Famous Quotes & Sayings

Debbee Klein Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 9 famous quotes about Debbee Klein with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Debbee Klein Quotes

Debbee Klein Quotes By George Herbert

The healthfull man can give counsell to the sick. — George Herbert

Debbee Klein Quotes By Max Lerner

What counted was not the facts but the fears. — Max Lerner

Debbee Klein Quotes By John Barth

Quantitative changes suddenly become qualitative changes. From all of Marxism, which I once thought attractive enough, I find only this dictum remaining in the realm of my opinions. Water grows colder and colder and colder, and suddenly it's ice. The day grows darker and darker, and suddenly it's night. Man ages and ages, and suddenly he's dead. Quantitative changes suddenly become qualitative changes; differences in degree lead to differences in kind. — John Barth

Debbee Klein Quotes By Gil Kane

I think the lack of precision and deep focus is why it took me years to build up my work. — Gil Kane

Debbee Klein Quotes By Robin Sacredfire

I feel uncomfortable with the words DEMOcracy, SOCIALism and COMMUNism. Common social demonocracy? — Robin Sacredfire

Debbee Klein Quotes By Jonathan Kellerman

I saw this cartoon in the paper, once. That Viking, Hagar the Horrible? He's standing on the mountaintop, holding his hands to the heavens, shouting "Why me?" And down from the heavens comes the answer: "Why not?" Maybe that's the ultimate truth; what right to do I have to expect a smooth ride? — Jonathan Kellerman

Debbee Klein Quotes By Mike Cameron

That's a headache waiting to happen. — Mike Cameron

Debbee Klein Quotes By Julia Child

Personally, I don't think pure vegetarianism is a healthy lifestyle. I've often wondered to myself: Does a vegetarian look forward to dinner, ever? — Julia Child

Debbee Klein Quotes By Michael Slote

But if love and friendship are weaknesses, they are basic human weaknesses: by which I mean that they are weaknesses so endemic to our nature that if one seeks, as the Stoics urge, to avoid being subject to them, one is likely to to get oneself into a worse position than one would be in if one simply accepted the weakness in oneself. The tendency towards, the need for, the various affections of love and friendship may be basic weaknesses in this sense because if one attempts to be utterly free of them, one will simply cover up one's needs and feelings and in the process give them free rein for subterranean mischief and eventual destructive effect within one's life. — Michael Slote