Tranasox Quotes & Sayings
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Top Tranasox Quotes

To become an Architect in the right sense of the word means that a man shall give his life to it and nothing else, and shall study the work he has to do with enthusiastic interest in every detail pertaining to it, and content himself with nothing less than complete success. — Cass Gilbert

Sometimes you must stand still in order to get moving to where GOD wants you to go. — D.A. McBride

The great silent man! Looking round on the noisy inanity of the world,
words with little meaning, actions with little worth,
one loves to reflect on the great Empire of Silence. — Thomas Carlyle

Time is a terrible thing because it can erase both joys and pains. — Gosho Aoyama

The land too poor for any other crop, is best for raising men. — Reginald Innes Pocock

People spend most of their lives worrying about things that never happen. — Moliere

She was silent. Time stopped, shifted, and went lazily in reverse. Somehow, then, it was always summer. — Harper Lee

The way to find what the mainstream will do tomorrow is to associate with the lunatic fringe today. — Jean Louis

Computing has gone from something tiny and specialized to something that affects every walk of life. It doesn't make sense anymore to think of it as just one discipline. I expect to see separate departments of user interface, for example, to start emerging at universities. — Nathan Myhrvold

A huge national security state has developed in the United States since World War II. Its function is to buttress anticommunist, procapitalist governments and undermine and destroy popular movements whenever possible. — Michael Parenti

There's kind of wisdom that must
be firstly rejected before accepted. — Toba Beta

Very harmful effects can follow accepting the philosophy which denies personal guilt or sin and thereby makes everyone nice. By denying sin, the nice people make a cure impossible. Sin is most serious, and the tragedy is deepened by the denial that we are sinners ... The really unforgiveable sin is the denial of sin, because, by its nature, there is now nothing to be forgiven. By refusing to admit to personal guilt, the nice people are made into scandalmongers, gossips, talebearers, and supercritics, for they must project their real if unrecognized guilt to others. This, again, gives them a new illusion of goodness: the increase of faultfinding is in direct ratio and proportion to the denial of sin. — Fulton J. Sheen