Keshet Quotes & Sayings
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Top Keshet Quotes

There is so little difference between husbands you might as well keep the first. — Adela Rogers St. Johns

ascertain, Jersey had no knowledge of demonology. At this point, all I could do was tell her and her family that I was very uncertain about the case, and that, after I got home, I would be — M. Scott Peck

It's very hard for someone who makes $1,000 a year or some who makes less than $1 a day to care about the environment. — Ian Bremmer

Burglars know there's more than one way to skin a vault. — James Chiles

Love and I once had a great relationship, but I fear we've broken up. It cheated on me, wrecked my heart, and then went on to date other people. A lot of other people. And I can't stand to watch it, since love's going to cheat on them too. — David Levithan

Boys don't cry, but men do. — Malorie Blackman

The more complicated the machine, the more problems I find it has. — Michele Scicolone

Peace is not something that happens by accident. Peace is like silence; it is always there. The lack of harmony in our lives is like noise superimposed on the silence. THe issue is not how to create peace, but how to live in a way that eliminates the noise. — Gabriel Cousens

Do not blame God for what men have done. — Jill Eileen Smith

It was possible, no doubt, to imagine
a society in which WEALTH, in the sense of personal pos-
sessions and luxuries, should be evenly distributed, while
POWER remained in the hands of a small privileged caste. — George Orwell

You are you and you are me. You are the Keshet. — Jessica Shirvington

The very word "change" has changed. When I was young
and not just because I was young
we looked forward with confident impatience to change. Planned, controlled, beneficent change would continue to clear slums, sweep up the remains of empire, raise living and educational standards, tidy away
firmly but kindly
the last aboriginals who still raved about martial glory or the pride of wealth. Now, as it seems to me, change is set almost exclusively in the minor key, change seen overwhelmingly as loss. — Neal Ascherson