George Carlin — "We're all fucked. It helps to remember that."
We're all fucked. It helps to remember that.
We're all fucked. It helps to remember that.
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"I'm not a sociopath. I just don't care about other people's feelings."
"I don't believe in God. I believe in people. I believe in the power of people to do good, and to do evil."
"I’m completely in favor of the separation of Church and State. My idea is that these two institutions screw us up enough on their own, so both of them together is certain death."
"I'm not a hater. I'm just a disliker of things that are bad."
"If crime fighters fight crime and fire fighters fight fire, what do freedom fighters fight?"
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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