
Top 14 Isaza Marina Quotes
#1. We cannot stick our heads in the sand concerning the issue of hunger in America. Even though this subject seldom reaches the front page of our newspapers or is featured on news programs because of its lack of sensationalism, the problem exists in massive proportions and must be defeated.
Bruce Davison
#2. It is well known that large numbers of poor people attribute their poverty to what they call the tyranny of capital; meaning thereby the unwillingness of the owners of capital to allow others to use it without security for its safe return and compensation for its use.
Frederic Bastiat
#4. The pleasure we hold in esteem for the course of our lives ought to have a greater share of our time dedicated to it; we should refuse no occasion nor omit any opportunity of drinking, and always have it in our minds.
Michel De Montaigne
#5. Because I find writing painful, I try to get it over with as fast as possible. But I write every day, or I lose the thread.
Patrick Modiano
#6. Man has free will and creates his destiny based upon his actions.
Ashwin Sanghi
#8. I think I was immediately fed, so food became a very important part of my life.
Dom DeLuise
#9. At this point, none of us are sure why we fight. We're sisters. We need no good reason to fight, even though we have plenty of them.
Ken Wheaton
#10. The two gentlemen stood back to back, ready to shoot, and ready to die.
Paul Andrews
#11. What we remember, and how we order and interpret what we believe to be true, are what shapes who we are.
Stephen Elliott
#12. Ma sighed gently and said, "A whole year gone, Charles." But Pa answered, cheerfully: "What's a year amount to? We have all the time there is.
Laura Ingalls Wilder
#13. Again, the troubling gap between word and meaning. My feeble language skills could not bear the weight of such a laden experience.
Alison Bechdel
#14. The Communist bloc of old was a study in the failure of failure. Losers in the Soviet economy were the people at the end of the long lines for consumer goods. Worse losers were the people who had spent hours getting to the head of the line, only to be told that the goods were unavailable.
P. J. O'Rourke
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