Famous Quotes & Sayings

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes & Sayings

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Top Emjay Rinaudo Quotes

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Jerzy Kosinski

The popular culture says ... Do what you do, your life is predestined, like the installment plan on your house. There's not much you can do about it. Make your payments, live it, get sick, die, don't make any trouble. It is the Master Charge of destiny. Try to get your high credit rating. — Jerzy Kosinski

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Tommy Bolin

If you're not having fun it's not worth doing. — Tommy Bolin

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Augustine Of Hippo

Though defensive violence will always be 'a sad necessity' in the eyes of men of principle, it would be still more unfortunate if wrongdoers should dominate just men. — Augustine Of Hippo

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Muhammad Imran Hasan

Never Give Up, Just Follow Your Dreams ... — Muhammad Imran Hasan

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Matt Welch

Consider that in a galaxy far, far away (otherwise known as the 1990s), President Clinton felt that he had to assure an isolationist Republican Congress - repeat after me, an isolationist Republican Congress - that the 20,000 U.S. peacekeeping troops he promised Bosnia as part of the Dayton Accords would only stay deployed for a single calendar year. — Matt Welch

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By David Joseph Cribbin

I wouldn't give ten gallons of my own piss for clear sentence that gives the sense of a tree as a tree, when I revel in the nonsense of its being my own Grandfather, a letter from yesterday, or a masturbating fist. — David Joseph Cribbin

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Sylvia Plath

As a poet I would say everything should be able to come into a poem but I can't put toothbrushes in a poem. I really can't. — Sylvia Plath

Emjay Rinaudo Quotes By Thomas Paine

In the following pages I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense; and have no other preliminaries to settle with the reader, than that he will divest himself of prejudice and repossession, and suffer his reason and feelings to determine for themselves; and that he will put on, or rather that he will not put off, the true character of man, and generously enlarge his view beyond the present day. — Thomas Paine