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No nation was ever so virtuous as each believes itself, and none was ever so wicked as each believes the other. - Bertrand Russell
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The Bag On Line Adventures, Maya mythology, In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3, The Second Stage Turbine Blade, Guns N' Roses, Coheed and Cambria, Meridian 59, City of Heroes, Template:Blizzard, Wikisource's Popol Vuh


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Perhaps man will rise ever higher as soon as he ceases to flow out into a god. - Nietzsche


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If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face —forever. - Nineteen Eighty-Four
The Monarch of the Glen
The Monarch of the Glen is an oil-on-canvas painting of a red deer stag completed in 1851 by the English painter Sir Edwin Landseer. It was commissioned as part of a series of three panels to hang in the Palace of Westminster in London. As one of the most popular paintings throughout the 19th century, it sold widely in reproductions in steel engraving, and was finally bought by companies to use in advertising. The painting had become something of a cliché by the mid–20th century, as the "ultimate biscuit tin image of Scotland: a bulky stag set against the violet hills and watery skies of an isolated wilderness", according to the Sunday Herald. The work is now in the Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh.Painting credit: Edwin Landseer
The economic anarchy of capitalist society as it exists today is, in my opinion, the real source of the evil. I am convinced there is only one way to eliminate these grave evils, namely through the establishment of a socialist economy accompanied by an educational system which would be oriented toward social goals. - Albert Einstein