Christopher Lasch Quotes, Sayings, Remarks, Thoughts and Speeches



Christopher Lasch Quotes and Sayings


  • 1
    A child's appetite for new toys appeal to the desire for ownership and appropriation: the appeal of toys comes to lie not in their use but in their status as possessions. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 2
    A growing awareness of the depth of popular attachment to the family has led some liberals to concede that family is not just a buzzword for reaction. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 3
    A society that has made "nostalgia" a marketable commodity on the cultural exchange quickly repudiates the suggestion that life in the past was in any important way better than life today. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 4
    Adherents of the new religious right reject the separation of politics and religion, but they bring no spiritual insights to politics. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 5
    Because it equates tradition with prejudice, the left finds itself increasingly unable to converse with ordinary people in their common language. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 6
    Because politics rests on an irreducible measure of coercion, it can never become a perfect realm of perfect love and justice. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 7
    Conservatives have no understanding of modern capitalism. They have a distorted understanding of the traditional values they claim to defend. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 8
    Conservatives sense a link between television and drugs, but they do not grasp the nature of this connection. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 9
    Conservatives unwittingly side with the social forces that contribute to the destruction of traditional values. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 10
    Drugs are merely the most obvious form of addiction in our society. Drug addiction is one of the things that undermines traditional values. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 11
    Environmentalism opposes reckless innovation and makes conservation the central order of business. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 12
    Every age develops its own peculiar forms of pathology, which express in exaggerated form its underlying character structure. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 13
    George Orwell's contention was that it is a sure sign of trouble when things can no longer be called by their right names and described in plain, forthright speech. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 14
    Ideologies, however appealing, cannot shape the whole structure of perceptions and conduct unless they are embedded in daily experiences that confirm them. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 15
    In an individualistic culture, the narcissist is God's gift to the world. In a collectivist society, the narcissist is God's gift to the collective. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 16
    In our society, daily experience teaches the individual to want and need a never-ending supply of new toys and drugs. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 17
    Information, usually seen as the precondition of debate, is better understood as its by-product. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 18
    Instead of taking environmentalism away from the left, conservatives condemn it as a counsel of doom. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 19
    It is advertising and the logic of consumerism that governs the depiction of reality in the mass media. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 20
    It is no longer an unwritten law of American capitalism that industry will attempt to maintain wages at a level that allows a single wage to support a family. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 21
    It is the logic of consumerism that undermines the values of loyalty and permanence and promotes a different set of values that is destructive of family life. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 22
    Knowledge is what we get when an observer, preferably a scientifically trained observer, provides us with a copy of reality that we can all recognize. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 23
    Liberals subscribe to the new flexible, pluralistic definition of the family; their defense of families carries no conviction. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 24
    Make it new is the message not just of modern art but of modern consumerism, of which modern art is largely a mirror image. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 25
    Most of these alternative arrangements, so-called, arise out of the ruins of marriages, not as an improvement of old fashioned marriage. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 26
    Most people no longer live in nuclear families at all. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 27
    Most women are pragmatists who have allowed extremists on the left and right to manipulate the family issue for their own purposes. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 28
    Neoclassical economics insists that advertising cannot force consumers to buy anything they don't already want to buy. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 29
    News represents another form of advertising, not liberal propaganda. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 30
    Nothing succeeds like the appearance of success. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 31
    Ostensibly rigorous and realistic, contemporary conservatism is an ideology of denial. Its symbol is a smile button. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 32
    Personal disintegration remains always an imminent danger. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 33
    Progressive rhetoric has the effect of concealing social crisis and moral breakdown by presenting them as the birth pangs of a new order. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 34
    Propaganda in the ordinary sense of the term plays a less important part in a consumer society, where people greet all official pronouncements with suspicion. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 35
    Relentless improvement of the product and upgrading of consumer tastes are the heart of mass merchandising. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 36
    The attempt to redefine the family as a purely voluntary arrangement grows out of the modern delusion that people can keep all their options open all the time. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 37
    The conservative revival cannot be dismissed. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 38
    The effect of the mass media is not to elicit belief but to maintain the apparatus of addiction. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 39
    The family wage has been eroded by the same developments that have promoted consumerism as a way of life. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 40
    The hope of a new politics does not lie in formulating a left-wing reply to the right-it lies in rejecting conventional political categories. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 41
    The intellectual debility of contemporary conservatism is indicated by its silence on all important matters. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 42
    The job of the press is to encourage debate, not to supply the public with information. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 43
    The last three decades have seen the collapse of the family wage system. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 44
    The left ask people to believe that there is no conflict between feminism and the family. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 45
    The left dismisses talk about the collapse of family life and talks instead about the emergence of the growing new diversity of family types. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 46
    The left has come to regard common sense - the traditional wisdom and folkways of the community - as an obstacle to progress and enlightenment. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 47
    The left has lost the common touch. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 48
    The left has lost touch with popular opinion, thereby making it possible for the right to present itself as the party of common sense. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 49
    The left no longer stands for common sense, as it did in the days of Tom Paine. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 50
    The left sees nothing but bigotry and superstition in the popular defense of the family or in popular attitudes regarding abortion, crime, busing, and the school curriculum. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 51
    The model of ownership, in a society organized round mass consumption, is addiction. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 52
    The news appeals to the same jaded appetite that makes a child tire of a toy as soon as it becomes familiar and demand a new one in its place. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 53
    The proper reply to right wing religiosity is not to insist that politics and religion don't mix. This is the stock response of the left. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 54
    The question of the family now divides our society so deeply that the opposing sides cannot even agree on a definition of the institution they are arguing about. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 55
    The reporting of news has to be understood as propaganda for commodities, and events by images. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 56
    The same historical development that turned the citizen into a client transformed the worker from a producer into a consumer. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 57
    Today Americans are overcome not by the sense of endless possibility but by the banality of the social order they have erected against it. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 58
    Traditionalists will have to master techniques of sustained activism formerly monopolized by the left. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 59
    We are all revolutionaries now, addicts of change. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF
  • 60
    When liberals finally grasped the strength of popular feeling about the family, they cried to appropriate the rhetoric and symbolism of family values for their own purposes. Christopher Lasch | Refcard PDF

 

  

  

 

  

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