Dewrell Wesley Quotes & Sayings
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Top Dewrell Wesley Quotes

We are rarely in danger of examining to excess, especially when the subject is the shape of our own lives. — G.K. Chesterton

Clothes are my drug. I love Camden market - I have so many vintage pieces from there it's unbelievable. Clothes are really important to me, they give me that feeling of happiness. I love being a bit free with it all and not giving myself rules. — Kaya Scodelario

The chains that bind us the most closely are the ones we have broken. — Antonio Porchia

Heat, dirt, blood, death. Life is made of these things. — Erica Cameron

Is regulation per se bad? Is better regulation bad? I think better regulation is good for the business community, and I think that's something we should get together on. — Ed Rendell

This is his first punishment, that by the verdict of his own heart no guilty man is acquitted. — Juvenal

Let us speak no more of faith in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of cryptography. — Glenn Greenwald

I began by asking myself, "What do I want out of life?" And the answer was happiness. Investigating further, I went into the moment when I was feeling happiest. I discovered something which to me was startling at the time. It was when I was loving that I was happiest. That happiness equated to my capacity to love rather than to being loved. That was a starting point. — Lester Levenson

The basic premise of collective security was that all nations would view every threat to security in the same way and be prepared to run the same risks in resisting it. Not only had nothing like it ever actually occurred, nothing like it was destined to occur in the entire history of both the League of Nations and the United Nations. Only when a threat is truly overwhelming and genuinely affects all, or most, societies is such a consensus possible - as it was during the two world wars and, on a regional basis, in the Cold War. But in the vast majority of cases - and in nearly all of the difficult ones - the nations of the world tend to disagree either about the nature of the threat or about the type of sacrifice they are prepared to make to meet it. — Henry Kissinger