Famous Quotes & Sayings

Sa Kahirapan Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 6 famous quotes about Sa Kahirapan with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Sa Kahirapan Quotes

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Elle Aycart

Oh boy, Christy's been reading steamy romances again, haven't you?" Holly said, frowning. "Honey, those aren't real. I wish they were, but they aren't. That kind of man doesn't exist. Take my word for it."

"Holly's right," Sophie said. "Reality is frostbite and vacuum-cleaner horror experiences, five-minute lays, unskilled fingers, and other rather unappealing appendages probing all over the place and frustrating the hell out of you. And nasty, expensive divorces, of course. — Elle Aycart

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Robert Green Ingersoll

There will never be a generation of great men until there has been a generation of free women - of free mothers. — Robert Green Ingersoll

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Pete Cashmore

If it doesn't come through the Internet, it's not really compelling to me. — Pete Cashmore

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Marguerite Yourcenar

The American child, driven to school by bus and stupefied by television, is losing contact with reality. There is an enormous gap between the sheer weight of the textbooks that he carries home from school and his capacity to interpret what is in them. — Marguerite Yourcenar

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Aaron Goldberg

Everyone has to do 20 push-ups for the mellophones shorts. — Aaron Goldberg

Sa Kahirapan Quotes By Peter Senge

Consider prejudice. Once a person begins to accept a stereotype of a particular group, that "thought" becomes an active agent, "participating" in shaping how he or she interacts with another person who falls in that stereotyped class. In turn, the tone of their interaction influences the other person's behaviour. The prejudiced person can't see how his prejudice shapes what he "sees" and how he acts. In some sense, if he did, he would no longer be prejudiced. To operate, the "thought" of prejudice must remain hidden to its holder — Peter Senge