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Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, sometimes men who desire to own slaves but are themselves too weak to do so, or, because of rigidities or cripplings, are psychologically incapable of doing so, will, out of envy, jealousy and spite, fight to free them, in order to deny others the pleasures which they, because of their handicaps and inhibitions, cannot grant to themselves. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #229)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 229 Too, sometimes men who desire to own slaves but are themselves too weak to do so, or, because of rigidities or cripplings, are psychologically incapable of doing so, will, out of envy, jealousy and spite, fight to free them, in order to deny others the pleasures which they, because of their handicaps and inhibitions, cannot grant to themselves.

Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 226 Many men, as they are of their own people, regardless of what would be in the best interest of the women, would fight to free them.
22 227 In such matters they would not consider what would make the women most happy but rather would take their enslavement, irrationally, as being somehow demeaning or insulting to them personally.
22 228 Thus, for their own vanity, really, in the final analysis, they would fight to free them.
22 229 Too, sometimes men who desire to own slaves but are themselves too weak to do so, or, because of rigidities or cripplings, are psychologically incapable of doing so, will, out of envy, jealousy and spite, fight to free them, in order to deny others the pleasures which they, because of their handicaps and inhibitions, cannot grant to themselves.
22 230 If I, for one reason or another, cannot have these extraordinary pleasures, then neither, too, shall anyone else, so to speak.
22 231 What I want and cannot have I will deny to others, so to speak.
22 232 Moral fervor is often the outcome of inadequacy.
Many men, as they are of their own people, regardless of what would be in the best interest of the women, would fight to free them. In such matters they would not consider what would make the women most happy but rather would take their enslavement, irrationally, as being somehow demeaning or insulting to them personally. Thus, for their own vanity, really, in the final analysis, they would fight to free them. Too, sometimes men who desire to own slaves but are themselves too weak to do so, or, because of rigidities or cripplings, are psychologically incapable of doing so, will, out of envy, jealousy and spite, fight to free them, in order to deny others the pleasures which they, because of their handicaps and inhibitions, cannot grant to themselves. If I, for one reason or another, cannot have these extraordinary pleasures, then neither, too, shall anyone else, so to speak. What I want and cannot have I will deny to others, so to speak. Moral fervor is often the outcome of inadequacy. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 22)