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More Quotes by Chuck Klosterman
- Styx and The Stones may break my bones but 'More than Words' will never hurt me
- Internet porn makes everything more reasonable -- once you've realized there is a massive subculture of upwardly mobile people who think it's erotic to see…
- There are two ways to look at life. The first view is that nothing stays the same and that nothing is inherently connected, and that…
- What my mom failed to understand was that I didn't even want long hair -- I needed long hair. And my desire for protracted, flowing…
- Who Am I? Or (Perhaps More Accurately) Who Else Could Be Me?
- In New York, people are unhappy on purpose, because unhappiness makes them seem more complex; in Washington DC it just sort of works out that…
- Observing someone without context amplifies the experience. The more we know, the less we are able to feel.
- Let's face it: Sadness and evil are always more believable than happiness and love. When a movie reviewer calls a film "realistic," everyone knows what…
More More Quotes
- . . . a basic law: the more you practice the art of thankfulness, the more you have to be thankful for.… — Norman Vincent Peale
- All human actions have one or more of these seven causes: chance, nature, compulsions, habit, reason, passion, desire. — Aristotle
- I'm hoping someday that some kid, black or white, will hit more home runs than myself. Whoever it is, I'd be pulling… — Hank Aaron
- No punishment has ever possessed enough power of deterrence to prevent the commission of crimes. On the contrary, whatever the punishment, once… — Hannah Arendt
- As a kid, 'Star Wars' was much more my thing than 'Star Trek' was. — J. J. Abrams
- Those who educate children well are more to be honored than they who produce them; for these only gave them life, those… — Aristotle
- It is just that we should be grateful, not only to those with whose views we may agree, but also to those… — Aristotle
- Hence poetry is something more philosophic and of graver import than history, since its statements are rather of the nature of universals,… — Aristotle