Famous Quotes & Sayings

Risky Drinking Quotes & Sayings

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Top Risky Drinking Quotes

Risky Drinking Quotes By Haile Selassie

Spiritual power is the eternal guide, in this life and the life after, for man ranks supreme among all creatures. Led forward by spiritual power, man can reach the summit destined for him by the Great Creator. — Haile Selassie

Risky Drinking Quotes By Jean Giraud

The comics were not only stories to enjoy; for me they were drawings that possessed me. — Jean Giraud

Risky Drinking Quotes By Jean Arasanayagam

But I was innocent only because I did not carry firearms. Whoever has witnessed death as I have seen it, men falling, hit by bullets, dying under a clear sky, not knowing sometimes from what direction they were fired upon, could not think himself to be innocent. Nor could I do anything about the killings on either side. It made me feel guilty, as if I had been a participant in all that had happened. I had knowledge, I could not claim to be innocent. — Jean Arasanayagam

Risky Drinking Quotes By D. Elton Trueblood

At the profoundest depths in life, men talk not about God but with Him. — D. Elton Trueblood

Risky Drinking Quotes By Frederick Douglass

Without Struggle There Is No Success — Frederick Douglass

Risky Drinking Quotes By James J. Rybacki

The best colleague any doctor can have is a more fully informed patient and family. — James J. Rybacki

Risky Drinking Quotes By Kay Ryan

A certain kind of Eden holds us thrall. — Kay Ryan

Risky Drinking Quotes By Georg Buchner

We do not have too much pain in this life, we have too little... Because through pain we arrive at God. We are death, dust, ashes... how should we complain? — Georg Buchner

Risky Drinking Quotes By Alan Dean Foster

Much easier it was to follow orders than to think for oneself. — Alan Dean Foster

Risky Drinking Quotes By Leora Tanenbaum

Although drinking to the point of becoming incapacitated is unwise and risky for anyone, the blame for rape must be put on the rapist who preys on a drunk woman, not a drunk woman who becomes prey. If my car is stolen after I've parked it with the door unlocked in a neighborhood known for car theft, a crime has been committed, and I have the right and expectation to report the crime to the police. No one would tell me that the thief is the one who deserves sympathy, and that apprehending him would ruin his life. No one would tell me I'm a terrible person for getting my car stolen, and that I deserve to have my car stolen. They would be right to question my judgment, but not the fact that a crime has been committed. But when it comes to rape, the victim's pre-rape actions are used to justify the crime. — Leora Tanenbaum

Risky Drinking Quotes By Donnie Fritts

John Paul to give me a shot, I'll never forget as long as I live. — Donnie Fritts

Risky Drinking Quotes By Mehmet Murat Ildan

Between birth and death, neighbour, there is no business that is not risky; drinking water in a sitting position included! . The gist of the matter is to do everything with fine tuning as an acrobat does when walking a tight rope, like a carpenter measuring everything meticulously! — Mehmet Murat Ildan

Risky Drinking Quotes By Angelina Jolie

We cannot close ourselves off to information and ignore the fact that millions of people are out there suffering. — Angelina Jolie

Risky Drinking Quotes By Henry Louis Gates

Lincoln had a tremendous capacity for personal growth - more than any other American President. — Henry Louis Gates

Risky Drinking Quotes By Timothy J. Keller

In particular, it is said, the most masculine of men do not do well in marriage. It is argued that "a need for sexual conquest, female adulation, and illicit and risky liaisons seems to go along with drive, ambition, and confidence in the 'alpha male.'" But Lipton argued that marriage was traditionally a place where males became truly masculine: "For most of Western history, the primary and most valued characteristic of manhood was self-mastery. . . . A man who indulged in excessive eating, drinking, sleeping or sex - who failed to 'rule himself' - was considered unfit to rule his household, much less a polity. . . . — Timothy J. Keller