Top 13 Blueshirts Brotherhood Quotes
#1. A new survey indicates that Obama supporters love iPhones. So if you have an iPhone, chances are you are going to be supporting President Obama. In a related story, if you support Governor Chris Christie from New Jersey, chances are you love IHOP.
David Letterman
#2. What is the destiny of man, but to fill up the measure of his sufferings, and to drink his allotted cup of bitterness?
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
#3. We watched each other's eyes. We were as strangers, in that moment - as intimate as strangers - for strangers know more of us, and can judge of us more without reproach than ever those we love.
M T Anderson
#4. One always begins to forgive a place as soon as it's left behind.
Charles Dickens
#5. After that demonstration everybody was thinking, what's going to happen to these wonderful men who have been so useful to us? We have to give people something to do with life.
Kurt Vonnegut
#7. Take life with a pinch of salt
A shot of tequila and a wedge of lime
Do nothing at all
But take your time
John Walter Bratton
#8. They didn't finish each other's sentences, rather it was the pauses they shared.
Rani Manicka
#9. He was beautiful. The most beautiful thing she'd ever seen. She wanted to crawl inside his skin, live where he breathed.
Cassandra Clare
#10. Be a woman of Christ. Cherish your esteemed place in the sight of God. He needs you. This church needs you. The world needs you. A woman's abiding trust in God and unfailing devotion to things of the Spirit have always been an anchor when the wind and the waves of life were fiercest.
Jeffrey R. Holland
#11. If men are God's gift to women, then God must really love gag gifts.
Maya Angelou
#12. Animals know. They know how a soul is stitched together. They know what it's made of before anyone else gets a clue.
Alex A. King
#13. The key distinction between a traditional and a customer-cultivating company is that one is organized to push products and brands whereas the other is designed to serve customers and customer segments.
Harvard Business School Press