November 3, 2012
Via awesomepeoplehangingouttogether.tumblr.com

Via awesomepeoplehangingouttogether.tumblr.com

September 19, 2012
"His desire to hear out junior people is a warm personality trait as much as a cool tactic, of a piece with his desire to play golf with White House cooks rather than with C.E.O.’s and basketball with people who treat him as just another player on the court; to stay home and read a book rather than go to a Washington cocktail party; and to seek out, in any crowd, not the beautiful people but the old people. The man has his stat­us needs, but they are unusual. And he has a tendency, an unthinking first step, to subvert established stat­us structures. After all, he became president."

Obama’s Way by Michael Lewis 

March 7, 2012
"The problem with police officers and firefighters isn’t a public-sector problem; it isn’t a problem with government; it’s a problem with the entire society. It’s what happened on Wall Street in the run-up to the subprime crisis. It’s a problem of people taking what they can, just because they can, without regard to the larger social consequences."

Michael Lewis, California and Bust

November 29, 2011
"Well, you can just stop and think of what could happen if anybody with a decent system of government got control of that mainland. Good God… . There’d be no power in the world that could even—I mean, you put 800 million Chinese to work under a decent system … and they will be the leaders of the world."

— Richard Nixon on China (1971)

November 29, 2011
"How China was prepared to stand alone, even in the face of a nuclear threat, and fight a protracted guerrilla war on its own against a coalition of all major powers became a standard Chinese narrative over the next decade. Its underlying purpose was to turn self-reliance into a weapon and into a method of mutual assistance based on parallel perceptions."

— Henry Kissinger, On China (Post Cold War)

November 29, 2011
"All told there are more than four hundred different types of Chinese cigarettes, each with a distinct identity and meaning. Around Beijing, peasants smoke Red Plum Blossom whites. Red Pagoda Mountain can be found in the pockets of average city folk. Middle-class entrepreneurs like Zhongnanhai Lights. Businessmen with a flair for foreign sport State Express 555. A nouveau riche tosses out Chunghwa like it’s rice. Pandas are the rarest best of all. That was Deng Xiaoping’s favorite brand, and government quotas make them hard to find; a single pack costs more than twelve dollars. If you carry Panda, you’re probably just being pretentious."

— Peter Hessler, Country Driving

September 18, 2011
"诡道也。故能而示之不能,用而示之不用,近而示之远,远而示之近。利而诱之,乱而取之,实而备之,强而避之,怒而挠之,卑而骄之,佚而劳之,亲而离之。攻其无备,出其不意,此兵家之胜,不可先传也。"

— 孙子兵法

September 11, 2011
"Much of the old town was pulled down; what replaced it was being levelled at the time of writing to restore what was there before. Illogical for sure, but this is China."

— LonelyPlanet China

September 6, 2011
"You guys need to get a handle on the numbers. The real numbers. You need to sit down with those numbers and figure out the size of the real hole, not the made-up hole. How big is the securities lending? You have to go contract by contract, like bottoms-up, real work. Then you need to make a list of who can help you fill it. This isn’t like, you know, you’re going to be late on your credit card bill."

— Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan Chase Chairman & CEO to AIG team during the heat of the 2008 financial crisis

August 9, 2011
"It is for us to decide what we are going to do; whether to swim upriver to make friends with the crocodile or to swim out to sea and hang on to the whale. … Being surrounded on two or three sides by powerful nations, as we are now, what can a small nation like us do? … The only weapons that will be of real use to us will be our mouths and hearts, constituted so as to be full of sense and wisdom for the better protection of ourselves."

— King Rama IV to his ambassador in Paris