Abraham Lincoln Motivational Quotes & Sayings
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Top Abraham Lincoln Motivational Quotes

Do what you love. Go to a good art school and study with the best teachers. Move to New York and read Ask Mark Kostabi. — Mark Kostabi

I like to do stuff real and practical and in camera, as much as possible. I like old school filmmaking. — David Ayer

Keeler, you have so many issues, you can put the fucking New York Times out of business. — Charlie Cochet

War is a business in which a lot of people watch a few people get killed and are damn glad it wasn't them. — Herman Wouk

Embracing and rejecting tradition, bound and liberated by faith, torn between obscurantism and reason, self-assured and self-critical, they were a kaleidoscope of fragments, positions held and abandoned, images formed and shattered, God-fearing Jew, God-denying Jew, passionate and indifferent, hero and villain, yea-sayer, nay-sayer. — Israel Shenker

I believe that hope for the future depends on each of us taking nonviolence into our hearts and minds and developing new and imaginative structures which are nonviolent and life-giving for all. — Mairead Corrigan

If you can't love crudeness, how can you truly love mankind? — John Irving

Will springs from the two elements of moral sense and self-interest. — Abraham Lincoln

Israel is following policies which maximise its security threats ... policies which choose expansion over security ... policies which lead to their moral degradation, their isolation, their delegitimation, as they call it now, and very likely ultimate destruction. That's not impossible. — Noam Chomsky

he attended a Buddhist retreat in the north of England at which the principal teachers were a small group of Buddhist nuns. He no longer remembers any details about the tradition they belonged to, but he remembers well the profound effect their teachings had on him. At the core of the retreat were instructions on how participants could develop a practice of meditation through using the breath as a focus to remain anchored in the present moment. "What the nuns pointed me to was the part of their tradition kept alive through monastic practice for 2,500 years," he says. "This was the importance of staying in the present moment, the importance of calm abiding, the practice of concentration in Buddhism known as samatha." This time spent in the company of nuns, listening to their guidance, was "a seminal moment. — Christine Toomey

My experience has taught me that a man who has no vices has damned few virtues. — Abraham Lincoln

Everything which made Abraham Lincoln the loved and honored man he was, it is in the power of the humblest American boy to imitate. — New York Times