Tables In Wonderland Quotes & Sayings
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Top Tables In Wonderland Quotes

When you are studying any matter or considering any philosophy, ask yourself only: what are the facts, and what is the truth that the facts bear out. Never let yourself be diverted by what you wish to believe, but look only and surely at what are the facts. — Bertrand Russell

You know when you eat too many sweets and get diabetes? Paparazzi are the diabetes of materialistic culture. — Shirley Maclaine

I did take some voiceover classes. I always loved the idea of doing a voice for a cartoon character. I just voiced the character of Suzi X in the upcoming 'The Haunted World of El Superbeasto.' — Sheri Moon Zombie

I don't have any personal challenges about throwing away the past. If you're not changing, you're giving others a chance to catch up. — Pete Cashmore

If complacency is bad for business, it can also be bad for the human spirit — Simon Silva

What good your beautiful proof on the transcendence of Pi: Why investigate such problems, given that irrational numbers do not even exist? — Leopold Kronecker

I conclude where I began, I was elected by the people of Australia to do a job. I was not elected by the factional leaders of Australia, of the Australian Labor Party to do a job - though they may be seeking to do a job on me, that's a separate matter. The challenge therefore is to honour the mandate given to me by the Australian people. — Kevin Rudd

If you rescue me from my pipe dreams, I'll stop smoking fantasies. — Munia Khan

I'd rather do comedies that strike at some bigger ideas. — Harold Ramis

Some writers, notably Anton Chekov, argue that all characters must be admirable, because once we've looked at anyone deeply enough and understood their motivation we must identify with them rather than judge them. — Scarlett Thomas

The measures of the reformers took no account of all this which seemed to me so obvious. The reformers themselves apparently did not see that the State, as an arbiter of economic advantage, must necessarily be a potential instrument of economic exploitation. In fact, these are but two ways of saying the same thing, for, as Voltaire saw so clearly, advantage to the State's beneficiaries means disadvantage to those who are not its beneficiaries. By putting a tariff on steel, for example, the State simply took a great deal of money out of the pockets of American purchasers of steel, and put it in Mr. Carnegie's; it acted ad hoc as Mr. Carnegie's instrument of exploitation. Neither — Albert Jay Nock

You must not pursue a success, but fly from it. — W. Somerset Maugham