Justifiable Anger Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Justifiable Anger with everyone.
Top Justifiable Anger Quotes

Captain Nemo pointed to this prodigious heap of shellfish, and I saw that these mines were genuinely inexhaustible, since nature's creative powers are greater than man's destructive instincts. — Jules Verne

The moon gazed on my midnight labours, while, with unrelaxed and breathless eagerness, I pursued nature to her hiding places. — Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

Anger - justifiable anger in the face of oppression and prejudice - should not be mistaken for hatred. — Christina Engela

When you think about justifiable anger in one's personal life, we look at those scenarios in everyday life and through our story with a superhero, we heighten them. — Charlie Cox

When I get on the field, it's just going to be another game, You get out there and it's just baseball. — Eric Byrnes

The callousness that had saved me so often had destroyed me too. — Roshani Chokshi

And so in place of insignificant, vague, and uncertain phrases subject to arbitrary interpretation, I found in Matthew v. 21-26 the first commandment of Jesus: Live in peace with all men. Do not regard anger as justifiable under any circumstances. Never look upon a human being as worthless or as a fool. Not only refrain from anger yourself, but do not regard the anger of others toward you as vain. If any one is angry with you, even without reason, be reconciled to him, that all hostile feelings may be effaced. Agree quickly with those that have a grievance against you, lest animosity prevail to your loss. — Leo Tolstoy

The biggest challenge for human mind is human mind. — Raheel Farooq

There is no such thing as "righteous" anger or justifiable killing. — Swami Vivekananda

As the anger, or the fear, within a personality builds, the world in which it lives increasingly reflects the anger, or the fear, that it must heal, so that eventually, ultimately, the personality will see that it is creating its own experiences and perceptions, that its righteous anger or justifiable fear originates within itself, and therefore can be replaced by other perceptions and experiences only through the force of its own being. — Gary Zukav