Crissman Lincoln Quotes & Sayings
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Top Crissman Lincoln Quotes

The unlikely combination of potatoes and pasta does appear in some Italian recipes. — Yotam Ottolenghi

They say that nobody is perfect. Then they tell you practice makes perfect. I wish they'd make up their minds. — Winston S. Churchill

But when the world and all that's behind it and in it seem black, I tell myself that self-respect and self-mastery are not everything, that faith and belief in the power of prayer are not so wonderful as what we call the ordinary love of two apparently very ordinary people. — William Fryer Harvey

It takes effort to accomplish God's will for your life. Until you know God's plan for you, it's impossible to achieve it. — Paul Silway

In grade school I was taught that the United States is a melting pot. People from all over the world come here for freedom and to pursue a better life. They arrive with next to nothing, work incredibly hard, learn a new language and new customs, and in a generation they become an integral part of our amazing nation. — Jeff Hawkins

The Way is hidden and nameless. Still only the Way nourishes and completes. — Laozi

I don't want to work, I want to bang on the drum all day. — Todd Rundgren

I had a marvelously happy childhood. — Darius Milhaud

When the norms that made the old institutions useful began to unwind, and the leaders abandoned their posts, the Roosevelt Republic that had reigned for almost half a century came undone. The void was filled by the default force in American life, organized money. — George Packer

God's justice and love are one. Infinite justice must be infinite love. Justice is but another sign of love. — Frederick William Robertson

As we learn from the New Testament, the Jews and the Samaritans in the days of Jesus were not agreed on the question which was the proper place of worship, but that there could be only one was taken to be as certain as the unity of God Himself. — Julius Wellhausen

But as much as this is a soldier's reason d'etre, it is not often that you hear a soldier explicitly talk about 'killing'. The k-word as a verb is instead often disguised and supplanted by any number of other euphemisms. In precise and technical military parlance, reflecting the ever more precise and technically removed means of killing, the 'enemy' becomes the 'target'. But for the soldiers who personally 'engage' these 'targets', these objects are colloquially 'slotted', 'dropped', 'hit', 'fragged', 'sawn in half', 'smashed' or just plain 'shot'.
Then the soldier will have achieved the noun of a 'kill'.
The author's supposition is that such words are used by the soldier in combat as an attempt to mentally dissociate himself from the reality of his actions, so he can continue to operate as a soldier - and perhaps, when all is finally said and done, as a human being back home. — Jake Wood