THE GOLDEN RULE  ---------------   Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.   Never resist temptation: prove all things: hold fast that which is good.   Do not love your neighbor as yourself. If you are on good terms with yourself it is an impertinence: if on bad, an injury.   The golden rule is that there are no golden rules.   IDOLATRY  --------   The art of government is the organization of idolatry.   The bureaucracy consists of functionaries; the aristocracy, of idols; the democracy, of idolaters.   The populace cannot understand the bureaucracy: it can only worship the national idols.   The savage bows down to idols of wood and stone: the civilized man to idols of flesh and blood.   A limited monarchy is a device for combining the inertia of a wooden idol with the credibility of a flesh and blood one.   When the wooden idol does not answer the peasant's prayer, he beats it: when the flesh and blood idol does not satisfy the civilized man, he cuts its head off.   He who slays a king and he who dies for him are alike idolaters.   ROYALTY  -------   Kings are not born: they are made by artificial hallucination. When the process is interrupted by adversity at a critical age, as in the case of Charles II, the subject becomes sane and never completely recovers his kingliness.   The Court is the servant's hall of the sovereign.   Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation.   The flunkeyism propagated by the throne is the price we pay for its political convenience.   DEMOCRACY  ---------   If the lesser mind could measure the greater as a foot-rule can measure a pyramid, there would be finality in universal suffrage. As it is, the political problem remains unsolved.   Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.   Democratic republics can no more dispense with national idols than monarchies with public functionaries.   Government presents only one problem: the discovery of a trustworthy anthropometric method.   IMPERIALISM  -----------   Excess of insularity makes a Briton an Imperialist.   Excess of local self-assertion makes a colonist an Imperialist.   A colonial Imperialist is one who raises colonial troops, equips a colonial squadron, claims.

George Bernard Shaw - Maxims for Revolutionists

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