"Our world and our state have been transformed, but in contrast, we as people have not been"
About this Quote
The intent is pragmatic and corrective. Minner isn’t waxing philosophical about human nature; she’s making a case for policy and cultural change that can’t be solved by infrastructure, budgets, or new laws alone. The subtext: growth has been external and measurable (economy, technology, demographics, governance), while the internal shift - empathy, responsibility, civic maturity - has lagged. It’s a quiet rebuke of complacency: don’t confuse updated systems with updated values.
Contextually, a long-serving state politician in the late 20th/early 21st-century U.S. would have watched “transformation” arrive as deindustrialization, suburbanization, culture wars, and rapid tech change. The line works because it refuses the comforting story that history automatically improves us. It suggests the opposite: the faster the world changes, the more our old reflexes - fear, tribalism, short-term thinking - show up as the real bottleneck.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Minner, Ruth Ann. (2026, February 16). Our world and our state have been transformed, but in contrast, we as people have not been. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-world-and-our-state-have-been-transformed-but-157180/
Chicago Style
Minner, Ruth Ann. "Our world and our state have been transformed, but in contrast, we as people have not been." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-world-and-our-state-have-been-transformed-but-157180/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Our world and our state have been transformed, but in contrast, we as people have not been." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/our-world-and-our-state-have-been-transformed-but-157180/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.




