A Quote by Albert Einstein

The tyranny of the ignoramuses is insurmountable and assured for all time. — © Albert Einstein
The tyranny of the ignoramuses is insurmountable and assured for all time.
Once any tyranny becomes accepted as ordinary, its victory is assured.
The future will present insurmountable problems- only when we consider them insurmountable.
You may talk of the tyranny of Nero and Tiberius; but the real tyranny is the tyranny of your next-door neighbor.
To rail and rant against tyranny is to manifest inferiority, for there is no tyranny but ignorance; to be conscious of one's powers is to lose consciousness of tyranny. Self government is not a remote aim. It is an intimate and inescapable fact. To govern oneself is a natural imperative, and all tyranny is the miscarriage of self government. The first requisite of freedom is to accept responsibility for the lack of it.
Time is invincible, impregnable, insurmountable, invulnerable, unstoppable and time is invisible.
The history of women is the history of the worst form of tyranny the world has ever known. The tyranny of the weak over the strong. It is the only tyranny that lasts.
Time perfects all living beings as well as kills them; it alone is awake when all others are asleep. Time is insurmountable.
Happy people are ignoramuses and glory is nothing else but success, and to achieve it one only has to be cunning.
The influence of the senses have in men overpowered the thought to the degree that the walls of time and space have come to look solid, real and insurmountable. .. Yet time and space are but inverse measures of the power of the mind. Man is capable of abolishing them both.
Those ignoramuses who think that birds are happy in their cages know not a single thing about freedom!
The piddling ignoramuses who deny that there is a distinct, discernible, objective western tradition are just woozy literati.
Of all forms of tyranny the least attractive and the most vulgar is the tyranny of mere wealth.
There is no tyranny more ferocious than the tyranny of morality. Everything is sacrificed to it.
No tyranny is so irksome as petty tyranny: the officious demands of policemen, government clerks, and electromechanical gadgets.
Tyranny is tyranny, no matter what its form; the free man will resist it if his courage serves.
We gain nothing by trading the tyranny of capital for the tyranny of labor.
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