Famous Quotes & Sayings

Macleans Magazine Quotes & Sayings

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Top Macleans Magazine Quotes

Macleans Magazine Quotes By Thomas Sowell

Pedestrians never seem to realize that they are a threat to the safety of cars. — Thomas Sowell

Macleans Magazine Quotes By Craig Johnson

Everybody in this county knows your flavor, Walt Longmire. — Craig Johnson

Macleans Magazine Quotes By John Townsend Trowbridge

Darius was clearly of the opinion
That the air is also man's dominion,
And that, with paddle or fins or pinion,
We soon or late
Shall navigate
The azure, as now we sail the sea. — John Townsend Trowbridge

Macleans Magazine Quotes By George Clooney

I don't tweet, I don't go on Facebook. I think there's too much information about all of us out there. I'm liking the idea of privacy more and more. — George Clooney

Macleans Magazine Quotes By Bell Hooks

Male fantasy is seen as something that can create reality, whereas female fantasy is regarded as pure escape. — Bell Hooks

Macleans Magazine Quotes By John Flanagan

It was not polite for a Temujai general to allow his emotions to show. — John Flanagan

Macleans Magazine Quotes By M.F. Moonzajer

If we are kind for the sake of humanity; why we are so kind to good-looking people? — M.F. Moonzajer

Macleans Magazine Quotes By Bertrand Russell

The only kind of appeal that wins any instinctive response in party politics is an appeal to hostile feeling; the men who perceive the need of cooperation are powerless. Until education has been directed for a generation into new channels, and the Press has abandoned incitements to hatred, only harmful policies have any chance of being adopted in practice by our present political methods. But there is no obvious means of altering education and the Press until our political system is altered. From this dilemma there is no issue by means of ordinary action, at any rate for a long time to come. The best that can be hoped, it seems to me, is that we should, as many of us as possible, become political skeptics, rigidly abstaining from belief in the various attractive party programmes that are put before us from time to time. — Bertrand Russell

Macleans Magazine Quotes By Carl Von Clausewitz

(1) War becomes a completely isolated act, which arises suddenly, and is in no way connected with the previous history of the combatant States. (2) If it is limited to a single solution, or to several simultaneous solutions. (3) If it contains within itself the solution perfect and complete, free from any reaction upon it, through a calculation beforehand of the political situation which will follow from it. — Carl Von Clausewitz