Bryant H. McGill

Bryant H. McGill
Bryant Harrison McGillis an American author, aphorist, speaker, and activist in the fields of self-development, personal freedom, and human rights. His writings and small aphorisms have been published in hundreds of books and are regularly used in newspapers, political speeches, network TV programs, university and library installations, peer-reviewed journals, academic papers and theses, and by university presidents and deans in non-violence programs and college ceremonies. McGill is a United Nations appointed Global Champion for the rights of women and girls,...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth7 November 1969
CountryUnited States of America
Bryant H. McGill quotes about
If you are competing with slaves, then you are a slave yourself.
Discovery requires courage and acceptance that we are not in control, and that the future is uncertain.
We are here to spend ourselves on others; for each person is a great treasure.
Nationalism as we know it, is the result of a form of state-sponsored branding.
What I remember the most about my childhood is constant fear and "good food." I don't want to get into the greasy, buttery, deep-fried, fatty, sugary, meaty, barbecued details here, but with no knowledge of healthy lifestyles or positive psychology, time took its toll on me.
There is little more powerful than when truth joins action.
A polite enemy is just as difficult to discredit, as a rude friend is to protect.
The supreme lesson of any education should be to think for yourself and to be yourself; absent this attainment, education creates dangerous, stupefying conformity.
Birth and death; we all move between these two unknowns.
* The essential respect is the one in your own heart for yourself.
Fanatic is often the name given to people of action by people who are lazy.
You may find many contradictory statements and philosophies within my writings. However, to this I will say such is life, for life is full of contradictions.
We must strive for literacy and education that teach us to never quit questioning and probing at the assumptions of the day.
We must imbue our children with principles of the higher-self, principles which see all people as true equals, and above all, which are sensitive to the delicate and fragile balance of life.