Famous Quotes & Sayings

Tweetdeck Help Quotes & Sayings

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Top Tweetdeck Help Quotes

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Frankie Avalon

It captures a lot of the spirit of the '50s. — Frankie Avalon

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Ayn Rand

People don't want to think. And the deeper they get into trouble, the less they want to think. But by some sort of instinct, they feel that they ought to and it makes them feel guilty. So they'll bless and follow anyone who gives them a justification for not thinking. Anyone who makes a virtue - a highly intellectual virtue - out of what they know to be their sin, their weakness and their guilt ... They envy achievement, and their dream of greatness is a world where all men have become their acknowledged inferiors. They don't know that that dream is the infallible proof of mediocrity, because that sort of world is what the man of achievement would not be able to bear — Ayn Rand

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Italo Calvino

It is only through the confining act of writing that the immensity of the nonwritten becomes legible — Italo Calvino

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Samuel Beckett

Dead calm, then a murmur, a name, a murmured name, in doubt, in fear, in love, in fear, in doubt, wind of winter in the black boughs, cold calm sea whitening whispering to the shore, stealing, hastening, swelling, passing, dying, from naught come, to naught gone — Samuel Beckett

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Mitch Albom

When a baby comes into the world, its hands are clenched, right? Like this?" He made a fist. "Why? Because a baby not knowing any better, wants to grab everything, to say the whole world is mine. But when an old person dies, how does he do so? With his hands open. Why? Because he has learned his lesson." "What lesson?" I asked. He stretched open his empty fingers. "We can take nothing with us. — Mitch Albom

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Carl Sagan

There are huge advertising budgets only when there's no difference between the products. If the products really were different, people would buy the one that's better. Advertising teaches people not to trust their judgment. Advertising teaches people to be stupid. — Carl Sagan

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Jerry Seinfeld

Well, birthdays are merely symbolic of how another year has gone by and how little we've grown. No matter how desperate we are that someday a better self will emerge, with each flicker of the candles on the cake, we know it's not to be, that for the rest of our sad, wretched pathetic lives, this is who we are to the bitter end. Inevitably, irrevocably; happy birthday? No such thing. — Jerry Seinfeld

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By William Shakespeare

Let each man do his best. — William Shakespeare

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Kyrsten Sinema

I think what endurance sports teach you is to stay dedicated, stay focused, and also to understand you're going to have ups and downs, but you need to keep running right through them. — Kyrsten Sinema

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Mark Twain

I'm in favor of progress; it's change I don't like. — Mark Twain

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Eva Marie Saint

I can't sit around having coffee. I have all these appointments, and a lot of my friends sit around having coffee talking about the jobs they didn't get. — Eva Marie Saint

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Chris Kirkpatrick

It's all about the special effects. — Chris Kirkpatrick

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By Cormac McCarthy

Men are attracted to flawed women too of course, but their illusion is that they can fix them. Women don't want to fix anything. They just want to be entertained. The truth about women is you can do anything to them except bore them. — Cormac McCarthy

Tweetdeck Help Quotes By William Greider

The trauma of 9/11 stimulated infinite possibilities for worry - some quite plausible, but most inspired by remote what-if fantasies. A society bingeing on fear makes itself vulnerable to far more profound forms of destruction than terror attacks. The "terrorism war", like a nostalgic echo of the cold war, is using these popular fears to advance a different agenda - the re-engineering of American life through permanent mobilization. — William Greider