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David R. Brower Quotes

David R. Brower Quotes
1.
The more we pour the big machines, the fuel, the pesticides, the herbicides, the fertilizer and chemicals into farming, the more we knock out the mechanism that made it all work in the first place.
David R. Brower

2.
All technology should be assumed guilty until proven innocent
David R. Brower

3.
All I know about thermal pollution is that if we continue our present rate of growth in electrical energy consumption it will simply take, by the year 2000, all our freshwater streams to cool the generators and reactors.
David R. Brower

4.
At that time a senator who was on the Joint Committee of Atomic Energy said rather quietly, 'You know, we're having a little problem with waste these days.' I didn't know what he meant then, but I know now.
David R. Brower

5.
We must begin thinking like a river if we are to leave a legacy of beauty and life for future generations.
David R. Brower

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
Overpopulation is perhaps the biggest problem facing us, and immigration is part of that problem. It has to be addressed.
David R. Brower

7.
The wild places are where we began. When they end, so do we.
David R. Brower

8.
Sometimes luck is with you, and sometimes not, but the important thing is to take the dare. Those who climb mountains or raft rivers understand this.
David R. Brower

Quote Topics by David R. Brower: People Environmental Rivers Men Thinking Earth World Years Energy Nature Needs Technology Growth Believe Space Political Country Waste Population Problem Trying Clubs Risk Hands Parent Wilderness Garbage Agriculture Impossible Goes On
9.
Understanding how DNA transmits all it knows about cancer, physics, dreaming and love will keep man searching for some time.
David R. Brower

10.
Truth and beauty can still win battles. We need more art, more passion, more wit in defense of the Earth.
David R. Brower

11.
We are no longer inheriting the Earth from our parents, we are stealing it from our children.
David R. Brower

12.
Without wilderness, the world's a cage.
David R. Brower

13.
Childbearing should be a punishable crime against society, unless the parents hold a government license. All potential parents should be required to use contraceptive chemicals, the government issuing antidotes to citizens chosen for childbearing.
David R. Brower

14.
Apollo 13, as you may remember, gave us a reactor that is bubbling away right now somewhere in the Pacific. It's supposed to be bubbling away on the moon, but it's in the Pacific Ocean instead.
David R. Brower

15.
Let the mountains talk, let the river run. Once more, and forever.
David R. Brower

16.
Bring diversity back to agriculture. That's what made it work in the first place.
David R. Brower

17.
It is absolutely imperative that we protect, preserve and pass on this genetic heritage for man and every other living thing in as good a condition as we received it.
David R. Brower

18.
We still need conservationists who will attempt the impossible, achieving it because they aren't aware how impossible it is.
David R. Brower

19.
There are many ways to salvation, and one of them is to follow a river.
David R. Brower

20.
I was actually telling people that - by harnessing the atom - we could enter a new era of unlimited power that would do away with the need to dam our beautiful streams.
David R. Brower

21.
There is no place where we can safely store worn-out reactors or their garbage. No place!
David R. Brower

22.
I'm always impressed with what young people can do before older people tell them it's impossible
David R. Brower

23.
To me, a wilderness is where the flow of wildness is essentially uninterrupted by technology; without wilderness the world is a cage.
David R. Brower

24.
It seems that every time mankind is given a lot of energy, we go out and wreck something with it.
David R. Brower

25.
Politicians are like weather vanes. Our job is to make the wind blow.
David R. Brower

26.
If you want to get people off drugs, improve reality.
David R. Brower

27.
Politics is democracy's way of handling public business. We won't get the type of country in the kind of world we want unless people take part in the public's business.
David R. Brower

28.
Is the minor convenience of allowing the present generation the luxury of doubling its energy consumption every 10 years worth the major hazard of exposing the next 20,000 generations to this lethal waste?
David R. Brower

29.
Perhaps most ridiculous of all is the suggestion that we 'keep' our radioactive garbage for the use of our descendants. This 'solution', I think, requires an immediate poll of the next 20,000 generations.
David R. Brower

30.
Polite conservationists leave no mark save the scars upon the Earth that could have been prevented had they stood their ground.
David R. Brower

31.
We need the sea. We need a place to stand and touch and listen - to feel the pusle of the world as the surf rolls in.
David R. Brower

32.
There is more inside you than you dare think.
David R. Brower

33.
True wilderness is where you keep it, and real wilderness experience cannot be a sedentary one; you have to seek it out not seated, but afoot.
David R. Brower

34.
I believe that the average guy in the street will give up a great deal, if he really understands the cost of not giving it up. In fact, we may find that, while we're drastically cutting our energy consumption, we're actually raising our standard of living.
David R. Brower

35.
I sort of kept my hand in writing and went to work for the Sierra Club in '52, walked the plank there in '69, founded Friends of the Earth and the League of Conservation Voters after that.
David R. Brower

36.
The Sierra Club is a very good and a very powerful force for conservation and, as a matter of fact, has grown faster since I left than it was growing while I was there! It must be doing something right.
David R. Brower

37.
When people say, 'You're not being realistic,' they're just trying to tag some thoughts that they can't otherwise handle.
David R. Brower

38.
It's like turning the space program over to the Long Island Railroad.
David R. Brower

39.
Some otherwise sane scientists have seriously proposed that we tuck this deadly garbage under the edges of drifting continents but how can they be sure the moving land masses will climb over the waste and not just push it forward?
David R. Brower

40.
We cannot go on fiddling while the earth's wild places burn.
David R. Brower

41.
Yet another proposal would have us rocket the waste into the sun, but, as you're probably aware, about one in ten of our space shots doesn't quite make it out of the earth's gravitational field.
David R. Brower

42.
Until four years ago, in fact, I was absolutely in love with the atom.
David R. Brower

43.
A great deal of pressure was then built up to remove me from the club and my resignation was, finally, a forced one.
David R. Brower

44.
There are many different kinds of radioactive waste and each has its own half-life so, just to be on the safe side and to simplify matters, I base my calculations on the worst one and that's plutonium.
David R. Brower

45.
Perhaps we'll realize that each of us has not one vote but ten thousand or a million.
David R. Brower

46.
For how many people do you think might yet stand on this planet before the sun grows cold? That's the responsibility we hold in our hands.
David R. Brower

47.
Once we open the door to the plutonium economy, we expose ourselves to absolutely terrible, horrifying risks from these people.
David R. Brower

48.
Let man heal the hurt places and revere whatever is still miraculously pristine.
David R. Brower

49.
I began working with the John Muir Institute and then started helping found Friends of the Earth organizations here and there in other countries. That pretty well brings us up to the present.
David R. Brower

50.
If I could go back to a point in history to try to get things to come out differently, I would go back and tell moses to go up the mountain again and get the other tablet. Because the Ten Commandments just tell us what we are supped to do with one another, not a word about our relationship to the earth. Genesis starts with these commands: multiply, replenish the earth, and subdue it. We have multiplied very well, we have replenished our populations very well, we have subdued it all too well, and we don't have any other instruction.
David R. Brower