(adapted from an online blurb I came across)
Consider the following quotations:
" Everything comes if a man will only wait."
- Benjamin Disraeli, Tancred
"Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice; it is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved."
- William Jennings Bryan, Memoirs
Disraeli and other fatalists the virtue of "patience" in "waiting" for good things to come, while proactive or ambitious people such as Bryan see fate as a matter to be taken into one's own hands. I've encountered the same split among Hindus/Buddha people describing karma (literally 'action'

: some people take 'karma' to mean that one's life circumstances (or those of other people) are entirely determined by their past action, and even interpret this to suggest that poor or oppressed people brought their conditions upon themselves. Others take "karma" to mean that every action that you take at a given moment is effectively a choice that leads you down a different road in life, and thus one's life circumstances are determined by one's action/karma.
The word "karma" aside, do you agree with Disraeli or with Bryan? Is there possibly a "Middle Path" between the two extremes, and if so, can you come up with a corresponding slogan for this "Middle Path"?
PS: I'm sure a similar discussion has arisen before (there was a thread specifically regarding "karma" previously) but I don't recall a discussion regarding the specific question I've asked.
"...I didn't know that Cheshire cats always grinned; in fact, I didn't know that cats could grin..." - Alice's Adventures in Wonderland