Top 16 Quotes & Sayings by Colman McCarthy

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American activist Colman McCarthy.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Colman McCarthy

Colman McCarthy, is an American journalist, teacher, lecturer, pacifist, progressive, anarchist, and long-time peace activist, directs the Center for Teaching Peace in Washington, D.C. From 1969 to 1997, he wrote columns for The Washington Post. His topics ranged from politics, religion, health, and sports to education, poverty, and peacemaking. Washingtonian magazine called him "the liberal conscience of The Washington Post." Smithsonian magazine said he is "a man of profound spiritual awareness." He has written for The New Yorker, The Nation, The Progressive, The Atlantic, The New York Times, and Reader's Digest. Since 1999, he has written biweekly columns for National Catholic Reporter.

Warmaking doesn't stop warmaking. If it did, our problems would have stopped millennia ago.
Everyone's a pacifist between wars. It's like being a vegetarian between meals.
It's better to build a peaceful child than re-build a violent adult. — © Colman McCarthy
It's better to build a peaceful child than re-build a violent adult.
It's too easy only to blame the militarists, racists, sexists and other pushers of violence for the mess we're in. What is harder is self-examination, moving beyond caring by looking inward to ask the personal question: What more should I be doing everyday to bring about a peace and justice based world, whether across the ocean or across the living room?
Indeed, the highest pleasure of golf may be that on the fairways and far from all the pressures of commerce and rationality, we can feel immortal for a few hours.
Unless we teach our children peace, somebody else will teach them violence.
I'd rather teach peace.
The failure of love, that's what all laws are really.
The students I've been with these twenty years are looking for a world where it becomes a little easier to love and a lot harder to hate, where learning nonviolence means that we dedicate our hearts, minds, time, and money to a commitment that the force of love, the force of truth, the force of justice, and the force of organized resistance to corrupt power are seen as sane and the force of fists, guns, armies, and bombs insane.
The most revolutionary thing anybody can do is to raise good, honest and generous children who will question the answers of people who say the answer is violence. That's what the schools should be doing.
Breaking America's oil addiction would not lead to a future of sackcloth and ashes.
Give peace a chance, yes, but why not get serious and give it a place in the curriculum: peace courses in every school, every grade, every nation. Unless we teach our children peace, someone else will teach them violence.
Wars aren't stopped by fighting wars, any more than you can fight fire with fire. You fight fire with water. You fight violence with nonviolence.
The earth is too small a star and we too brief a visitor upon it for anything to matter more than the struggle for peace.
Peace is the result of love, and if love were easy we'd all be good at it.
Forty-one rules aren't so many - St. Benedict had 73 to keep the brethren on the straight and narrow. — © Colman McCarthy
Forty-one rules aren't so many - St. Benedict had 73 to keep the brethren on the straight and narrow.
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