Decommissioning Quotes & Sayings
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Top Decommissioning Quotes

Some often repent, yet never reform; they resemble a man traveling in a dangerous path, who frequently starts and stops, but never turns back. — Bonnell Thornton

Well I think it has always been a mistake to reduce the peace process in Ireland to a decommissioning process. — Martin McGuinness

I find it sad, but all too human, that there are vast bureaucracies concerned about nuclear waste, huge organizations devoted to decommissioning nuclear power stations, but nothing comparable to deal with that truly malign waste, carbon dioxide. — James E. Lovelock

So Thomas Pynchon wants a private life and no photographs and nobody to know his home address. I can dig it, I can relate to that (but, like, he should try it when it's compulsory instead of a free-choice option). — Salman Rushdie

In the 60s, if you wanted to be an actor, you couldn't do just one thing. — Barry Bostwick

Run along now while I show off my new acquisition. No one below has feathers. I'll be the envy of hell. — Susan Ee

H. G. Wells was not the only one to mention Churchill and Hitler in the same breath: "Churchill and Hitler are striving to change the nature of their respective countrymen by forcing and hammering violent methods on them. Man may be suppressed in this manner but he cannot be changed. Ahimsa [non-violence in the Hindu tradition], on the other hand, can change human nature and sooner than men like Churchill and Hitler." — Mahatma Gandhi

What I want my father's writing to keep teaching us is that at the table of writing, everyone is welcome. No voice without all voices. — Kim Stafford

You can, of course, be a sexy, strong female and be a good role model. — Ricki-Lee Coulter

I truly believe that people like myself, who are in a position of entertainers in the limelight, should keep their mouth shut on politics. — Kid Rock

Time to release the kraken, Mr Fenton, — A.W. Exley

She had met the man who was now her husband. He was seven foot three, and she was six foot two and a quarter. It was a match made perhaps not in heaven but certainly nearer the ceiling. — Jasper Fforde