Bribing Someone For Money Quotes & Sayings
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Top Bribing Someone For Money Quotes
God loves us more than we love Him. — Peter Kreeft
The trouble for today's footballers is they have too many distractions. We used to get our old players coming to watch training with football magazines in their hands. Now, more often than not, they are checking the share prices. — Franz Beckenbauer
Money is good for bribing yourself through the inconveniences of life. — Gottfried Reinhardt
There is no kind of freedom and liberty other than the kind which the market economy brings about. — Ludwig Von Mises
They don't have to choose either/or. They can have their cake and mutilate it too. — Rob Thurman
Silly girl ... because chasing you makes for more of a challenge
and more of a reward."
Alex offered an amused snort. "I assure you, my lord. Considering my feelings about being 'caught,' I would provide little, if any, reward. — Sarah MacLean
Prussia is great because her people are intelligent. They know the alphabet. The alphabet is conquering the world. — George William Curtis
The most successful classes are those where the teacher has a clear idea of what is expected from the students and the students know what the teacher expects from them. — Harry Wong
Speech is but the incorporation of thought. — Joseph Joubert
Nothing ever works out when you are at the whims of others. It doesn't matter if you are an entrepreneur or an employee. Once someone is bribing you to do something (a salary is a form of bribery if you are only doing the work for the money and not for the meaning) then you become a prisoner. — James Altucher
When these political action committees give money, they expect something in return other than good government. — Bob Dole
When delicate and feeling souls are separated, there is not a feature in the sky, not a movement of the elements, not an aspiration of the breeze, but hints some cause for a lover's apprehension. — Richard Brinsley Sheridan
They had lived to see their simple patriotism derided, their morality despised, their savings devalued. They caused no trouble. Millions of pounds of public money wasn't regularly siphoned into their neighbourhoods in the hope of bribing, cajoling or coercing them into civic virtue. If they protested that their cities had become alien, their children taught in overcrowded schools where 90 per cent of the children spoke no English, they were lectured about the cardinal sin of racism by those more expensively and comfortably circumstanced. Unprotected by accountants, they were the milch-cows of the rapacious Revenue. No lucrative industry of social concern and psychological analysis had grown up to analyse and condone their inadequacies on the grounds of deprivation or poverty. — P.D. James
