'Salaam Bombay' didn't put a halo on the poor. Instead, it said that they will teach us how to live.
I have to go make books. Sorry about that.
Plot is a literary convention. Story is a force of nature.
That's the great thing about doing good: Anyone can do it, any time, no waiting periods or batteries required.
So many problems are solved simply by knowing enough verbs.
There's a rule for what makes good fantasy work, and it's as strange as any riddle ever posed in a fairy tale: In fantasy, you can do anything; and therefore, the one thing you must not do is 'just anything. ' Why? Because in a story where anything can happen and anything can be true, nothing matters. You have no reason to care what happens. It's all arbitrary, and arbitrary isn't interesting.
If there is no willingness to use force to defend civil society, it's civil society that goes away, not force.
Something's lost, but something's gained, in living everyday.
I want to work and be happy.
The organizational architecture is really that a centipede walks on hundred legs and one or two don't count. So if I lose one or two legs, the process will go on, the organization will go on, the growth will go on.
Surround yourself with "yay-sayers" not "naysayers. "