Linus Pauling — "If there were nobody in the world but politicians, I would feel that there was n…"
If there were nobody in the world but politicians, I would feel that there was no hope for mankind, no hope for civilization, no hope for the world.
If there were nobody in the world but politicians, I would feel that there was no hope for mankind, no hope for civilization, no hope for the world.
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"You can't have a good idea unless you have a lot of ideas."
"The most important thing in life is to be happy."
"The most important thing for a scientist is to be curious."
"Everyone should know that the 'war on cancer' is largely a fraud."
"The only thing that stands between a man and what he wants from life is often merely the will to try it and the faith to believe that it is possible."
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Politicians alone cannot save humanity. Without scientists, artists, educators, doctors, and ordinary citizens working toward truth and human welfare, civilization has no foundation. Progress depends on people driven by knowledge and ethics rather than power and compromise. Society needs people who pursue what is true and good, not merely what is expedient or politically advantageous.
Pauling won Nobel Prizes in both Chemistry and Peace — a unique double that reflected his conviction that scientific truth and moral courage must guide civilization. He fought McCarthyism personally, having his passport revoked for anti-nuclear activism. He saw politicians obstruct nuclear test ban treaties for years despite clear scientific evidence of harm, deepening his distrust of political systems unchecked by science.
Pauling spoke during the Cold War nuclear arms race, when politicians in Washington and Moscow held civilization's fate in their hands. The period saw McCarthyite persecution of scientists, congressional hearings dismissing expert testimony, and both superpowers expanding nuclear arsenals despite mounting evidence of radiation dangers. Scientists like Pauling felt increasingly sidelined by political calculation overriding scientific consensus on existential threats.
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