Friday 2 October 2009

Attack in situations of continued confusion is the clearest form of defence, especially for the man who has no time to do anything else more intellectually creative with his time.

Sometimes you may have just gotten the wrong end of the stick; the appreciation of this fact is of paramount importance.

To live everyday with the unbearable is quite preposterous; and so, perhaps, then it should be put aside in favour of taking up origami.

Laziness is a more productive method of taking up wasted time than in using it liberally on a lack of direction.

Truthfulness may also become a vague irritation to strangers to it, one maybe enough even to be found worthwhile to be acted upon.

To be immoral is a matter of moral judgement: to have chosen to do what you have done despite being told not to by certain vested interests.

It is human nature for people to attack that which they do not understand; of course, in the final analysis, this just means you.

Be wary of those who have their own take on life, as it isn’t yours.

True selfishness must have a point to it, or else it could simply be misconstrued as being a little too much like a very mean pizza served-up with indifference.

Real men prefer the company of like-minded men; this is a danger signal to any man.

The tactical use for a man of his essential maleness is to surprise his nearest rival with his trousers down.

Acceptance within the group is the touchstone of individualistic youth culture; know this and you know all about it.

The person smart enough to know just how stupid he can be cannot be that stupid after all, or can he?

The failings of the son can most reasonably be blamed on the father––as he shouldn’t have done it should he.

Being inoffensive is a matter of good manners, but is something not many will manage to achieve with any real consistency.

A good moral judgement always puts a bit of a strain on the system, but when it’s done it all feels much better.

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