Rotten Kids Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 16 famous quotes about Rotten Kids with everyone.
Top Rotten Kids Quotes
Children from the age of five to ten should watch more television. Television depicts adults as rotten SOB's given to fistfights, gunplay, and other mayhem. Kids who believe this about grownups aren't likely to argue about bedtime. — P. J. O'Rourke
The demand of our people in 1980 is not for smaller government or bigger government but for better government. — Edward Kennedy
Don't say "The last one there is a rotten egg": unless you're absolutely sure there's a slow kid behind you. — Cynthia Lewis
I'll say one thing about an oil boom; it will teach a kid that Life's a pretty rotten thing as quick as anything I can think of. — Robert E. Howard
Nobody's born rotten. You just don't have bad kids. It's not true. There is no such thing. But we can make them bad. — Jean Liedloff
He thinks of the rotten parachute they played with as kids in Arcadia: they hurtle through life aging unimaginably fast, but each grasps a silken edge of memory that billows between them and softens the long fall. — Lauren Groff
Try approving of yourself just as you are, and spoiling yourself rotten with small kid's pleasures. — Julia Cameron
Words are a weapon, and rotten kids like Tyler Jones get a free pass when it comes to using them because the marks they leave are invisible. Why don't more adults realize that? — Jenny Lundquist
Really, theology is simply what we think about God and then living that truth out in our right-now life. — Sarah Bessey
The thing about oracles is that they talk back. — Darin Bradley
On my fifteenth birthday, I came to realize that the expression spoiled rotten meant exactly that. We kids were the apples of our parents' eyes, and I, for one, was rotting from inside out. — Neal Shusterman
Forgiving is forgetting, in spite of remembering. — Dag Hammarskjold
Everyone things children are sweet as Necco Wafers, but I've lived long enough to know the truth: kids are rotten. The only difference between grown-ups and kids is that grown-ups go to jail for murder. Kids get away with it. — Jennifer L. Holm
My father was the church organist; the village curate was my mother's brother, a former monk from the order of Pijar, a very well-educated and ascetic man who loved nothing but solitude. — Wladyslaw Reymont
ground-growing shrub rather like a small azalea,' Madame is explaining when I return — Carol Drinkwater
Can we really choose anything?'
'Maybe. If we want to bad enough. — Isaac Marion
