Goodguy Quotes & Sayings
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Top Goodguy Quotes

For me, this was an example of how unconscious motives may sometimes ally themselves to physiological propensities, of how one cannot abstract an ailment or its treatment from the whole pattern, the context, the economy of someone's life. — Oliver Sacks

Intrinsically evil people are often hypocrites who make a show of their Goodguy Badge; without an enemy to plague them they could never in any believable sense become Good. This — Anton Szandor LaVey

Sounds great. Let me grab a quick shower." "Good idea. I'll wash your back," he said, following me into the living room. "Why don't you keep Lizzy company?" "Why don't I keep you company?" His voice dropped in volume. "I could clean that special place for you with my tongue. Promise I'll do a good job. — Kylie Scott

Stupid patriarchal culture with stupid ideas of beauty - stupid me for going along with it. — Marni Bates

I would love to do comedy. I think I'm funny and that comedy is my strong suit, at least in real life. I have yet to prove myself in the movies, but I'd love to get the opportunity to do that. — Evan Peters

She was a tall, seedy, sad-eyed blonde who had once been a policewoman and had lost her job when she married a cheap little check bouncer named Johnny Horne, to reform him. She hadn't reformed him, but she was waiting for him to come out so she could try again. — Raymond Chandler

I'm always concerned that I'm insulting the elder statesmen on the set by my crass behavior. — Heather Langenkamp

Sometimes I do an automatic songs, songs that you don't really think about, or work on. You just look back and it sorta surprises you. — Bruce Springsteen

Thirdly, Death is nothing else but a change of a short and temporary for an unalterable and eternal condition. — John Pearson

Daley may be sinking. The hot water has gone from his chest to his neck. — Don Rose

For police themselves, the consequence of [911 policing] has been the emergence of a siege mentality...the alienation of officers from the communities they police interferes with the effective exercise of their basic authority, forcing police to rely inordinately on the use of force. As strangers, police feel compelled to draw upon 'preemptively coercive means such as intimidation and threats' if not the direct application of force...not only is such coercion antithetical to policing a democracy, it may create the very resistance it is intended to forestall, and lead to self-fulfilling prophecies and a downward spiral in which police become more aggressive and youths embittered and resistant. — George Kelling