unfortunately it kills all its pupils." ~ Hector Louis Berlioz


"Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so." ~ Douglas Adams


"Time: a landing field! Death needs time like a junkie needs junk." ~ William S. Burroughs


"Times are bad. Children no longer obey their parents, and everyone is writing a book." ~ Marcus Tullius Cicero


"Tip the world over on its side and everything loose will land in Los Angeles." ~ Frank Lloyd Wright


"To *you* I'm an atheist; to God, I'm the Loyal Opposition." ~ Woody Allen


"To be great is to be misunderstood." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"To be pleased with one's limits is a wretched state." ~ Goethe


"To be sure of hitting the target, shoot first, and call whatever you hit the target." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"To become a popular religion, it is only necessary for a superstition to enslave a philosophy." ~ William Ralph Inge


"To believe is very dull. To doubt is intensely engrossing. To be on the alert is to live, to be lulled into security is to die." ~ Oscar Wilde


"To call war the soil of courage and virtue is like calling debauchery the soil of love." ~ George Santayana


"To describe the beating of Egg Whites is almost as cheeky as advising how to lead a happy life." ~ The Joy of Cooking


"To die for an idea is to set a rather high price on conjecture." ~ Anatole France


"To different minds, the same world is a hell, and a heaven." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"To err is human. To forgive is not our policy." - MIT Assassins' Guild


"To fall in love is awfully simple, but to fall out of love is simply awful." ~ Bess Myerson


"To fall into a habit is to begin to cease to be." ~ Miguel de Unamuno y Jugo


"To knock a thing down, especially if it is cocked at an arrogant angle, is a deep delight of the blood." ~ George Santayana


"To know all is not to forgive all. It is to despise everybody." ~ Quentin Crisp


"To live outside the law you must be honest." ~ Bob Dylan


"To love oneself is the beginning of a lifelong romance." ~ Oscar Wilde


"To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation." ~ St. Augustine


"To stimulate creativity, one must develop the childlike inclination for play and the childlike desire for recognition." ~ Albert Einstein


"To those who think that the law of gravity interferes with their freedom, there is nothing to say." ~ Lionel Tiger


"Too much of a good thing is WONDERFUL." ~ Mae West


"Total chaos; that's what I like! Out of chaos comes reason. Out of reason, science." ~ _God Told Me To_


"Touch my monkey, feed him Cool Whip." ~ ghond


"Tourists are terrorists with cameras; terrorists are tourists with guns." ~ Andrei Codresque


"Trapped, like a trap in a trap." ~ Dorothy Parker


"Traveling there was really boring so I headed for the ditch. It was a rough ride but I met more interesting people there." ~ Neil Young


"True friendship is never serene." ~ Marie de Rabutin-Chantal


"True, money _can't_ buy happiness, but it isn't happiness I want. It's money." ~ Bizarro


"Truly great madness can not be achieved without significant intelligence." ~ Henrik Tikkanen


"Truth is beautiful, without doubt; but so are lies." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Truth, in matters of religion, is simply the opinion that has survived." ~ Oscar Wilde


"Try to be the best of what you are, even if what you are is no good." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"Try to keep things in perspective. Fifty years from now, kids in history classes will be yawning over what panics us today." ~ Unknown


"Try to relax and enjoy the crisis." ~ Ashleigh Brilliant


"Trying to define yourself is like trying to bite your own teeth." ~ Alan Wilson Watts


"USENET is William Shatner and George Bush trading places after being hit by lightning." ~ James 'Kibo' Parry


"Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"Under any conditions, anywhere, whatever you are doing, there is some ordinance under which you can be booked." ~ Robert D. Sprecht


"Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite." ~ John Kenneth Galbraith


"Unemployment has gone from quantitative to qualitative." ~ Alvin Toffler


"University politics are vicious precisely because the stakes are so small." ~ Henry Kissinger


"Unquestionably, there is progress. The average American now pays out twice as much in taxes as he formerly got in wages." ~ H.L. Mencken


"Usenet is a right, a left, a jab, and a sharp uppercut to the jaw. The postman hits! You have new mail." ~ Ed Vielmetti


"Usenet is distributed network anarchy at its best ~ or worst, depending on what is posted on any particular day." ~ David Fiedler


"Usenet: a vast collection of people being polite to each other in the most creative possible ways!" ~ James 'Kibo' Parry


"Vegetables are interesting but lack a sense of purpose when unaccompanied by a good cut of meat." ~ Fran Lebowitz


"Venture not to the utmost bounds of even lawful pleasure; the limits of good and evil join." ~ Fuller


"Very deep. You should send that into Reader's Digest, they've got a page for people like you." ~ Douglas Adams


"Violence isn't a solution to your problems; violence is a horse, of course, of course."


"Virtue has never been as respectable as money." ~ Mark Twain


"Virtue is more to be feared than vice, because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience." ~ Adam Smith


"WARNING: This Product Attracts Every Other Piece of Matter in the Universe." ~ Susan Hewitt and Edward Subitzky


"Washington [D.C.] is a city of Southern efficiency and Northern charm." ~ John F. Kennedy


"We all know that art is not truth. Art is the lie that makes us realize truth ~ at least the truth that is given us to understand." ~ Pablo Picasso


"We all learn by experience but some of us have to go to summer school." ~ Peter De Vries


"We all live in the protection of certain cowardices which we call our principles." ~ Mark Twain


"We are all born charming, fresh and spontaneous and must be civilized before we are fit to participate in society." ~ Miss Manners (Judith Martin)


"We are all mortal until the first kiss and the second glass of wine." ~ Eduardo Galeano


"We are all worms, but I believe I am a glowworm." ~ Winston Churchill


"We are at times too ready to believe that the present is the only possible state of things." ~ Marcel Proust


"We could have saved [the Earth] but we were too damned cheap." ~ Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.


"We do not know what to do with this short life, yet we yearn for another that will be eternal." ~ Anatole France


"We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." ~ Anais Nin


"We enact many laws that manufacture criminals, and then a few that punish them." ~ Benjamin Ricketson Tucker


"We have a firm commitment to NATO, we are a *part* of NATO. We have a firm commitment to Europe. We are a *part* of Europe." ~ Dan Quayle


"We have art in order not to die of the truth." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"We have first raised a dust and then complain we cannot see." ~ Bishop Berkeley


"We have long passed the Victorian era, when asterisks were followed after a certain interval by a baby." ~ W. Somerset Maugham


"We have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night." ~ Epitaph of two astronomers


"We learn from experience that men never learn anything from experience." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"We made mad love, shadow love, random love, and abandoned love, Accidentally like a martyr..." ~ Warren Zevon


"We may eventually come to realize that chastity is no more a virtue than malnutrition." ~ Alexander Comfort


"We must believe in luck. For how else can we explain the success of those we don't like?" ~ Jean Cocteau


"We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty." ~ Edward R. Murrow


"We must remember the First Amendment, which protects any shrill jackass, no matter how self-seeking." ~ F.G. Withington


"We owe most of what we know to about one hundred men. We owe most of what we have suffered to another hundred or so." ~ R. W. Dickson


"We participate in a tragedy; at a comedy we only look." ~ Aldous Huxley


"We shape our buildings, and forever afterwards our buildings shape us." ~ Winston Churchill


"We should develop anti-satellite weapons because we could not have prevailed without them in _Red Storm Rising_." ~ Senator Dan Quayle


"We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality." ~ Albert Einstein


"We tend to idealize tolerance, then wonder why we find ourselves infested with losers and nut cases." ~ Patrick Nielsen Hayden


"We tend to scoff at the beliefs of the ancients. But we can't scoff at them personally, to their faces, and this is what annoys me." ~ Jack Handy


"We were nearly one of the last to realize that in the age of information science the most expensive asset is knowledge." ~ Mikhail Gorbachev


"Well, to be fair I did have a couple of gadgets he probably didn't, like a teaspoon and an open mind." ~ The Doctor


"What I look forward to is continued immaturity followed by death." ~ Dave Barry


"What are our schools for if not indoctrination against Communism?" ~ Richard Milhous Nixon


"What does education often do? It makes a straight cut ditch of a free meandering brook." ~ Henry David Thoreau


"What garlic is to salad, insanity is to art." ~ Augustus Saint-Gaudens


"What government is the best? That which teaches us to govern ourselves." ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


"What is it that makes a complete stranger dive into an icy river to save a solid gold baby? Maybe we'll never know." ~ Jack Handy


"What is truth? Truth is something so noble that if God could turn aside from it, I would keep to the truth and let God go." ~ Johannes Eckhard


"What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the will to find out, which is the exact opposite." ~ Bertrand Russell


"What is youth except a man or a woman before it is ready or fit to be seen?" ~ Evelyn Waugh


"What luck for the rulers that men do not think." ~ Adolf Hitler


"What makes resisting temptation difficult, for many people, is that they don't want to discourage it completely." ~ Franklin P. Jones


"What sane person could live in this world and not be crazy?" ~ Ursula K. Leguin


"What's reality anyway? Nothing but a collective hunch." ~ Jane Wagner


"What's the difference between a Dice Clay concert and a Klan rally? Nothing. Trick question." ~ Bob Goldthwait


"Whatever women do they must do twice as well as men to be thought half is good... luckily, it's not difficult." ~ Charlotte Whitton


"Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it." ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


"When I can no longer bear to think of the victims of broken homes, I begin to think of the victims of intact ones." ~ Peter De Vries


"When I get a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and clothes." ~ Desiderius Erasmus


"When I play with my cat, who knows if I am not more of a pastime to her than she is to me?" ~ Michel Eyquem de Montaigne


"When I was a little kid we had a sand box. It was a quicksand box. I was an only child... eventually." ~ Steven Wright


"When I woke up this morning my girlfriend asked me, 'Did you sleep good?' I said, 'No, I made a few mistakes.'" ~ Steven Wright


"When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"When a man says he had pleasure with a woman he does not mean conversation." ~ Samuel Johnson


"When a stupid man is doing something he is ashamed of, he always declares that it is his duty." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"When a true genius appears in the world you may know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in confederacy against him." ~ Jonathan Swift


"When dictatorship is a fact, revolution becomes a right." ~ Victor Marie Hugo


"When in doubt, go for the dick joke." ~ Robin Williams


"When men are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws are broken." ~ Benjamin Disraeli


"When people are bored, it is primarily with their own selves that they are bored." ~ Eric Hoffer


"When people are free to do as they please, they usually imitate each other." ~ Eric Hoffer


"When people have trouble communicating, the least they can do is to shut up." ~ Tom Lehrer


"When solving a 'panic' you must first ask yourself what you were doing that could possibly frighten an operating system." ~ Peter van der Linden


"When the gods wish to punish us they answer our prayers." ~ Oscar Wilde


"When the least they could do to you was everything, then the most they could do to you suddenly held no terror." ~ Terry Pratchett, Small Gods_


"When the next White House enemies list comes out, I want to be on it." ~ Hunter S. Thompson


"When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary." ~ Thomas Paine


"When you go in for a job interview, I think a good thing to ask is if they ever press charges. " ~ Jack Handy


"When you're cool, the world is pouring mud up your nose."


"Whenever a thing is done for the first time, it releases a little demon." ~ Dave Sim


"Whenever you find that you are on the side of the majority, it is time to reform." ~ Mark Twain


"Where is human nature so weak as in the bookstore?" ~ Henry Ward Beecher


"Where the press is free and every man able to read, all is safe." ~ Thomas Jefferson


"Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." ~ George Orwell


"Who will protect the public when the police violate the law?" ~ Ramsey Clark


"Whoever ceases to be a student has never been a student." ~ George Iles


"Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


"Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a god." ~ Francis Bacon


"Why do men go to war? Because women are watching." ~ T. S. Eliot


"Wit has truth in it; wisecracking is simply calisthenics with words." ~ Dorothy Parker


"Wit is educated insolence." ~ Aristotle


"Wit is the epitaph of an emotion." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Witchcraft always has a hard time, until it becomes respectable and changes its name." ~ Charles Fort


"Withdrawing in disgust is not the same as apathy." ~ Richard Linklater


"Without music life would be a mistake." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche


"Wobbler thought that California was where good people went when they died." ~ Terry Pratchett, _Only You Can Save Mankind_


"Woe to him inside a nonconformist clique who does not conform with nonconformity." ~ Eric Hoffer


"Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition." ~ Timothy Leary


"Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind." ~ Rudyard Kipling


"Work and play are words to describe the same thing under different conditions." ~ Mark Twain


"Work is the source of nearly all the misery in the world." ~ Bob Black


"Work to survive, survive by consuming, survive to consume; the hellish cycle is complete." ~ Raoul Vaneigem


"Working in the theater has a lot in common with unemployment." ~ Arthur Gingold


"Worlds may freeze and suns may perish, but there stirs something within us now that can never die again." ~ H. G. Wells


"Would it upset men if they found out we weren't different? Are we? Aren't we? Damned if I know." ~ Rita Mae Brown


"Writers aren't exactly people...they're a whole lot of people trying to be one person." ~ F. Scott Fitzgerald


"You can always pick up your needle and move to another groove." ~ Timothy Leary


"You can best serve civilization by being against what usually passes for it." ~ Wendell Berry


"You can discover what your enemy fears most by observing the means he uses to frighten you." ~ Eric Hoffer


"You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements." ~ Norman Douglas


"You can't crush ideas by suppressing them. You can only crush them by ignoring them." ~ Ursula K. LeGuin


"You can't expect a boy to be vicious until he has been to a good school." ~ H. H. Munro (Saki)


"You cannot slander human nature; it is worse than words can paint it." ~ Charles Haddon Spurgeon


"You couldn't even prove the White House staff sane beyond a reasonable doubt." ~ Ed Meese, on the Hinckley verdict


"You don't have to suffer to be a poet. Adolescence is enough suffering for anyone." ~ John Ciardi


"You don't tell deliberate lies, but sometimes you have to be evasive." ~ Margaret Thatcher


"You have all eternity to be cautious in when you're dead." ~ Lois Platford


"You have not converted a man because you have silenced him." ~ John Morley


"You have procmail. That counts as lube." ~ ambar~clock.org


"You have to be deviant if you're going to do anything new." ~ David Lee


"You never forget how to fuck. Unless you're really, _really_ stupid." ~ Frank Zappa


"You never realize how short a month is until you pay alimony." ~ John Barrymore


"You only live once, so live under as many false names as possible." ~ Dana McManus


"You probably wouldn't worry about what people think of you if you could know how seldom they do." ~ Olin Miller


"You see things; and you say, 'Why?' But I dream things that never were; and I say, 'Why not?'" ~ George Bernard Shaw


"You shall judge of a man by his foes as well as by his friends." ~ Joseph Conrad


"You shouldn't think about *how* we're doing this. You should ask yourself, 'why?'" ~ Penn Jillette


"You slapped my face / Oh but so gently I smiled / At the caress" ~ william carlos williams


"You think you know when you learn, are more sure when you can write, even more when you can teach, but certain when you can program." ~ Alan J. Perlis


"You'll never have a quiet world till you knock the patriotism out of the human race." ~ George Bernard Shaw


"You're bound to be unhappy if you optimize everything." ~ Donald E. Knuth


"You're doomed! You're SO doomed! I wouldn't have swallowed a Buick, and I wouldn't want to keep on eating!"


"You're infatuated with someone you love because they're SATAN."


"You're so vain, you probably think this song is about to engulf your planet!"


"You've achieved success in your field when you don't know whether what you're doing is work or play." ~ Warren Beatty


"You, my boy, if you want to be a good pickpocket, need to learn how to tell a wallet from a maxipad." ~ Jessica


"[David] Cronenberg is to Toronto as John Hughes is to Chicago." ~ David Plant, Toronto Film Commissioner


"[The] Internet is so big, so powerful and pointless that for some people it is a complete substitute for life." ~ Andrew Brown


"_Prospero's Books_ is the _Terminator 2_ for intellectuals." ~ Peter Greenaway


"happy happy joy joy oh fuck" ~ hugh


"the command line is not a bug." ~ John M. Flinchbaug


"usenet: it's not an obsession. it's just something I have to do ALL THE TIME." ~ moxie~char.vnet.net


"well, it seems doable so we should do it. if we can't then we should get no biscuits." ~ tim~meer.net


~v=(a,e,i,o,u,"y");for(~ARGV){y/A-Z/a-z/;$p++=$c=$s=0;for$l(split(//)){if(grep (/$l/,~v)&&!$s){$c++;$s++}else{$s=0}$p++}$c~if(/e$/);print"$_: $c\n"}


A day without sunshine is like night.


A good slogan can stop thought for fifty years. A great slogan can stop it forever.


A lack of leadership is no substitute for inaction.


A metaphor is like a simile.


A morning without coffee is like something without something else.


A well adjusted person is one who makes the same mistake twice without getting nervous.


ABATIS, n. Rubbish in front of a fort, to prevent the rubbish outside from molesting the rubbish inside. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ABDICATION, n. An act whereby a sovereign attests his sense of the high temperature of the throne. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ABSCOND, v.i. To "move in a mysterious way," commonly with the property of another. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ABSURDITY, n. A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ACCUSE, v.t. To affirm another's guilt or unworth; most commonly as a justification of ourselves for having wronged him. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ACHIEVEMENT, n. The death of endeavor and the birth of disgust. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ACKNOWLEDGE, v.t. To confess. Acknowledgement of one another's faults is the highest duty imposed by our love of truth. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ADMIRATION, n. Our polite recognition of another's resemblance to ourselves. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ADMONITION, n. Gentle reproof, as with a meat-axe. Friendly warning. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ADORE, v.t. To venerate expectantly. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ALONE, adj. In bad company. ~ Ambrose Bierce


AMBITION, n. An overmastering desire to be vilified by enemies while living and made ridiculous by friends when dead. ~ Ambrose Bierce


AMNESTY, n. The state's magnanimity to those offenders whom it would be too expensive to punish. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ANOINT, v.t. To grease a king or other great functionary already sufficiently slippery. ~ Ambrose Bierce


APHORISM, n. Predigested wisdom. ~ Ambrose Bierce


APOLOGIZE, v.i. To lay the foundation for a future offence. ~ Ambrose Bierce


APPEAL, v.t. In law, to put the dice into the box for another throw. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ARENA, n. In politics, an imaginary rat-pit in which the statesman wrestles with his record. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ARREST, v.t. Formally to detain one accused of unusualness. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ASPERSE, v.t. Maliciously to ascribe to another vicious actions which one has not had the temptation and opportunity to commit. ~ Ambrose Bierce


All I ask of life is a constant and exaggerated sense of my own importance.


Among animals, it's eat or be eaten. Among people it's define or be defined.


An idea is not responsible for the people who believe in it.


Anarchy ~ it's not the law, it's just a good idea.


Anti-paranoia is that eerie feeling that nothing is connected to anything else.


Any slogan simple enough to fit in a .sig is too simple to do any good.


Anything not worth doing is not worth doing well.


Anything you say will be distorted and remixed and used against you.


BAROMETER, n. An ingenious instrument which indicates what kind of weather we are having. ~ Ambrose Bierce


BIGOT, n. One who is obstinately and zealously attached to an opinion that you do not entertain. ~ Ambrose Bierce


BORE, n. A person who talks when you wish him to listen. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Be good to your friends, or they may develop psychokinetic powers and destroy Tokyo.


Being weird isn't enough.


Boredom delenda est!


Brought to you by the people who made "out of context" a household word.


But I don't have an "any key" on my computer!


But this *is* the simplified version for the general public!


Bwah-hah-hah!


By God, for a moment there it all made sense...


CANNON, n. An instrument employed in the rectification of national boundaries. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CLERGYMAN, n. A man who undertakes the management of our spiritual affairs as a method of better his temporal ones. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CLOCK, n. A machine of great moral value to man, allaying his concern for the future by reminding him what a lot of time remains to him. ~ Ambrose Bierce


COMMENDATION, n. The tribute that we pay to achievements that resembles, but do not equal, our own. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CONSULT, v.i. To seek another's disapproval of a course already decided on. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CONTEMPT, n. The feeling of a prudent man for an enemy who is too formidable safely to be opposed. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CONTROVERSY, n. A battle in which spittle or ink replaces the injurious cannon-ball and the inconsiderate bayonet. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CONVENT, n. A place of retirement for woman who wish for leisure to meditate upon the vice of idleness. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CORPORATION, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. ~ Ambrose Bierce


CRITIC, n. A person who boasts himself hard to please because nobody tries to please him. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Calm down ~ it's only ones and zeroes.


Chaos is King, and Magic is loose in the world.


Cheer up ~ if the economy collapses completely, you won't owe your student loan to *anybody*.


Coffee is my only REAL friend.


DEBT, n. An ingenious substitute for the chain and whip of the slave-driver. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DEFAME, v.t. To lie about another. To tell the truth about another. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DEFENSELESS, adj. Unable to attack. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DIARY, n. A daily record of that part of one's life, which he can relate to himself without blushing. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DIPLOMACY, n. The patriotic art of lying for one's country. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DISCRIMINATE, v.i. To note the particulars in which one person or thing is, if possible, more objectionable than another. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DISCUSSION, n. A method of confirming others in their errors. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DISOBEDIENCE, n. The silver lining to the cloud of servitude. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DISOBEY, v.t. To celebrate with an appropriate ceremony the maturity of a command. ~ Ambrose Bierce


DUTY, n. That which sternly impels us in the direction of profit, along the line of desire. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Debate politics with a fern. If you lose, refuse to water it.


Delight and amaze me!


Democracy is the form of government where everyone gets what the majority deserves.


Don't mock the insecure.


EDUCATION, n. That which discloses to the wise and disguises from the foolish their lack of understanding. ~ Ambrose Bierce


EGOTIST, n. A person of low taste, more interested in himself than in me. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ERUDITION, n. Dust shaken out of a book into an empty skull. ~ Ambrose Bierce


EXPERIENCE, n. The wisdom that enables us to recognize as an undesirable old acquaintance the folly that we have already embraced. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Eloquence is logic on fire.


Established technology tends to persist in spite of new technology. ~ Blaauw's Law


FAITH, n. Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel. ~ Ambrose Bierce


FAMOUS, adj. Conspicuously miserable. ~ Ambrose Bierce


FELON, n. A person of greater enterprise than discretion, who in embracing an opportunity has formed an unfortunate attachment. ~ Ambrose Bierce


FIB, n. A lie that has not cut its teeth. An habitual liar's nearest approach to truth: the perigee of his eccentric orbit. ~ Ambrose Bierce


FLESH, n. The Second Person of the secular Trinity. ~ Ambrose Bierce


FUTURE, n. That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our friends are true and our happiness is assured. ~ Ambrose Bierce


First Law of Socio-Genetics: Celibacy is not hereditary.


Frisbeetarianism is the belief that when you die, your soul goes up on the roof and gets stuck.


Go Lemmings Go!


Go not to Usenet for counsel, for it will say both no, and yes, and no, and yes....


Guns don't kill people; people kill people.


HABIT, n. A shackle for the free. ~ Ambrose Bierce


HARBOR, n. A place where ships taking shelter from stores are exposed to the fury of the customs. ~ Ambrose Bierce


HERMIT, n. A person whose vices and follies are not sociable. ~ Ambrose Bierce


He who dies with the most toys is nonetheless still dead.


Hit any key to continue, or any other key to quit.


I don't care if I'm a lemming, I'm still not going.


I feed on the flesh of the living ~ and I vote.


I guess we were all guilty, in a way. We all shot him, we all skinned him, and we all got a complimentary bumper sticker that said, "I helped skin Bob."


I like life ~ it's something to do.


I like the idea of an ancient race ~ it makes a world feel so...lived in.


I may look calm, but beneath this cool exterior is a churning iceberg ready to explode.


I think people tend to forget that trees are living creatures. They're sort of like dogs. Huge, quiet, motionless dogs, with bark instead of fur.


I used to get high on life, but I've built up a tolerance.


I'm killing time, wasting space, and going through a phase.


I'm not doing this *just* to be weird.


ILLUSTRIOUS, adj. Suitably placed for the shafts of malice, envy and detraction. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMAGINATION, n. A warehouse of facts, with poet and liar in joint ownership. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMBECILITY, n. A kind of divine inspiration, or sacred fire affecting censorious critics of this dictionary. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMMIGRANT, n. An unenlightened person who thinks one country better than another. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMMODEST, adj. Having a strong sense of one's own merit, coupled with a feeble conception of worth in others. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMPIETY, n. Your irreverence toward my deity. ~ Ambrose Bierce


IMPUNITY, n. Wealth. ~ Ambrose Bierce


If it has syntax, it isn't user friendly.


If it's not one thing, it's a BUNCH of things.


If we're so smart and so creative, why aren't we happier than they are?


If you chose to dance with a bear, don't stop when you get tired.


In America, anyone can become president. That's one of the risks you take.


In the beginning, there was nothing. And God said, "Let there be Light." And there was still nothing, but you could see it.


It is much harder to find a job than to keep one. ~ Becker's Law


It may be that your whole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others.


It's a control freak thing ~ I won't *let* you understand.


It's a fine night to have an evening.


It's so elegant that it's wrong.


JAPANESE MINIMALISM: The most frequently offered interior design aesthetic used by rootless career-hopping young people. ~ Douglas Coupland


JEALOUS, adj. Unduly concerned about the preservation of that which can be lost only if not worth keeping. ~ Ambrose Bierce


KING, n. A male person commonly known in America as a "crowned head," although he never wears a crown and has usually no head to speak of. ~ Ambrose Bierce


KNEE-JERK IRONY: The tendency to make flippant ironic comments as a reflexive matter of course in everyday conversation. ~ Douglas Coupland


LABOR, n. One of the processes by which A acquires property for B. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LANGUAGE, n. The music with which we charm the serpents guarding another's treasure. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LAWFUL, adj. Compatible with the will of a judge having jurisdiction. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LAWYER, n. One skilled in circumvention of the law. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LAZINESS, n. Unwarranted repose of manner in a person of low degree. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LEARNING, n. The kind of ignorance distinguishing the studious. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LECTURER, n. One with his hand in your pocket, his tongue in your ear and his faith in your patience. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LIBERTY, n. One of Imagination's most precious possessions. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LOQUACITY, n. A disorder which renders the sufferer unable to curb his tongue when you wish to talk. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LOW-BRED, adj. "Raised" instead of brought up. ~ Ambrose Bierce


LUMINARY, n. One who throws light upon a subject; as an editor by not writing about it. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Last year I went fishing with Salvador Dali. He was using a dotted line. He caught every other fish. ~ Steven Wright


Life is a whim of several billion cells to be you for a while.


Life is uncertain. Eat dessert first.


Life's not fair, but the root password helps.


MACHINATION, n. The method employed by one's opponents in baffling one's open and honorable efforts to do the right thing. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MAMMON, n. The god of the world's leading religion. The chief temple is in the holy city of New York. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MERCHANT, n. One engaged in a commercial pursuit. A commercial pursuit is one in which the thing pursued is a dollar. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MESMERISM, n. Hypnotism before it wore good clothes, kept a carriage and asked Incredulity to dinner. ~ Ambrose Bierce


METROPOLIS, n. A stronghold of provincialism. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MILLENNIUM, n. The period of a thousand years when the lid is to be screwed down, with all reformers on the under side. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MISERICORDE, n. A dagger which in mediaeval warfare was used by the foot soldier to remind an unhorsed knight that he was mortal. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MISFORTUNE, n. The kind of fortune that never misses. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MONARCHICAL GOVERNMENT, n. Government. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MONDAY, n. In Christian countries, the day after the baseball game. ~ Ambrose Bierce


MORAL, adj. Conforming to a local and mutable standard of right. Having the quality of general expediency. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.


Marching to a different kettle of fish.


Me not responsible. Me just pawn in game of life.


Millions long for immortality who don't know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon.


Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons.


Morris dancing is an exercise in fertility.


My life is not organized around high probability events.


My life may be strange, but at least it's not boring.


NEPOTISM, n. Appointing your grandmother to office for the good of the party. ~ Ambrose Bierce


NIHILIST, n. A Russian who denies the existence of anything but Tolstoi. The leader of the school is Tolstoi. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.


Never send a monster to do the work of an evil genius.


OATH, n. In law, a solemn appeal to the Deity, made binding upon the conscience by a penalty for perjury. ~ Ambrose Bierce


OBSERVATORY, n. A place where astronomers conjecture away the guesses of their predecessors. ~ Ambrose Bierce


OMEN, n. A sign that something will happen if nothing happens. ~ Ambrose Bierce


ONCE, adv. Enough. ~ Ambrose Bierce


OPTION PARALYSIS: The tendency, when given unlimited choices, to make none. ~ Douglas Coupland


OVERWORK, n. A dangerous disorder affecting high public functionaries who want to go fishing. ~ Ambrose Bierce


OZMOSIS: The inability of one's job to live up to one's self-image. ~ Douglas Coupland


Objectivity is in the eye of the beholder.


Of all forms of caution, caution in love is the most fatal.


PATIENCE, n. A minor form of despair, disguised as a virtue. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PATRIOT, n. One to whom the interests of a part seem superior to those of the whole. The dupe of statesmen and the tool of conquerors. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PEACE, n. In international affairs, a period of cheating between two periods of fighting. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PENITENT, adj. Undergoing or awaiting punishment. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PIETY, n. Reverence for the Supreme Being, based upon His supposed resemblance to man. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PLAN, v.t. To bother about the best method of accomplishing an accidental result. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PLEBISCITE, n. A popular vote to ascertain the will of the sovereign. ~ Ambrose Bierce


POLICE, n. An armed force for protection and participation. ~ Ambrose Bierce


POLITICS, n. A strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles. The conduct of public affairs for private advantage. ~ Ambrose Bierce


POSITIVE, adj. Mistaken at the top of one's voice. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PRAY, v. To ask that the laws of the universe be annulled in behalf of a single petitioner confessedly unworthy. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PREDICAMENT, n. The wage of consistency. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PREDILECTION, n. The preparatory stage of disillusion. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PREHISTORIC, adj. Belonging to an early period and a museum. Antedating the art and practice of perpetuating falsehood. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PREJUDICE, n. A vagrant opinion without visible means of support. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PREROGATIVE, n. A sovereign's right to do wrong. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PROVIDENTIAL, adj. Unexpectedly and conspicuously beneficial to the person so describing it. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PRUDE, n. A bawd hiding behind the back of her demeanor. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PUBLISH, n. In literary affairs, to become the fundamental element in a cone of critics. ~ Ambrose Bierce


PUSH, n. One of the two things mainly conducive to success, especially in politics. The other is Pull. ~ Ambrose Bierce


People are more violently opposed to fur than leather because it's safer to harass rich women than motorcycle gangs.


Proof by accumulated evidence: Long and diligent search has not revealed a counterexample.


Proof by eminent authority: I saw Karp in the elevator and he said it was probably NP-complete.


Proof by funding: How could three different government agencies be wrong?


Proof by importance: A large body of useful consequences all follow from the proposition in question.


Proof by intimidation: Trivial.


Proof by omission: The reader may easily supply the details. The other 253 cases are analogous.


QUEEN, n. A woman by whom the realm is ruled when there is a king, and through whom it is ruled when there is not. ~ Ambrose Bierce


QUOTATION, n. The act of repeating erroneously the words of another. The words erroneously repeated. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RADICALISM, n. The conservatism of to-morrow injected into the affairs of to-day. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RADIUM, n. A mineral that gives off heat and stimulates the organ that a scientist is a fool with. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RANSOM, n. The purchase of that which neither belongs to the seller, nor can belong to the buyer. The most unprofitable of investments. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RASCAL, n. A fool considered under another aspect. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RASH, adj. Insensible to the value of our advice. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RATIONAL, adj. Devoid of all delusions save those of observation, experience and reflection. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REASON, n. Propensitate of prejudice. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REASON, v.i. To weight probabilities in the scales of desire. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REASONABLE, adj. Accessible to the infection of our own opinions. Hospitable to persuasion, dissuasion and evasion. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REBEL, n. A proponent of a new misrule who has failed to establish it. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RECOLLECT, v. To recall with additions something not previously known. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RECONCILIATION, n. A suspension of hostilities. An armed truce for the purpose of digging up the dead. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RECONSIDER, v. To seek a justification for a decision already made. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RECOUNT, n. In American politics, another throw of the dice, accorded to the player against whom they are loaded. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REFERENDUM, n. A law for submission of proposed legislation to a popular vote to learn the nonsensus of public opinion. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REFORM, v. A thing that mostly satisfies reformers opposed to reformation. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REPORTER, n. A writer who guesses his way to the truth and dispels it with a tempest of words. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RESIGN, v.t. To renounce an honor for an advantage. To renounce an advantage for a greater advantage. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RESOLUTE, adj. Obstinate in a course that we approve. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RESPECTABILITY, n. The offspring of a _liaison_ between a bald head and a bank account. ~ Ambrose Bierce


REVERENCE, n. The spiritual attitude of a man to a god and a dog to a man. ~ Ambrose Bierce


RUMOR, n. A favorite weapon of the assassins of character. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Red meat is _not_ bad for you. Now blue-green meat, *that's* bad for you!


Remember that you are unique, just like everyone else.


SAINT, n. A dead sinner revised and edited. ~ Ambrose Bierce


SCRIBBLER, n. A professional writer whose views are antagonistic to one's own. ~ Ambrose Bierce


SELF-EVIDENT, adj. Evident to one's self and to nobody else. ~ Ambrose Bierce


SELFISH, adj. Devoid of consideration for the selfishness of others. ~ Ambrose Bierce


SENATE, n. A body of elderly gentlemen charged with high duties and misdemeanors. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Shouldn't there be a shorter word for monosyllabic?


Sleep deprivation is fun ~ you see such pretty colors.


Sleep is for wimps. Happy, healthy, well-rested wimps, but wimps nonetheless.


TELEPHONE, n. An invention of the devil which abrogates some of the advantages of making a disagreeable person keep his distance. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Talking about music is like dancing about architecture.


The Earth is like a tiny grain of sand, only much, much, heavier.


The map is not the territory, but you can't fold up the territory and put it in your glove compartment.


The street finds its own uses for technology; the net finds its own uses for garbage.


This slogan is programming you in ways that may not be apparent for months, or even years.


Thou shalt eat green eggs and ham ~ obey thy God, I-am-that-I-am.


UN-AMERICAN, adj. Wicked, intolerable, heathenish. ~ Ambrose Bierce


UNIVERSALIST, n. One who forgoes the advantage of a Hell for persons of another faith. ~ Ambrose Bierce


Usenet is like Tetris for people who still remember how to read. ~ Button from the Computer Museum, Boston, MA


VIRTUES, n.pl. Certain abstentions. ~ Ambrose Bierce


VITUPERATION, n. Saite, as understood by dunces and all such as suffer from an impediment in their wit. ~ Ambrose Bierce


VOTE, n. The instrument and symbol of a freeman's power to make a fool of himself and a wreck of his country. ~ Ambrose Bierce


WIT, n. The salt with which the American humorist spoils his intellectual cookery by leaving it out. ~ Ambrose Bierce


WITTICISM, n. A sharp and clever remark, usually quoted, and seldom noted; what the Philistine is pleased to call a "joke." ~ Ambrose Bierce


What if no one ever asked a hypothetical question?


What really matters is the name you succeed in imposing on the facts ~ not the facts themselves. ~ Cohen's Law


When you are not looking at it, this .sig is in Cymrec.


Where am I going, and what am I doing in this handbasket?


Why serial commas are important: "I dedicate this book to my parents, Ayn Rand and God."


You know my motto: Forgive and uh... the other thing.


You'll go to Heck if you don't believe in Gosh.


ZEAL, n. A certain nervous disorder afflicting the young and inexperienced. A passion that goeth before a sprawl. ~ Ambrose Bierce


f u cn rd ths u r usng unx
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 12.03.2006, 20:00   #15
m@theis
Platinum Head
 
Benutzerbild von m@theis
 
Registriert seit: 25.10.2004
Ort: mainz
Beiträge: 3.706
Zitat:
Zitat von saschberT
Mr.EZ seine signatur is auch nich schlecht.
find ich jetzt zu sexistisch.
__________________
signatur ihrer wahl
m@theis ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 14.03.2006, 15:51   #16
Arsonist
Diamond Head
 
Benutzerbild von Arsonist
 
Registriert seit: 23.12.2002
Ort: MA-Neckarstadt-West
Beiträge: 6.716
Dressur heißt beim menschen erziehung!
__________________
ArsiPorns:
facebook.com/dnbarsonist /-/ soundcloud.com/arsonist /-/ soundcloud.com/spinning-time /-/ mixcloud.com/arsonistarsidub
Arsonist ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 15.03.2006, 09:53   #17
ReBirth
Senior Head
 
Registriert seit: 05.01.2006
Ort: Augusta Vindelicorum
Beiträge: 209
Zitat:
Zitat von saschberT
Mr.EZ seine signatur is auch nich schlecht.
ich find die voll fürn arsch!
__________________
Lass die Sonne rein
ReBirth ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 15.03.2006, 09:56   #18
Steppsen
Forum Freak
 
Benutzerbild von Steppsen
 
Registriert seit: 02.09.2002
Ort: Saar-G-Beat / NK-Town
Beiträge: 17.572
weil sie die fakten wiederspiegelt...hrhr...jaja...kenn´wer von den damen ja das die wahrheit meist wie bleib aufn fuss fällt...
__________________
[Printwerbung is out]
Steppsen ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 15.03.2006, 10:47   #19
soundsurfer
Hardcore Head
 
Benutzerbild von soundsurfer
 
Registriert seit: 15.01.2004
Beiträge: 8.534
die signatur vom thomas jvxp is mal wieder
soundsurfer ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 15.03.2006, 17:53   #20
~miss~d~a~
Platinum Head
 
Benutzerbild von ~miss~d~a~
 
Registriert seit: 03.07.2002
Ort: In The Heart of Manhattan and Hamburch City, Baby!
Beiträge: 4.646
stoppt tierversuche nehmt kinderschänder
__________________
NATURAL BORN CORE

(¯`·._.· music is taking you from everyday life`s darkness into the brightness of eternity ·._.·´¯)
~miss~d~a~ ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 15.03.2006, 19:48   #21
Kwestion
Platinum Head
 
Benutzerbild von Kwestion
 
Registriert seit: 12.03.2005
Ort: Haus im Wald
Beiträge: 4.407
wer das liest .......




















































































........ der kann lesen
__________________
baze... how low can you go?
Kwestion ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 18.03.2006, 16:59   #22
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
wenn ich meine sig mal ändern sollte
wärs wahrscheinlihc die folgende quote

Zitat:
Zitat von Silent Darkness





was ihr seid alle power rangers??
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 16.05.2006, 15:27   #23
hustlin l.
Hardcore Head
 
Benutzerbild von hustlin l.
 
Registriert seit: 17.09.2003
Beiträge: 8.959
Zitat:
Zitat von MC Sinista
es gibt keine weiblichen mcs
denn rap ist nicht lesbisch
und hat somit kein interesse an der
massage eurer igel
schreibt poesie in eure alben
aber stoppt das dumme female mc geschreie am mic
bitches ernten props aus mitleid
bwuahahaha was ne punchline. ich brech ab
__________________
|-|
hustlin l. ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 16.05.2006, 18:06   #24
D.E.E.N
Hardcore Head
 
Benutzerbild von D.E.E.N
 
Registriert seit: 20.11.2001
Beiträge: 8.147
rofl...geilo...
D.E.E.N ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 16.05.2006, 21:23   #25
s_move
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 11.10.2003
Ort: CGN
Beiträge: 1.966
Zitat:
Zitat von AlexJungle
Wenn du trinkst dem fettarme Milsch kriegst du konkrete Fettarm

BRÜLLAAAAAA!!!!! ich schmeiß mich weg!!! isch glaub da mach isch misch d-schäät vom...
__________________
www.myspace.com/djs_move
s_move ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 17.05.2006, 19:49   #26
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
auch ganz weit vorne

Zitat:
Zitat von niklas
300 millionen fliegen können nicht irren...im makai'schen sinne...fresst schxxxxe
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 19.05.2006, 12:58   #27
dawn.d
Gold Head
 
Registriert seit: 16.08.2005
Beiträge: 1.987
wird ja immer besser hier

Zitat:
Zitat von vHm.r0x
ich find diesen tagesablauf scheisse !

da gehören eindeutig mehr blowjobs rein
__________________
That is why I said to you, Be of good
courage, and if you are discouraged be
encouraged in the presence of the
different forms of nature
dawn.d ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 19.05.2006, 15:27   #28
tina
Diamond Head
 
Benutzerbild von tina
 
Registriert seit: 23.05.2001
Ort: im Frauenhaus
Beiträge: 5.410
Bauchfrei befreit nicht von Bauch!
tina ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.10.2006, 11:07   #29
Chris1202
Moderator
 
Benutzerbild von Chris1202
 
Registriert seit: 25.07.2002
Ort: Frankfurzt
Beiträge: 8.646
Zitat:
Zitat von misscuddles
Wenn die Betriebssysteme so sicher wären,
wie die Gedankenverschlüsselung einer Frau,
wäre jede Art von Firewall überflüssig!!!

__________________
http://www.nsf-music.de/


Einen Ohrgasmus erkennst Du am rhythmischen Zucken der Muschel beim Eindringen ganz spezieller Klänge.
Chris1202 ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Alt 23.10.2006, 11:10   #30
misscuddles
Silver Head
 
Registriert seit: 22.05.2005
Ort: Mannheim
Beiträge: 731
stimmt doch oder?
__________________
Wenn die Betriebssysteme so sicher wären,
wie die Gedankenverschlüsselung einer Frau,
wäre jede Art von Firewall überflüssig!!!

http://www.myspace.com/misscuddles78
misscuddles ist offline   Mit Zitat antworten
Antwort

Lesezeichen


Aktive Benutzer in diesem Thema: 1 (Registrierte Benutzer: 0, Gäste: 1)
 
Themen-Optionen Thema durchsuchen
Thema durchsuchen:

Erweiterte Suche
Ansicht

Forumregeln
Es ist dir nicht erlaubt, neue Themen zu verfassen.
Es ist dir nicht erlaubt, auf Beiträge zu antworten.
Es ist dir nicht erlaubt, Anhänge hochzuladen.
Es ist dir nicht erlaubt, deine Beiträge zu bearbeiten.

BB-Code ist an.
Smileys sind an.
[IMG] Code ist aus.
HTML-Code ist aus.


Ähnliche Themen
Thema Autor Forum Antworten Letzter Beitrag
Signaturen Aeolho Ankündigungen, Hinweise & Tipps ... 43 04.12.2002 22:08
Signaturen FEINDSOUL Sonstiges, offtopic... 22 10.10.2002 20:59


Alle Zeitangaben in WEZ +2. Es ist jetzt 21:25 Uhr.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 (Deutsch)
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
& future-music.net, Germany.