Best 20 quotes of Peter Coyote on MyQuotes

Peter Coyote

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    Peter Coyote

    Any political agenda and organization which doesn't begin with personal responsibility is just half the argument. It's just not going to succeed.

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    Peter Coyote

    Business is a subset of the environment, not the other way around. You can't have a healthy economy, you can't have a healthy anything in a degraded environment.

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    Peter Coyote

    Everyone knows that our current system is kind of like legalized prostitution. The corporate sector completely controls the civic sector.

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    Peter Coyote

    Habitat for wildlife is continually shrinking - I can at least provide a way station.

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    Peter Coyote

    I got out of college and I went to get my master's in creative writing at San Francisco State. I was working as an actor at the Actor's Workshop, being abused as a intern.

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    Peter Coyote

    Interdependence is a fact, it's not an opinion.

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    Peter Coyote

    It came home to me indelibly that I was never going to change anything in America by walking around carrying a sign. It was a great revelation. It saved me a lot of anxiety and a lot of wasted energy.

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    Peter Coyote

    I think it's good that people value their bodies and take care of them. I think if you cross the line and begin using your body as an asset or as an extension of your vanity, you've gone too far.

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    Peter Coyote

    I think the '60s were an extraordinary time. I feel bad for the kids today who missed this wonderful confluence, which was simultaneously a confluence of the global and the mythological.

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    Peter Coyote

    I would say 90 percent of my mail and phone calls are from people who want some kind of help or succor or commitment from me to do something.

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    Peter Coyote

    Kennedy invited us into the White House-the first time in the history of the White House picketers had been invited inside. This made front page headlines.

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    Peter Coyote

    Once you accept anything as tacked down, then you begin to build a structure, to accept limits. Then you have to make a choice as to whether or not you're going to accept that structure. If you do, you give up the notion of total freedom.

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    Peter Coyote

    Phil Cousineau has created a fine companion book to accompany the important film he and Gary Rhine have made in defense of the religious traditions of Native Americans. [Native Americans] are recognized the world over as keepers of a vital piece of the Creator's original orders, and yet they are regarded as little more than squatters at home. This book features impressive interviews, beautiful illustrations, and gives a voice to the voiceless.

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    Peter Coyote

    The body is an inviolable limit. And you have to really hurt it before you know that.

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    Peter Coyote

    The idea of absolute freedom is fiction. It's based on the idea of an independent self. But in fact, there's no such thing. There's no self without other people. There's no self without sunlight. There's no self without dew. And water. And bees to pollinate the food that we eat...So the idea of behaving in a way that doesn't acknowledge those reciprocal relationships is not really freedom, it's indulgence.

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    Peter Coyote

    The self is just not a worthy enough vehicle to worship.

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    Peter Coyote

    When I got to Grinnell College, I was part of the black turtleneck sweater and Camel cigarette crowd of poets and writers.

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    Peter Coyote

    Where I didn't have the maturity and the compassion to consider other people's needs, I did a lot of damage.

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    Peter Coyote

    You don't see artists sitting around a lot, talking about ideology. They find out what they believe, and what they're doing, by doing it.

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    Peter Coyote

    When Verlaine and Rimbaud were young,” [Snyder] said, they were protesting the iron-grip bourgeois rationality had on all aspects of nineteenth-century French culture— the manners, the view of reality, and the exclusion of ‘the wild’ from public life. Rationality in business and society were dominant values. ‘Deranging the senses’ was one strategy artists like Verlaine and Rimbaud employed to break free of that. “Today,” he continued, “the bourgeoisie is sociopathic, overindulged, distracted, spoiled beyond measure, and unable to restrain its gluttony, even in the face of pending planetary destruction. In the face of such a threat, it has, by necessity, become the responsibility of the artist to model health and sanity.