Margarian Law Quotes & Sayings
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Top Margarian Law Quotes
I have veterans in my family. But I didn't know anything about DAV, Disabled American Veterans. — Gary Sinise
While the official productivity data look impressive, alternative measures that are equally reasonable show a much more subdued picture. — Jan Hatzius
The yogi should meditate on a firm seat, one that is clean - untainted by dirt or unspiritual vibrations of others. The thought or life force emanating from an individual saturates the objects he uses and his dwelling. — Paramahansa Yogananda
We don't really understand most of what's happening in the cosmos. Is there any afterlife? Who knows. — David Eagleman
It's the abject smallness of the earth that gets you. — Stuart Roosa
You look like gold. I've been fooled before, but now I know I've made the mistake in the past. But now I, now I know the difference from gold and brass. — Ben Harper
articles of agreement which were to bind these friends in a common partnership, whereby it was understood — George Randolph Chester
In this book, we will naturally be dealing primarily with the manifestations of the third level of immunity. I gather material on the biography of Homo immunologicus, guided by the assumption that this is where to find the stuff from which the forms of anthropotechnics are made. By this I mean the methods of mental and physical practising by which humans from the most diverse cultures have attempted to optimize their cosmic and immunological status in the face of vague risks of living and acute certainties of death. Only when these procedures have been grasped in a broad tableau of human 'work on oneself' can we evaluate the newest experiments in genetic engineering, to which, in the current debate, many have reduced the term 'anthropotechnics', reintroduced in 1997. — Peter Sloterdijk
Later, someone will come back and get her and take her back home. — Lidia Yuknavitch
Humble' is another way or saying 'simple' or 'poor' like we can't have fun; we can't roll up the rugs and dance, or tap the sap, or make decorations for a tree. It's pious and is just the sort of thing that lectures a room or depresses it, and you have to have a wall hanging because the old biddies say so, but you don't like it and you wish you didn't need it. In fact, you absolutely hate it. — Allan Dare Pearce
