Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Beware of fame; for when they come for you, they come not to give, but for to gain. Whoever is needed, wields the most power. Whoever is needy, seeks to wield that power.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Children are being killed, because some "adults" think life is a game. Something is amiss. When children shoot up other children in school, it's a national tragedy, and a week of mourning. When grown men are killing unarmed young, yes unarmed young, it bespeaks the leagues of fear residing in these men's hearts; that they've created a world in which they themselves have become useless. Then it makes front page, and it becomes business as usual. Something is amiss here. If adults don't truly grow up, then their young may never get the chance.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Corruption ultimately guilts the corrupt, and it hardens the innocent who suffer as a result of it. It isn't the young who corrupt the old, rather it's the inverse. The aim of the old should be to ensure that the young grow up incorruptible.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Cowards only find courage in the number of their likeness, citing their lofty strongholds as havens for their impunity.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Detachment is not the absence of emotion, it is the process of becoming one with the Oneness that is the Universe. To be detached, is to realize that the fullness of all there is, is too much to react to with just one emotion, one thought, or any bias. To be detached, is to acknowledge all, without owning any of it. To be detached, is to summon forth the whole entirety of understanding, to the fragment that is the void.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Do not trust a person without scars. If they have no scars, then it means someone else is wearing theirs, usually unfairly, and usually permanently.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Even the proud in all their boasting, must fall silent before the wise.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Falsehoods, rob the good in the hood, of the good wood. The good wood, that the good in the hood are descended from, is their birthright.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Greed is mistaken nobility. Instead of robbing all the pain and hardship from people's lives and rescuing them from danger, greed robs provisions from providers.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
Greed is taking more than you need to feed. Avarice is hoarding, and stockpiling stolen, rotten goods.
— Justin K. McFarlane Beau
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