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                #1. I knew that I had been partially right in the storeroom above the bar on Christmas Day. 
Whoever I had become had to die.
                Craig Ferguson
							 
            
                    
		    
                #2. Let us be vulgar and have some fun, let us invite the President.
                Henry James
							 
            
            
		    
                #3. Because homophobia is still largely driven by the church, it's legitimised. It's also tied to sexism, because those two are never far apart.
                Marlon James
							 
            
            
		    
                #4. Isn't antimatter what fuels the U.S.S.
Enterprise?
                Dan Brown
							 
            
                    
		    
                #5. 'Star Trek' is about acceptance, and the strength of the Starship Enterprise is that it embraces diversity in all its forms.
                George Takei
							 
            
            
		    
                #6. I for one refuse to believe that an enterprise so well conceived, so scrupulously produced, and so widely loved can stay boneyarded for long.
And I have 1,898 letters from people who don't believe it either.
                James Blish
							 
            
            
		    
                #7. When, in the autumn of 1947, I was fired from the first and only job I have ever held, I wanted one thing out of life: to become a writer.
                William Styron
							 
            
            
		    
                #8. Every day, and in every way, I am becoming better and better.
                Emile Coue
							 
            
                    
		    
            
            
		    
            
            
		    
                #11. Still, I knew from that first moment that my tour on the Enterprise was going to be something special." He shrugged. "The name carries that level of expectation, you know?
                Dayton Ward
							 
            
            
		    
                #12. Literature professes to be important while at the same time considering itself an object of doubt. It confirms itself as it disparages itself. It seeks itself: this is more than it has a right to do, because literature may be one of those things which deserve to be found but not to be sought.
                Maurice Blanchot
							 
            
            
		 
		
			        
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