Quotes & Sayings About Technology Being Bad In Fahrenheit 451
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Top Technology Being Bad In Fahrenheit 451 Quotes

I've been booed off the field, and I've been carried off the field by people cheering me. So I've seen both ends of it, and I can tell you the bad side of it gets a lot more attention than the good side does, but the good side is pretty darned good when it's on your side. — Tom Glavine

New York is such an awful place. No wonder it's so crowded. No wonder it's almost impossible to leave. — Matthew Licht

The sole literary presence from my childhood was my grandfather, a Jewish immigrant from Latvia, who eccentrically copied poems into the backs of his books. After he died, when I was 8 years old, my grandmother gave his books away, and his poems were lost. — Edward Hirsch

I could spank Constantine and skin him alive afterwards, that I could," she exclaimed bitterly.
"Oh, Susan, I'm surprised at you," said the doctor, pulling a long face. "Have you no regard for the proprieties? Skin him alive by all means but omit the spanking. — L.M. Montgomery

Drugs and drinking affect every family I know, country and city, middle-class and poor. — Bonnie Jo Campbell

You have to be brave to be good" Maharaja Siddhivarun - Vasu and the Matsya Temple — Rajeev Tanwar

Keeping or holding on to a concept shows belief but building or adding to it shows confidence and depth of character. — Delma Pryce

People aren't supposed to get pleasure out of the destruction Mother Nature is capable of, but we want to stare anyway — Colleen Hoover

They looked plainly scared, except for one, a wiry boy with bright orange hair - not the largest of the lot, but the one who seemed to be in charge. He had an air about him, Alf thought, the look of a boy who doesn't miss much. — Dave Barry

Well, your perfect erotic object remains only in recognition memory); and his absolute absence from reconstruction memory becomes the yearning that is, finally, desire. That socially surrounded absence, when you're young, masks a lot of things in the real world; when you're older and a few thousand sexual encounters have begun to clear what desire is about (or perhaps what really lies about desire) and you have begun to perceive desire's edges, its effect is not so much that of an obliterator any more as it is that of a distorting lens. If you can smile at what you see through, it's sometimes illuminating. — Samuel R. Delany

How to Avoid Pleurisy: Never make love to a girl named Candy on the tailgate of a half-ton Ford pickup during a chill rain in April out on Grandview Point in San Juan County, Utah. — Edward Abbey