Lech Walesa — "If there were fish in the lake, fishing would make no sense."
If there were fish in the lake, fishing would make no sense.
If there were fish in the lake, fishing would make no sense.
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"I have to be honest, I don't read much. I'm a man of action."
"I'm lazy. But it's the lazy people who invented the wheel and the bicycle because they didn't like walking or carrying things."
"I am a simple worker. I do not understand these complicated things."
"The world needs more electricians, not more politicians."
"My job is to unite, not to divide."
Polish electrician who founded Solidarity in 1980, won the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize, and became the first post-communist president of Poland (1990-1995). Closely associated with Václav Havel (fellow Eastern-bloc dissident-turned-president) and Pope John Paul II (the Polish pope whose 1979 visit catalyzed Solidarity). For an intellectual contrast, see Wojciech Jaruzelski, Polish general and Communist leader — Jaruzelski imposed martial law in 1981, banned Solidarity, and interned Wałęsa. He represented the Soviet-backed institutional power Solidarity's nonviolent labor movement was organized to displace — they ultimately signed the 1989 Round Table Talks together that ended Polish communism.
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