Child Age 15 Famous Quotes
"I believe you should live each day as if it is your last, which is why I don't have any clean laundry because, come on, who wants to wash clothes on the last day of their life"
"I've learned that although it's hard to admit it, I'm secretly glad my parents are strict."
"Whenever I start getting sad about where I am in my life, I think about the last words of my favorite uncle A truck"
The people who think Tiny Tim is strange are the same ones who think it odd that I drive without pants.
Child Age 15 Quotations
"I consider it a public duty to answer falsifications with facts. I will not pretend that I find this an unpleasant duty. I am an old campaigner, and I love a good fight."
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Outside show is a poor substitute for inner worth.
Aesop
Givers have to set limits because takers rarely do.
Irma Kurtz
"To act from pure benevolence is not possible for finite beings. Human benevolence is mingled with vanity, interest, or some other motive."
James Boswell
"Why is it that, as we grow older, we are so relunctant to change It is not so much that new ideas are painful, for they are not. It is that old ideas are seldom entirely false, but have truth, great truth in them. The justification for conservatism is the desire to preserve the truths and standards of the past its dangers, of which we are seldom aware, is that in preserving those values, we may miss the infinitely greater riches that lie in the future."
Dr Dale E Turner
"The law isn't justice. It's a very imperfect mechanism. If you press exactly the right buttons and are also lucky, justice may show up in the answer. A mechanism is all the law was ever intended to be."
Raymond Chandler
"I think and think for months and years. Ninety-nine times, the conclusion is false. The hundredth time I am right."
Albert Einstein
Turbulence is life force. It is opportunity. Let's love turbulence and use it for change.
Ramsay Clark
God is a comic playing to an audience that's afraid to laugh.
Francois Marie Arouet Voltaire
To perceive is to suffer.
Aristotle