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Tag Archives: quotes
finale: a last few (random) DC things
and then a few things that didn’t quite get mentioned previously:
- quotes.
i feel like there is no way to talk about my trip to DC without mentioning the wealth of quotations that are everywhere. i mean everywhere. every museum, every wall, every exhibit–even some of the bathrooms—were adorned with inspiring, moving, thought-provoking, pause-giving words. it was like i was in heaven. i took pictures of so (so SO) many…but here’s a choice few i wanted to share…
- misquotes.
on the walls of the bathroom in the newseum hang tiles of badly-worded and erroneous headlines from over the years.
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- souvenirs.
i only bought one souvenir on my trip, actually…

have i mentioned how much i love this show?
and that’s a wrap!
“the sheer arduousness of change”
If you’ve been following this blog (or my twitter, google+, or facebook) for any period of time, you will have figured out that I like quotes. I mean, I like them a lot. So imagine my fascination when I saw this morning’s New York Times’s article, “Falser Words Were Never Spoken,” by Brian Morton. The article is short (one page) and well worth the read. Morton discusses the present-day tendency to rewrite, “tweak,” or simply falsify the words of famous thinkers. And then he offers a stunning consideration about why we might do such a thing:
Thoreau, Gandhi, Mandela — it’s easy to see why their words and ideas have been massaged into gauzy slogans. They were inspirational figures, dreamers of beautiful dreams. But what goes missing in the slogans is that they were also sober, steely men. Each of them knew that thoroughgoing change, whether personal or social, involves humility and sacrifice, and that the effort to change oneself or the world always exacts a price.
But ours is an era in which it’s believed that we can reinvent ourselves whenever we choose. So we recast the wisdom of the great thinkers in the shape of our illusions. Shorn of their complexities, their politics, their grasp of the sheer arduousness of change, they stand before us now. They are shiny from their makeovers, they are fabulous and gorgeous, and they want us to know that we can have it all. Brian Morton (my emphasis)
I’d like to see the section I bold-faced on a poster or magnet. Seriously.









