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If you’ve been successful, you didn’t get there on your own. You didn’t get there on your own! I’m always struck by people who think, “Well, it must be ‘cause I was just so smart!” There are a lot of smart people out there. “It must be because I worked harder than everybody else.” Let me tell you something: There are a whole bunch of hardworkin’ people out there. If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help.

President Barack Obama

Apparently this is a controversial statement? Even though it’s true? (via annaetc)

I tried but failed to find (lol logic) what is controversial about it. Never mind the notion that no human being is an island, there’s still the pesky truth about roads, law enforcement, municipal services, and schools. Unless you were spontaneously born with some magically affixed bootstraps in a bubble in the vacuum of space, and arrive on earth fully formed without the assistance of NASA, you did not become whoever you are without other human beings.

There is literally no one in the Republican party I don’t hate right now.

(via someauthorgirl)

(Source: shakesville.com)

janedoe225:

“We’ve bought into the idea that education is about training and “success”, defined monetarily, rather than learning to think critically and to challenge. We should not forget that the true purpose of education is to make minds, not careers. A culture that does not grasp the vital interplay between morality and power, which mistakes management techniques for wisdom, which fails to understand that the measure of a civilization is its compassion, not its speed or ability to consume, condemns itself to death.”

The plain fact is that the planet does not need more “successful people”. But it does desperately need more peacemakers, healers, restorers, storytellers and lovers of every kind. it needs people who live well in their places. It needs people of moral courage willing to join the fight to make the world habitable and human, and these qualities have little to do with success as our culture has defined it.

David Orr  (via sitasays) (via thebeldam, free-wilderness) (via voiceofnature)

Always re-blog, as a reminder to myself if nothing else.

(via journeyers-scrapbook)

((via guerrillamamamedicine)

(via dreams-from-my-father)

(via truth-has-a-liberal-bias)

(via stfuconservatives)

(via missmokushiroku)

quotevadis:

“Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success.”

Albert Schweitzer, a German and then French theologian, organist, philosopher, physician, and medical missionary. He was born in Kaysersberg in the province of Alsace-Lorraine, at that time part of the German Empire. Schweitzer, a Lutheran, challenged both the secular view of Jesus as depicted by historical-critical methodology current at his time in certain academic circles, as well as the traditional Christian view. He depicted Jesus as one who literally believed the end of the world was coming in his own lifetime and believed himself to be a world savior. He received the 1952 Nobel Peace Prize for his philosophy of “Reverence for Life”, expressed in many ways, but most famously in founding and sustaining the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, now in Gabon, west central Africa (then French Equatorial Africa). As a music scholar and organist, he studied the music of German composer Johann Sebastian Bach and influenced the Organ reform movement (Orgelbewegung).

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