On the Use of Propaganda to Conquer Cities
"It is like seeing a larl tricked into destroying himself... as though he were told the only good larl is a sick, apologetic, self-suspecting, guilt-ridden larl. It is like vulos legislating for tarns, the end of which legislation is the death of the tarn, or its transformation into something new, something reduced, pathological and sick, celebrated then as the true tarn... the larl makes a poor verr... The tarn makes a pathetic vulo. Cannot you imagine it hunching down, and pretending to be little and weak? Is the image not revolting? Why is it not soaring among the cliffs, uttering its challenge scream to the skies? ...The beast who was born to live on flesh is not to be nourished on the nibblings of urts."-Tarl Cabot pages 173-174, Magicians of Gor
On Gorean Trust and Loyalty
"Goreans are not stupid. It is difficult to fool them more than once. They tend to remember... there would always be the dupes, of one sort or another, and the opportunists, and the cowards, with their rationalizations. But, too, I speculated, there would be those of Ar to whom the Home Stone was a Home Stone, and not a mere rock, not a piece of meaningless earth." -Tarl Cabot page 489, Magicians of Gor
On Gorean Honesty
"It might also be noted, interestingly, that the Gorean, in spite of his awe of Priest-Kings, and the reverence he accords them, the gods of his world, does not think of them as having formed the world, nor of the world being in some sense consequent upon their will. Rather the Priest-Kings are seen as being its children, too, like sleen, and rain and man. A last observation having to do with the tendency of some Goreans to accept illusions and such as reality is that the Gorean tends to take such things as honor and truth very seriously. Given his culture and background, his values, he is often easier to impose upon than would be many others. For example, he is likely, at least upon occasion, to be an easier mark for the fraud and charletan than a more suspicious, cynical fellow. On the other hand, I do not encourage lying to Goreans. They do not like it." -Tarl Cabot page 255, Magicians of Gor
On the Rights of Discipline
"The discipline of a slave may be attended to by any free person, otherwise she might do much what she wished, provided only her Master did not learn of it. The legal principle is clear, and has been upheld in several courts, in several cities, including Ar." -Tarl Cabot, page 122, Magicians of Gor
On the Politics of Slaves
"...in a group of female slaves, for example, in a pleasure gardens, a fortress or a tavern, there will usually be a girl appointed First Girl. Indeed, if there is a large number of slaves, there are sometimes heirarchies of 'first girls,' lower-level first girls reporting to higher-level first girls, and so on. The lower-level girls will commonly address their first girl as 'Mistress.'" -Tarl Cabot, page 123, Magicians of Gor
On the Use of Slaves
"...one of the utilities of a slave, of course, is to occasionally serve as the helpless object upon which the Master may vent his dissatisfaction, his frustration or anger. Too, of course, they may serve many other related purposes, such as the relief of tensions, to relax oneself and even to calm oneself for clear thought."-Tarl Cabot, page 134, Magicians of Gor