Fyodor Dostoevsky Quote: How to Keep Prisoners Without Walls – The Shocking Truth!
“The best way to keep a prisoner from escaping is to make sure he never knows he’s in prison.”
Fjodor Dostojewski
“The best way to keep a prisoner from escaping is to make sure he never knows he’s in prison.”
Fjodor Dostojewski
“Ordinary men and women are too small-minded to govern their own affairs, that order and progress can only come when individuals surrender their rights to an all-powerful sovereign.”
Barack Hussein Obama II
“A higher power is pushing me to a goal I don’t know. Until it is reached, I will be invulnerable, unshakeable. As soon as I’m no longer needed, one fly will be enough to knock me down.”
Napoleon Bonaparte
“What the government is good at is collecting taxes, taking away your freedoms and killing people. It’s not good at much else.”
Tom Clancy
“If the government was replaced by the mafia we’d probably have half as much corruption and twice as much fun.”
Klaus Kinski
“When you pay the representatives of the people, you do not arouse in them an interest in performing their functions conscientiously; rather, you interest them only in continuing to secure for themselves the exercise of those functions.”
Benjamin Constant
“The individual is handicapped by coming face-to-face with a conspiracy so monstrous he cannot believe it exists. The American mind simply has not come to a realization of the evil which has been introduced into our midst. It rejects even the assumption that human creatures could espouse a philosophy which must ultimately destroy all that is good and decent.”
John Edgar Hoover
“He is free to evade reality, he is free to unfocus his mind and stumble blindly down any road he pleases, but not free to avoid the abyss he refuses to see.”
Ayn Rand
“We live in a system in which one must either be a wheel or get crushed by the wheels.”
Friedrich Nietzsche
“Every four years it elects the Bundestag. The lists or persons submitted to it by the parties are already elected beforehand by the parties. The process of this hidden preliminary election, which is the actual election, is convoluted; the names for the constituency lists and the state lists are not drawn up in the same way. But it is always the party committees, never the people, who would be involved in this decisive beginning. One must be a party member in order to participate somewhere in this election and to be able to be set up. Even those who are party members, as such, have little effect in the nominations. The decisive factor is the party hierarchy and bureaucracy.[…] Even the elections are not really elections, but acclamations to the party oligarchy. [….] The parties, which should by no means be the state, make themselves, withdrawn from the life of the people, the state [….] The governance of the state is in the hands of the party oligarchy [….] Their position, not limited by any tension to other power, seduces [….] the parties to want to occupy the seats by their own people. This is the reward for party work, the spoils of victory after the electoral battle [….]”
Karl Jaspers
