Bubble Quotes
Quotes tagged as "bubble"
Showing 1-25 of 25

“Many politicians are tantalizing storytellers, as they mix facts with fiction, grab our emotion and tell things, they want us to believe. Their factoids are unremittingly reiterated, take a life on their own and in the end become the very truth鈥� until the bubble bursts.("What after bowling alone?" )”
―
―

“You know nothing about pain. You know nothing about reality. All you know is what鈥檚 inside your bubble. Well, I'm the needle about to pop it. Just you wait.”
― Hayfoot
― Hayfoot
&濒诲辩耻辞;鈥擜辫谤颈濒鈥�
In this distance I hear a heartbeat...
The only sound I remember from my last life
I listen to it when I am awake or in sleep....
I know it is the heartbeat of my loved one
A heartbeat that inspires my heart to beat..
I don't know where you are... where to find
We on earth may never meet in real...
All I can listen is your heart murmur......”
―
In this distance I hear a heartbeat...
The only sound I remember from my last life
I listen to it when I am awake or in sleep....
I know it is the heartbeat of my loved one
A heartbeat that inspires my heart to beat..
I don't know where you are... where to find
We on earth may never meet in real...
All I can listen is your heart murmur......”
―

“...she'd been in a hermetically sealed bubble. A " couple bubble" that made the rest of the male species invisible.”
― Calling Romeo
― Calling Romeo

“We are given these niches, small worlds of our own populated by only a handful, where we feel understood. Our bubble worlds bump into innumerable others daily, but there is so little cause to allow their integrity to be breached.”
― Find What You Love and Let It Kill You
― Find What You Love and Let It Kill You

“The bubble had subsided, leaving only a tiny scar, but the irrational fear of water never quite left her. I never allowed her to forget, not for a moment.”
― Chronicles of Urban Nomads
― Chronicles of Urban Nomads

“Just what is a speculative bubble? The Oxford English Dictionary defines a bubble as 鈥渁nything fragile, unsubstantial, empty, or worthless; a deceptive show. From 17th c. onwards often applied to delusive commercial or financial schemes.鈥� The problem is that words like show and scheme suggest a deliberate creation, rather than a widespread social phenomenon that is not directed by any central impresario.”
― Irrational Exuberance
― Irrational Exuberance

“What fools we mortals are to think that the plans we make are anything more than a soap bubble blown against a hurricane, a frail and fleeting wish destined to burst.”
― Ambush
― Ambush

“Don't you know there's another bubble as well? An expectations bubble. Bigger houses, private planes, yachts... stupid salaries and bonuses. People come to desire these things and expect them. But the expectations bubble will burst as well, as all bubbles do.”
― New York
― New York

“Bubble: A safe space where people that don't like to be confronted with the consequences of their actions live. Often known as the perfect environment for those that are too immature to assume responsibility for their lack of realistic perception, and instead focus their energy in maintaining an image of perfection to the outside world, while hiding their real thoughts, quite usually very sadistic and selfish. Bubbles can easily blast when a small portion of truth or justified anger hits one, so people that live inside a bubble are particularly sensitive to those that tell them things they can't comprehend, even, and in particular, when such things are correlated with their immoral social behavior. And as people that live inside a bubble need the bubble as much as they fear the outside world, they often blend unrelated words with their own nonsense to keep the danger of having a bubble exploded far from sight. This includes being an hypocrite when calling one ungrateful, offending someone while calling such individual aggressive, and using negative depreciation with arguments that fit their agenda of keeping themselves within ignorance while bringing others further to that paradox. People that live in the bubble believe anything they hear but always assume that their beliefs are independent, as the bubble stops them from seeing further and admitting something they can't see or accept. Therefore, until the moment in which everyone will be happy to have a microchip attached to their brain and google glasses stopping them from seeing the world as it is, the bubble will be known as a transitory stage, between an unempathetic dumbness and being a brainless humanoid vegetal on two legs.”
―
―
“Some people get offended by what I write, by what I do with my life and by what I say to those they never saw. And they also get offended when told they are too stupid to have the right to judge anyone. These poor souls don't know that respect and intelligence are correlated.”
―
―

“Sometimes it was hard to breathe, knowing how small my world could be. Maybe in San Francisco it wouldn't feel like the universe was conspiring to keep me in a bubble.”
― I'll Meet You There
― I'll Meet You There
“It is often said of the gold rush that the people who got rich were the shovel dealers who profited from the greed of the forty-niners. With Beanie Babies, most of the lasting personal fortunes came from selling books and tag protectors, not from speculating in plush.”
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute

“There was the outside world, the world of politics and history, and there was my inside world, the world of music and family, and the two worlds never met. In the outside world there was economic stagnation and military rule and political censorship and people being tortured and sent away to concentration camps; in my inside world there was music and laughter, there were home comforts and good food and the warm glow of the unconditional love my parents felt for each other and for me. I lived in a little bubble of happiness and paid hardly any attention to what was going on around me.”
― Mr Wilder & Me
― Mr Wilder & Me

“Inflation creates bubble and burst.
That develops world economy, and will destroy it too.”
― Master of Stupidity
That develops world economy, and will destroy it too.”
― Master of Stupidity

“Trust is a notoriously vulnerable good, easily wounded and not at all easily healed.
Trust is not always a good, to be preserved. There must be some worthwhile enterprise in which the trusting and trusted parties are involved, some good bread being kneaded, for trust to be a good thing. If the enterprise is evil, a producer of poisons, then the trust that improves its workings will also be evil, and decent people will want to destroy, not to protect, that form of trust.
A death squad may consist of wholly trustworthy and, for a while at least, sensibly trusting coworkers. So the first thing to be checked, if our trust is to become self-conscious, is the nature of the enterprise whose workings are smoothed by merited trust.”
―
Trust is not always a good, to be preserved. There must be some worthwhile enterprise in which the trusting and trusted parties are involved, some good bread being kneaded, for trust to be a good thing. If the enterprise is evil, a producer of poisons, then the trust that improves its workings will also be evil, and decent people will want to destroy, not to protect, that form of trust.
A death squad may consist of wholly trustworthy and, for a while at least, sensibly trusting coworkers. So the first thing to be checked, if our trust is to become self-conscious, is the nature of the enterprise whose workings are smoothed by merited trust.”
―
“Economic conditions may differ from period to period, but human psychology is embedded among us and will not change.”
―
―

“Dodd-Frank is the most restrictive financial regulation since the Great Depression鈥攂ut it won鈥檛 stop another bubble.”
― Economic Warfare: Secrets of Wealth Creation in the Age of Welfare Politics
― Economic Warfare: Secrets of Wealth Creation in the Age of Welfare Politics
“[Peggy Gallagher] was also appearing once a month for two hours on WGN Radio [...] During one summer show, a caller asked, 'Do you think there is a seasonal cycle for Beanie Babies?'
'It鈥檚 not different than any other kind of investment鈥攖he stock market or the commodities market,' was Gallagher鈥檚 reply. Then she explained that she used to be a trader on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. 'There are peaks and valleys. It鈥檚 an investment for people. There鈥檚 nobody as big as the market. The Hunt [brothers] tried to do it with the silver market. There is nobody bigger than the market. The prices have stabilized a bit right now, but now they鈥檙e starting to get more active. So it鈥檚 just like any other type of investment'.”
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute
'It鈥檚 not different than any other kind of investment鈥攖he stock market or the commodities market,' was Gallagher鈥檚 reply. Then she explained that she used to be a trader on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. 'There are peaks and valleys. It鈥檚 an investment for people. There鈥檚 nobody as big as the market. The Hunt [brothers] tried to do it with the silver market. There is nobody bigger than the market. The prices have stabilized a bit right now, but now they鈥檙e starting to get more active. So it鈥檚 just like any other type of investment'.”
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute
“The Bradford Exchange鈥攁 knockoff of [Joseph] Segel鈥檚 [Franklin Mint] business鈥攃reated a murky secondary market for its collector plates, complete with advertisements featuring its 鈥渂rokers鈥� hovering over computers, tracking plate prices. To underscore the idea of these mass-produced tchotchkes as upmarket, sophisticated investments, the company deployed some of its most aggressive ads (which later led to lawsuits) in magazines like Kiplinger鈥檚 Personal Finance and Architectural Digest. A 1986 sales pitch offered 鈥淭he Sound of Music,鈥� the first plate in a new series from the Edwin M. Knowles China Company, at a price of $19.50. Yet the ad copy didn鈥檛 emphasize the plate itself. Rather, bold type introduced two so-called facts: 鈥淔act: 鈥楽carlett,鈥� the 1976 first issue in Edwin M. Knowles鈥� landmark series of collector鈥檚 plates inspired by the classic film Gone With the Wind, cost $21.60 when it was issued. It recently traded at $245.00鈥攁n increase of 1,040% in just seven years.鈥� And 鈥淔act: 鈥楾he Sound of Music,鈥� the first issue in Knowles鈥� The Sound of Music series, inspired by the classic film of the same name, is now available for $19.50.鈥� Later the ad advised that 鈥渋t鈥檚 likely to increase in value.鈥� Currently, those plates can be had on eBay for less than $5 each. In 1993 U.S. direct mail sales of collectibles totaled $1.7 billion”
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute
― The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusion and the Dark Side of Cute

“The most intensely value-laden artifacts of human creativity - works of art - are now the purist examples of that old capitalist alchemy: turning human value into exchange value. At a certain point, and that point has been passed, the art market will only be a mathematical exchange. Art is worth money, but what鈥檚 money worth? Money is the ultimate numbers game. What the furor over the art market brings tantalizingly close to the surface is the fact that it is not just the value of art that is dependant on a shared fantasy, it is also money itself.
Warhol is not the name of an artist, it is the name of a currency. 鈥淲arhol鈥� is a big number because its denomination (soup cans, Brillo box simulacrums, etc.) is presumed to be stable and growing. But it can inflate or deflate like any stock or bond or national currency. Jeff Koons is also a currency but less stable. The only thing that really changes hands are the numbers that are for some reason associated with these opaque talismans called 鈥渁rtworks.鈥� The billionaire buyers of these works have been reduced to South sea natives who insist on the magical properties of certain queer objects - a cornhusk doll with pearls for eyes and a colourful ribbon about its head - but are unable to say why they are so important or why their world would collapse without them. Investors in the art market need to fear bot only the economic boogies of bubbles and ponzi schemes but also that dreaded moment when they look at one another in panic and say, 鈥淲hat were we thinking? What is this stuff? What could have possessed us to say that a glass balloon dog is worth thens of millions? Sell! Sell!”
― We, Robots: Staying Human in the Age of Big Data
Warhol is not the name of an artist, it is the name of a currency. 鈥淲arhol鈥� is a big number because its denomination (soup cans, Brillo box simulacrums, etc.) is presumed to be stable and growing. But it can inflate or deflate like any stock or bond or national currency. Jeff Koons is also a currency but less stable. The only thing that really changes hands are the numbers that are for some reason associated with these opaque talismans called 鈥渁rtworks.鈥� The billionaire buyers of these works have been reduced to South sea natives who insist on the magical properties of certain queer objects - a cornhusk doll with pearls for eyes and a colourful ribbon about its head - but are unable to say why they are so important or why their world would collapse without them. Investors in the art market need to fear bot only the economic boogies of bubbles and ponzi schemes but also that dreaded moment when they look at one another in panic and say, 鈥淲hat were we thinking? What is this stuff? What could have possessed us to say that a glass balloon dog is worth thens of millions? Sell! Sell!”
― We, Robots: Staying Human in the Age of Big Data

“Today, Muslim women have on average 3.1 children. Christian women have 2.7. There is no major difference between the birth rates of the great world religions.”
― Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World 鈥� and Why Things Are Better Than You Think
― Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World 鈥� and Why Things Are Better Than You Think
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