Top 13 Great Kaizen Quotes
#1. I'd like now and into the future to play a bigger role not only in Wisconsin and the Midwest, but nationally. I'd like to have an impact.
Scott Walker
#2. I don't think painters have the answers about a painting except the painting itself. Anyway, a painting has to have some kind of mystery to it to make it work.
Elizabeth Kostova
#3. Nothing is easy. To change or to accept changes is difficult.
Debasish Mridha
#4. The advice of a scholar, whose piles of learning were set on fire by imagination, is never to be forgotten. Proportion an hour's reflection to an hour's reading, and so dispirit the book into the student.
Robert Aris Willmott
#5. It is your omen, only you know the meaning. To me, it is but another star in the night.
Gerald R. Stanek
#6. Many philosophers, economists and social scientists saw the middle classes, as the tool to end all class division, with an end of days revolution
Owen H. Lewis
#7. If society will adopt the rule of nature, and justify no marriage without a supreme affection, the evils of marriage without love will be sufficiently cured. Those who marry without the consent of Nature may securely expect trouble.
Joseph Cook
#8. God can make you whole again. Past experiences may not disappear, but they don't have the same effect on you.
Thea Harris
#9. There is a sad tendency in our world today for persons to cut one another down. Did you ever realize that it does not take very much in the way of brainpower to make remarks that may wound another? Try the opposite of that. Try handing out compliments.
Gordon B. Hinckley
#10. Envision possibility. Don't worry who else believes in it; the universe is only looking for instructions from you.
Marianne Williamson
#11. I have a checkered past. I'll take any eyeliner that comes my way.
Emma Stone
#12. The most important talent to have is the ability to cooperate with others. It is the foundation on which a great village is built and it only cost a smile or a kind word.
Kaizen Kobe
#13. Protectionism, socialism, all varieties of state favoritism and restrictions on competition, and the growth of bureaucracy and jobbery were the means by which special interests sought to exploit the public, the great mass of consumers and taxpayers.
Ralph Raico
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