Homeland Season 2 Episode 4 Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Homeland Season 2 Episode 4 with everyone.
Top Homeland Season 2 Episode 4 Quotes

Companies come up with elaborate, often passive-aggressive ways to say no: processes to follow, approvals to get, meetings to attend. No is like a tiny death to smart creatives. No is a signal that the company has lost its start-up verve, that it's too corporate. Enough no's, and smart creatives stop asking and start heading to the exits. — Eric Schmidt

Sometimes men are pussies, and they need you to dangle yours in front of them to remember that they're all dicks. — K.A. Linde

This is not just primitive rural superstition; [juju] is practiced by all kinds of people, from illiterate herd boys to multi-dregreed university professors. If you don't understand the power of this belief, you will never truly grasp the rich albeit often incomprehensible spirituality of Africa. — Lawrence Anthony

Some day I'm going to have to stand before God, and if He asks me why I didn't let that [Jackie] Robinson fellow play ball, I don't think saying 'because of the color of his skin' would be a good enough answer. — Branch Rickey

Stoner saw them through a haze, as if he were an audience. — John Edward Williams

Wrinkles? They just tell the story of your life — Linda Boyden

She wrote sniffing back the tears that flowed over the version of things that her unconscious insisted on sicking up. — Helen Hodgman

We were all born to dream so let's take this long journey of finding our dreams because we need one another. — Euginia Herlihy

Oh my, the look he gives me could be solely responsible for global warming. — E.L. James

Nothing perplexes us quite like our best pal's choice in a partner. — P.B. Kerr

When you are a friend, you will have a friend. — Debasish Mridha

There is no excuse for not trying. — Barack Obama

You have to move beyond that vision of the way your life has always looked and begin to picture your life as you want it to look. — Larry Winget

If anyone comes to the gates of poetry and expects to become an adequate poet by acquiring expert knowledge of the subject without the Muses' madness, he will fail, and his self-controlled verses will be eclipsed by the poetry of men who have been driven out of their minds. — Plato