Better Future Quotes

Quotes tagged as "better-future" Showing 1-30 of 84
Simone Collins
“We will preserve the capacity for independent thought through a society so heterogeneous that it will make our own look trite. We will intentionally craft new ethnicities, religions, and ways of existing. The genome will be our canvas and flesh our clay. Man is a young species. We still occupy the same bodies with which our ancestors hunted and picked berries. We are so trapped by the limitations of our biology that we lack the capacity to conceive our ultimate potential. ”
Simone Collins, The Pragmatist’s Guide to Crafting Religion: A playbook for sculpting cultures that overcome demographic collapse & facilitate long-term human flourishing

Simone Collins
“People experience anger when their expectations around how they should be treated don’t align with their actual treatment (or when they expect a thing to happen based on some series of actions and it does not happen).”
Simone Collins, The Pragmatist’s Guide to Crafting Religion: A playbook for sculpting cultures that overcome demographic collapse & facilitate long-term human flourishing

Germany Kent
“Don't allow your own insecurities to keep you away from the career or lifestyle you believe you deserve. ”
Germany Kent

“Terrorizing a child, mentally or physically, is the worst thing someone can do.”
Cindrella

“Mistakes are meant to to make us understand life better. Admit your mistakes, learn from them, and move on.”
Cindrella

“When you are defending yourself, you're attacking someone else at the same time. It's a lose-lose situation.”
Cindrella

“Don't hide your true self in front of your children, or you will stop being alive.”
Cindrella

“Your apology means nothing when it's about hurting someone's emotions”
Cindrella

“Success is a lifestyle, not a final goal to be achieved.”
Cindrella

“Your kids are your kids, not your friends. Don't assume that you're doing the right thing when you remove the barriers.”
Cindrella

“You are alive as long as you remain in someone's memory”
Cindrella

“It's always about the journey, so make sure to enjoy it before you reach your final destination.”
Cindrella

Gift Gugu Mona
“Dear Superwoman,
Be that woman who stands out.
Even if it means spending sleepless nights, do it.
As long as it is the right thing to do.
Do not settle for being where you were in the past,
so you can waltz towards a better future.”
Gift Gugu Mona, Woman of Virtue: Power-Filled Quotes for a Powerful Woman

“How peaceful you are, indicates to how strong personality you have. Anger is the first sign of weak personality.”
Cindrella

“How involved you are in your children's lives, is your own responsibility. Even if you choose to ignore this fact.”
Cindrella

“The thing between men and women is not about power or equality. It is about differentiation and respect.”
Cindrella

“Democracy doesn't mean your ability to insult others. Liberality doesn't mean your ability to walk naked.”
Cindrella

“If it's going to be hard, do it as fast as you can. Delaying it will make it get harder.”
Cindrella

“Being strong doesn't mean you don't get hurt. It means you are aware of your true worth.”
Cindrella

“If you are unable to love yourself, you definitely can’t love anyone else.”
Cindrella

Giridhar Alwar
“It’s been a fallacy that people run for the money, but the reality is people see happiness there. Once people realize happiness has no connection with any material things, their life changes automatically.”
Giridhar Alwar, My Quest For Happy Life

Todd Stocker
“When you get a glimpse of a better future, the present becomes even more exciting!”
Todd Stocker

Gift Gugu Mona
“Dear Daughter,
Be hopeful because hope is an anticipation of a better future, despite what may have happened in the past.”
Gift Gugu Mona, Dear Daughter: Short and Sweet Messages for a Queen

“Have no fear of failure. We might rise again in a better future.”
Shaa Zainol

“A culture can be thought of as ever-evolving software that sits on top of—and synergistically interacts with—both biological hardware and firmware, addressing flaws our biology hasn’t had sufficient evolutionary time to address. To go further with this analogy: Biological evolution provides some basic coding, much like a low-level programming language might for a given hardware, whereas cultural evolution manipulates the high-level, object-oriented code that lets us program highly nuanced behaviors.”
Malcolm Collins, The Pragmatist's Guide to Governance: From high school cliques to boards, family offices, and nations: A guide to optimizing governance models

“When a person gets severe radiation poisoning, some time passes before they feel the adverse effects. Their DNA has functionally been scrambled; their cells can’t divide; the person is dead—they just don’t know it yet. Many wildly popular cultural movements are currently in this state. It may be easier to coax a caged panda to reproduce than it would be to convince a cosmopolitan progressive to raise their own kid. ”
Malcolm Collins, The Pragmatist's Guide to Governance: From high school cliques to boards, family offices, and nations: A guide to optimizing governance models

“Almost all hard cultures have some ritual focused on voluntary self-denial, such as Ramadan, Lent, or the Fast of the Firstborn. The question is, why? Why do cultures that practice something that makes membership less pleasant historically outcompete cultures that encourage people to indulge in whatever they want? This question becomes more pointed when we look at how common it is for pop cultures to emotionally reward people for succumbing to their base desires, as is seen in pop culture outputs like the Intuitive Eating Movement, which entails telling people they are being healthy by eating whatever they want whenever they want in an age in which we’re surrounded with an abundance of foods that are designed to be highly addictive. Movements telling people to indulge in their immediate desires have been around since the ancient Greeks. These movements resurface during every civilization’s brief golden age and only seem to be successful in the short run. While the pop cultures that produce them consistently die, stodgy hard cultures persist. Why?”
Malcolm Collins, The Pragmatist's Guide to Governance: From high school cliques to boards, family offices, and nations: A guide to optimizing governance models

“Society can be thought of as a collection of overlapping nodal networks (things like companies and cultivars), with each node representing a person and their connections to other people. Historically, pop cultures, simple memetic viruses, evolved to target single nodes. These cultures would flip target nodes (convert them) by offering individuals an easy life and positive emotional subsets. While these viruses lowered the birth rates among the individual nodes they flipped and could sometimes lead to wild outbreaks, those outbreaks were always contained within single or closely-related nodal networks, meaning they were never really an existential threat to our species. . . .The supervirus evolved a new strategy. Instead of flipping individual nodes, it works to flip entire nodal networks. Instead of selling the promise of minimizing emotional suffering within a single node, it entices nodal systems with the prospect of minimizing negative emotion across the entire network. ”
Malcolm Collins, The Pragmatist's Guide to Governance: From high school cliques to boards, family offices, and nations: A guide to optimizing governance models

“Once the supervirus controls a certain number of nodes within a culture, it begins to systematically erase that culture's core, including its inherent values and objectives, maintaining only cosmetic features (consider attributes like accents, dress, superficial holidays … nothing representing deep underlying beliefs). . . . The supervirus has already gutted a few of the more progressively minded cultivars to a point at which they are now functionally the same culture wearing different skins … and it won’t stop there, having wrapped its tendrils deep within many more traditional belief systems. In erasing the genuine differences in how these cultures historically saw the world—the “offensive” bits—the supervirus robs us of these cultivars’ rich cultural histories and unique approaches to problems. It achieves equality by shaving off beliefs, objectives, and traditions that may produce genuine conflict among its vassals. The last thing our society needs is a monoculture wearing a skin mask of its victims. ”
Malcolm Collins, The Pragmatist's Guide to Governance: From high school cliques to boards, family offices, and nations: A guide to optimizing governance models

“A wise parent thinks like a root, sustaining not only its trunk but also ensuring that the furthest green leaf is nurtured.”
Nitzan Hamburg

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