When an honest man discovers he is mistaken, he will either cease being mistaken, or cease being honest.
~ unknown
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When an honest man discovers he is mistaken, he will either cease being mistaken, or cease being honest.
~ unknown
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Weâre supposed to be thinking people. Weâre supposed to be able to question everything.
There are things that happen in the world that are bad, and you want to do something about them. You have a just cause. But our culture is so war prone that we immediately jump from âThis is a good causeâ to âThis deserves a war.â
You need to be very, very comfortable in making that jump.
~ Howard Zinn from, «http://www.progressive.org/zinnjuly09.html»
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During the course of our conversation, I told these researchers about my practice and about the success I was having with patients on low-carb diets. I explained how my patients lost weight fairly easily and experienced significant and rapid changes in blood pressure, lipids, fasting insulin and blood sugar levels. They became intrigued since these changes pretty much mirrored those seen over time in caloric-restriction studies on lab animals. It set them to wondering whether humans following low-carb diets would manifest the same enzymatic changes as calorically-restricted animals. They proposed an experiment.
~ Michael Eades from, «http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/inflammation/can-your-food-make-you-fit/»
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I hear it all the time from people. âIâm passionate about it.â âIâm not going to quit, Itâs my passionâ. Or I hear it as advice to students and others âFollow your passionâ.
What a bunch of BS. âFollow Your Passionâ is easily the worst advice you could ever give or get.
~ Mark Cuban from, Mark Cuban â Don’t Follow Your Passion, Follow Your Effort | Genius
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If you have to understand the law to read a book, we have failed. If you have to enter into a contract â any contract, even a ââgoodââ contract â to read a book, we have failed.
These are cultural, not industrial activities. Itâs insane to ask people to sign contracts to read books. Seriously, who actually thinks this is a good idea?
Maybe we do need rules for culture, and maybe we even need laws for culture, but they shouldnât â and canât â be the rules we designed for industry.
Itâs not always easy to tell the difference beÂtween culture and industry, but there are plenty of cases where itâs totally obvious. For those fuzzy cases in the middle, come up with some guidelines and let the courts apply them.
Itâs a wildly imperfect system, but at the very least, it isnât the grossly Kafkaesque idea that you should have to enter into a 22,000-word agreement with Apple, AT&T, and Random House audio in order to listen to a 15,000-word novella.
~ Cory Doctorow from, Cory Doctorow: A New Deal for Copyright â Locus Online
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The truth is, that wherever we are in life, we all have pockets of time that we own, and that we could be doing more to actively shape and make the most of. Itâs just that so often we default to the path of least resistance. Unbelievably, Americans only use 51% of their paid vacation and paid days off. When weâre not working, and do have free time, rather than pursuing a constructive hobby or side business, weâll often plop in front of the TV or mindlessly surf the internet. Instead of seeking out good books to read to feed our minds, we default to consuming whatever information happens to pop up in our Facebook feeds. The ironclad rules that governed our childhood are long gone, and yet we still donât feel fully in control of our lives. We feel swept along by the currents of our responsibilities, so that our lives seem to go by in a unthinking haze â a fog that is ever so often perforated by the question: âWhy havenât things turned out the way I had hoped?â
~ Brett McKay from, Become the Author of Your Own Life | The Art of Manliness
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Say yes whenever you can and overcome the inertia of rigmarole. One of the greatest impediments to adventure as an adult is the number of your responsibilities, and how said responsibilities sap your willpower. Psychologists have shown that we have a limited supply of willpower each day, that if we use it for one thing, we have less it for another, and that when our willpower runs low, our default answer to everything becomes âno.â
~ Brett McKay from, How to Be More Adventurous | The Art of Manliness
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Creating an awesome adulthood involves using your imagination to create a story for yourself, and then taking ceaseless action to bring that narrative to life. Itâs like riding a stationary bike that powers a film projector: to create a new world â to project your chosen narrative on the screen of your life â you must pedal continuously.
~ Brett McKay from, Churchill’s Advice on How to Be an Adult | The Art of Manliness
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This is a rather large, long (and I think, well written) series of posts from Brett over at Art of Manliness. Well worth a read in my opinion.
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I think this is going to be a “road trip of the English countryside” after RDVX and a few days in London. Parkour friends, I’m seeking floor space around Aug RDV weekend!
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We’re friends. You laugh I laugh. You cry I cry. You jump off a bridge, I get on my boat and save your retarded ass.
~ unknown
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There has been much written about past debt bubbles and collapses. The situation we are facing today is different. In the past, the world economy was growing, even if a particular area was reaching limits, such as too much population relative to agricultural land. Even if a local area collapsed, the rest of the world could go on without them. Now, the world economy is much more networked, so a collapse in one area affects other areas as well. There is much more danger of a widespread collapse.
~ Gail Tverberg from, The Problem of Debt as We Reach Oil Limits | Our Finite World
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Most of the US and Europe are too far north to get enough sun exposure to generate the production of adequate vitamin D during a large part of the year. And, second, most parents are so fearful of sunburn that they slather their kids with sunscreen if and when they let these children play outside during the part of the year they can make adequate vitamin D. Since a sunscreen with an SPF of only 8 reduces the synthesis of vitamin D by 95 percent, think of how little vitamin D children with sunscreens of SPF 30 or 45 are making. Zero.
~ Michael Eades from, «http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/supplements/sunshine-superman/»
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