George Carlin — "When I hear a person talking about political solutions, I know I am not listenin…"
When I hear a person talking about political solutions, I know I am not listening to a serious person.
When I hear a person talking about political solutions, I know I am not listening to a serious person.
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"I don't believe in heaven. I don't believe in hell. I don't believe in an afterlife. I believe in this life. And I believe in making the most of it."
"I'm not a hater. I'm just a disliker of things that are bad."
"I'm not saying I'm right. I'm just saying you're wrong."
"I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a conspiracy realist. I believe that there are people who are conspiring to do things, and I believe that those things are usually bad."
"Most people are not religious, they just want something that makes them feel good."
American stand-up comedian whose 'Seven Words You Can't Say on Television' (1972) reached the Supreme Court and reshaped US obscenity law. Closely associated with Richard Pryor (countercultural-comedy peer) and Lenny Bruce (predecessor in obscenity-law fights). For an intellectual contrast, see Tipper Gore, co-founder of the Parents Music Resource Center — the PMRC's 1985 Senate hearings on 'explicit' content labeling are exactly the cultural-establishment force Carlin's free-speech comedy was organized against.
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