John McCarthy

John McCarthy
average both face honesty opinion situations somewhat stand strain
Both politicians and journalists face situations which strain their honesty and humanity. My opinion is that politicians on the average stand up somewhat better than journalists.
data few ignored interest line past positive seen sell
It's kind of in line with what we've seen over the past few weeks, in that positive data is ignored by the market. There is a lot of interest to sell dollars.
break buyers dollar gas ran trading
Dollar buyers ran out of gas once we couldn't break through $1.2750 and 106 in dollar/yen and as a consequence we started technically trading off those levels.
dollar further numbers obviously possible
The numbers were obviously better than expected. It's possible we could see a little further dollar buying.
dismal dollar numbers people produced short slightly taking
The numbers produced a slightly firmer dollar: they weren't dismal and as a consequence people are taking back some of their short dollar positions.
alone fights man people
It is said that man doesn't live by bread alone. Sometimes this is unfortunate, because people who cannot live by bread alone too often kill other people in consequence of the fights they get into.
It's all part of the game, ... These things happen.
Language is froth on the surface of thought.
convinced man order shoot true
A true intellectual is a man who, after reading a book and being convinced by its arguments, will shoot someone or, more likely, order someone shot.
force great movement peace people
The peace movement is a great force for peace. Some of the world's most quarrelsome people act out their aggressions through the peace movement.
riots soccer
Soccer riots kill at most tens. Intellectuals' ideological riots sometimes kill millions.
anyone sixty slogan trust
The slogan was 'Don't trust anyone over thirty'. Sixty years later the slogan became, 'Don't trust anyone over ninety'.
doomed refuses
He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
until
Never abandon a theory that explains something until you have a theory that explains more.