Youre here: Home » Famous Quotes » Polly Toynbee Quotes


FAMOUS QUOTES MENU

» Famous Quotes Home

» Quote Topics

» Author Nationalities

» Author Types

» Popular Searches


 Browse authors:

Polly Toynbee Quotes


Page 1 of 2
Polly Toynbee
December 27, 1946 -
Nationality: English
Category: Journalist
Subcategory: English Journalist

But the single overwhelming reason why jails are bursting is longer sentences given for more crimes.

   

My mother begged doctors to end her life. She was beyond the physical ability to swallow enough of the weak morphine pills she had around her. When she knew she was dying I promised to make sure she could go at a time of her choosing, but it was impossible. I couldn't help.

   

It is now possible to quantify people's levels of happiness pretty accurately by asking them, by observation, and by measuring electrical activity in the brain, in degrees from terrible pain to sublime joy.

   

My Lords temporal, today is the day to rise up against the regiment of Lords spiritual and proclaim the values of enlightenment, compassion and common sense.

   

People want the right to die at a time of their own choosing. Too many families have watched helplessly as a relative dies slowly, longing for death.

   

But how odd that in this heathen nation of empty pews, where churches' bare, ruined choirs are converted into luxury loft living, a Labour government - yes, a Labour government - is deliberately creating a huge expansion of faith schools.

   

The strongest predictor of unhappiness is anyone who has had a mental illness in the last 10 years. It is an even stronger predictor of unhappiness than poverty - which also ranks highly.

   

The best care on earth cannot prevent us all dying in the end.

   

How do you make any sense of history, art or literature without knowing the stories and iconography of your own culture and all the world's main religions?

   

Thresholds of pain, indignity and incapacity are entirely personal.

   

Openness about death has led to greater care about all aspects of dying.

   

Could a government dare to set out with happiness as its goal? Now that there are accepted scientific proofs, it would be easy to audit the progress of national happiness annually, just as we monitor money and GDP.

   

There is all the difference in the world between teaching children about religion and handing them over to be taught by the religious.

   

Inequality makes everyone unhappy, the poor most of all, and that is well within the remit of the state. More money gives less extra happiness the richer we get, yet we are addicted to earning and spending more every year.

   

But instead of standing up for reason, our government is handing education over to the world of faith.

   

Working lives are for the state to influence. Unemployment makes people unhappy. So does instability.

   

Happiness is a real, objective phenomenon, scientifically verifiable. That means people and whole societies can now be measured over time and compared accurately with one another. Causes and cures for unhappiness can be quantified.

   

So what really works? Treatments in jail do some good, but it's mostly too late: finding a family and a job or just growing older make most prisoners eventually give up crime.

   

This is indeed a clash of civilisations, not between Islam and Christendom but between reason and superstition.

   

Most people come to fear not death itself, but the many terrible ways of dying.

   

Page:   1 | 2

Privacy Policy
Copyright © 1999-2008 eDigg.com. All rights reserved.