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Genders Quotes

Quotes tagged as "genders" Showing 1-8 of 8
Vera Nazarian
“A woman is human.

She is not better, wiser, stronger, more intelligent, more creative, or more responsible than a man.

Likewise, she is never less.

Equality is a given.

A woman is human.”
Vera Nazarian, The Perpetual Calendar of Inspiration

“I don’t have a gender, I’m myself”
Skye Davies

Christos Tsiolkas
“It is possible the world is divided into three genders - there are men, there are women and then there are women who choose to have nothing to do with children. How about men without children, he answered quickly, aren't they also different from fathers? She shook her head firmly, daring him to contradict her: no, all men are the same.”
Christos Tsiolkas, The Slap

Sebastian Junger
“Women tend to act heroically within their own moral universe, regardless of whether anyone else knows about it - donating more kidneys to nonrelatives than men do, for example. Men, on the other hand, are far more likely to risk their lives at a moment's notice, and that reaction is particularly strong when others are watching, or when they are part of a group.”
Sebastian Junger, Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging

Timothy Hallinan
“And you know women, they're both back there turning it into the crime of the century. Planting it in a little garden in the center of their hearts and watering it with feelings. Talking about it, sharing it. You're a cheat, you're a heartbreaker, you're like a museum exhibit, Everything That's Wrong with Guys.”
Timothy Hallinan, Little Elvises

Asa Don Brown
“Drugs and addiction impact all classes, genders, ages, and races.”
Asa Don Brown

Gavin G. Smith
“What sex is she, anyway? Girly girl?â€�
“Base human female. There were only two, possibly three genders originally.”
Gavin G. Smith, A Quantum Mythology

“Had I taken my title from the kingdom of fungi, I would have opted not for some unspectacular parasite, but rather the reishi, or Amanita virosa, or maybe the magnificent split gill, a mushroom found on every continent except Antarctica, where lichens reign. (For more on this please see Irena Rey's Kernel of Light, in my translation.) This is the least this author could have done. For the split gill can be 23,328 different sexes, each of which is able to mate with any of the 23,327 that it is not.”
Jennifer Croft, The Extinction of Irena Rey