Msizi Shabalala Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Msizi Shabalala with everyone.
Top Msizi Shabalala Quotes

I often find it's just the confidence that makes you sexy, not what your body looks like. It's how you feel about yourself that makes you sexy. — Queen Latifah

An intellectual instinct which extracts the essence from the phenomena of life, as a bee sucks honey from a flower. In addition to study and reflections, life itself serves as a source. — Carl Von Clausewitz

It's so wonderful ... if your whole day is rotten, once they start the music, it seems to melt away. — Donald O'Connor

Exercise is bunk. If you are healthy, you don't need it: if you are sick you should not take it. — Henry Ford

When you buy a lottery ticket, you don't know how tickets have been sold. But sold they have been. And there is an underlying distribution for the game. — Robert Haugen

The media love coarse debate because coarse debate drives ratings and ratings generate profits. Unless the TV producer happens to be William Shakespeare, an argument is more interesting than a soliloquy - and there will never be a shortage of people willing to argue on TV. — John Sununu

For an occurrence to become an adventure, it is necessary and sufficient for one to recount it. — Jean-Paul Sartre

A friend once told me that the real message Bram Stoker sought to convey in 'Dracula' is that a human being needs to live hundreds and hundreds of years to get all his reading done; that Count Dracula, basically nothing more than a misunderstood bookworm, was draining blood from the necks of 10,000 hapless virgins not because he was the apotheosis of pure evil but because it was the only way he could live long enough to polish off his extensive reading list. But I have no way of knowing if this is true, as I have not yet found time to read 'Dracula. — Joe Queenan

who promises you fairness is lying. — Bridget Blackwood

Whatever work he does, beyond what is sufficient to purchase his own maintenance, can be squeezed out of him by violence only, and not by any interest of his own. — Adam Smith