Almost every time I make a building, some people will condemn it straight to Hell.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I've learned during my life that if I am in hell, I make my own glory. I've also been in glory, and perhaps I've made my own hell, but I certainly don't take anyone down with me.
One cannot walk through an assembly factory and not feel that one is in Hell.
I do believe that people of all religions have a right to build edifices or structures or places of religious worship or study where the community allows them to do it under zoning laws and that sort of thing, and that we don't want to turn an act of hate against us by extremists into an act of intolerance for people of religious faith.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists. That is why they invented Hell.
I don't go down the road of condemning.
The attempt to force human beings to despise themselves is what I call hell.
To consider persons and events and situations only in the light of their effect upon myself is to live on the doorstep of hell.
The supreme satisfaction is to be able to despise one's neighbor and this fact goes far to account for religious intolerance. It is evidently consoling to reflect that the people next door are headed for hell.
One ought to look a good deal at oneself before thinking of condemning others.
No one has ever written, painted, sculpted, modeled, built, or invented except literally to get out of hell.