Quote
"Fashion is a way of not having to decide who you are. Style is deciding who you are and being able to perpetuate it."
Q
Quentin Crisp"The low dive had set a standard that only middle-aged hooligans could remember and to which they looked back as Mrs Lot at Sodom."
Quentin Crisp was an English raconteur, whose work in the public eye included a memoir of her life and various media appearances. Before becoming well known, she was an artist's model, hence the title of Crisp's most famous work, The Naked Civil Servant. She afterwards became a gay icon due to her flamboyant personality, fashion sense, and wit. Her iconic status was occasionally controversial due
"Fashion is a way of not having to decide who you are. Style is deciding who you are and being able to perpetuate it."
"If I have any talent at all, it is not for doing but for being."
"The young always have the same problem — how to rebel and conform at the same time. They have now solved this problem by defying their elders and copying each other."
"When stripped, I looked less like "Il David" than a plucked chicken that died of myxomatosis."
"Health consists of having the same diseases as one’s neighbours."
"At the age of ninety, it has finally been explained to me that I am not really homosexual, Im transgender. I now accept that. I no longer see myself as homosexual, though it is a word I have used to describe myself and which others have understandably used to describe me. I dont actually see myself as a man though, of course, I know Im not physically a woman. The only thing in my life I have wanted and didnt get was to be a woman. [...] I dont dress like a woman ... I think my body is too like a mans body to have lived as a woman with any kind of success. I refer to myself as homosexual without thinking because of how I have lived my life."
"I also know that the shock of Annabels death consolidated the frustration of that nightmare summer, made of it a permanent obstacle to any further romance throughout the cold years of my youth. The spiritual and the physical had been blended in us with a perfection that must remain incomprehensible to the matter-of-fact, crude, standard-brained youngsters of today. Long after her death I felt her thoughts floating through mine. Long before we met we had had the same dreams. We compared notes. We found strange affinities. The same June of the same year (1919) a stray canary had fluttered into her house and mine, in two widely separated countries. Oh, Lolita, had you loved me thus!"
"If you have always believed that everyone should play by the same rules and be judged by the same standards, that would have gotten you labeled a radical 50 years ago, a liberal 25 years ago and a racist today."
"Since the Chernobyl accident, we have worked all over the globe to raise nuclear safety performance. And since the September 2001 terrorist attacks, we have worked with even greater intensity on nuclear security. On both fronts, we have built an international network of legal norms and performance standards. But our most tangible impact has been on the ground. Hundreds of missions, in every part of the world, with international experts making sure nuclear activities are safe and secure. I am very proud of the 2,300 hard working men and women that make up the IAEA staff — the colleagues with whom I share this honour. Some of them are here with me today. We come from over 90 countries. We bring many different perspectives to our work. Our diversity is our strength. We are limited in our authority. We have a very modest budget. And we have no armies. But armed with the strength of our convictions, we will continue to speak truth to power. And we will continue to carry out our mandate with independence and objectivity."
"Their standard, planted on the battlement, Despair and death among the soldiers sent."
"I compared some passages of articles of Robert McNamara in the late 1960s, speeches, on management and the necessity of management, how a well-managed society controlled from above was the ultimate in freedom. The reason is if you have really good management and everythings under control and people are told what to do, under those conditions, he said, man can maximize his potential. I just compared that with standard Leninist views on vanguard parties, which are about the same. About the only difference is that McNamara brought God in, and I suppose Lenin didnt bring God in. He brought Marx in."
"The centerpiece of the cultural counterrevolution is the snowballing campaign for a "drug-free workplace" — a euphemism for "drug-free workforce," since urine testing also picks up for off-duty indulgence. The purpose of this 80s version of the loyalty oath is less to deter drug use than to make people undergo a humiliating ritual of subordination: "When I say pee, you pee." The idea is to reinforce the principle that one must forfeit ones dignity and privacy to earn a living, and bring back the good old days when employers had the unquestioned right to demand that their workers appearance and behavior, on or off the job, meet managements standards."