Uninjurious Quotes & Sayings
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Top Uninjurious Quotes

I am against Prohibition because it has set the cause of temperence back twenty years; because it has substituted an ineffective campaign of force for an effective campaign of education; because it has replaced comparatively uninjurious light wines and beers with the worst kind of hard liquor and bad liquor; because it has increased drinking not only among men but has extended drinking to women and even children. — William Randolph Hearst

Obsession with conventional ideas of 'success' can be harmful enough, but compound that stress with relationships, family, financial woes and health concerns, and you find yourself in a constant state of fight or flight. This causes people to be more reactionary, which further perpetuates the cycle of stress. — Ariel Garten

We are so vain as to set the highest value upon those things to which nature has assigned the lowest place. What can be more coarse and rude in the mind than the precious metals, or more slavish and dirty than the people that dig and work them? And yet they defile our minds more than our bodies, and make the possessor fouler than the artificer of them. Rich men, in fine, are only the greater slaves. — Seneca The Younger

I'm all about what happens organically. If something happens, it was meant to happen. — Kay Panabaker

A lot of people say the worst feeling in the world is not being loved, when really it's when someone loves you and you can't love them back. — Erin Mack Smith

I never had teenage years. I guess because I was seen to be more adult than anybody around me. — Patrick Stewart

If you paid Americans a living wage, they would be able to pay for products made by Americans in America. — Henry Rollins

He walked out of nowhere toward nowhere, a man from another time who, it seemed, had reached a point of pointless ending. — Stephen King

I think that ultimately any effective drama or tragedy tries to put you as much as it can into the protagonist's shoes. — Nicholas Jarecki

If equations are trains threading the landscape of numbers, then no train stops at pi. — Richard Preston