Quotes about Society
A government is for the benefit of all the people.
— William Howard Taft
We live in an atmosphere of shame. We are ashamed of everything that is real about us; ashamed of ourselves, of our relatives, of our incomes, of our accents, of our opinions, of our experience, just as we are ashamed of our naked skins.
— George Bernard Shaw
Oh that. Men do fall in love with me. They seem to think me a creature with volcanic passions; I'm sure I don't know why. All the volcanic women I know are plain little creatures with sandy hair. I don't consider human volcanoes respectable. And I'm so tired of the subject. Our house is always full of women in love with my husband and men in love with me. We encourage it because it's pleasant to have company.
— George Bernard Shaw
You see, we're all savages, more or less. We're supposed to be civilized and cultured—to know all about poetry and philosophy and art and science, and so on; but how many of us know even the meanings of these names?
— George Bernard Shaw
If we desire a certain type of civilisation and culture we must exterminate the sort of people who do not fit into it.
— George Bernard Shaw
your uncle Howard is one of the most harmless of men—much nicer than most professional people. Of course he does dreadful things as a judge; but then if you take a man and pay him 5,000 pounds a year to be wicked, and praise him for it, and have policemen and courts and laws and juries to drive him into it so that he can't help doing it, what can you expect?
— George Bernard Shaw
Civilized society is one huge bourgeoisie: no nobleman dares now shock his greengrocer.
— George Bernard Shaw
You see this creature with her kerbstone English: the English that will keep her in the gutter to the end of her days.
— George Bernard Shaw
The power to exterminate is too grave to be left in any hands but those of a thoroughly Communist government.
— George Bernard Shaw
What right have such men to represent Christianity—as if it were an institution for getting up idiots genteelly?
— George Eliot
We don't ask what a woman does; we ask whom she belongs to.
— George Eliot
It had never occurred to him that he should live in any other than what he would have called an ordinary way, with green glasses for hock, and excellent waiting at table. In warming himself at French social theories he had brought away no smell of scorching. We may handle even extreme opinions with impunity while our furniture, our dinner-giving, and preference for armorial bearings in our own ease, link us indissolubly with the established order.
— George Eliot