
Top 17 Japanese Occupation Quotes
#1. Most of you are so young you don't know who I am, and that's good.
Jim Bakker
#5. I was hooked in before hacking was even illegal.
Kevin Mitnick
#6. What did you say to Souness after the end of the final whistle?
Tony Gubba
#7. One of the great consolations ... is that because Jesus walked such a long, lonely path utterly alone, we do not have to do so.
Jeffrey R. Holland
#8. Our actions, particularly interventions, can upset regions, nations, cultures, economies, and peoples, however virtuous our purpose. We must ensure that the cure we offer through intervention is not worse than the disease.
Stanley McChrystal
#9. He shook his head again. 'I just can't figure out why anyone in his right head would bother these Virgin River women.'
'Yeah. Makes no sense.' Jack said.
Robyn Carr
#10. When I was pregnant, I couldn't wear fragrance. I couldn't smell anything. I couldn't smell flowers, I was very sensitive to everything. I could smell orange juice from across the room and I remember thinking, 'I will throw up.'
Gwyneth Paltrow
#11. If they love they know not why, they hate upon no better ground, they hate upon no better a ground
William Shakespeare
#12. In a perfect world, you can finish out your career where you start ... It's one of those things you only have so much control over. You have to see how everything plays out and let the system work its course.
Cullen Jenkins
#13. For the 1,300 years prior to the Japanese occupation, Korea had been a unified country governed by the Chosun dynasty, one of the longest-lived monarchies in world history
Barbara Demick
#15. I will warn you now; adventures rarely, if ever, end. Once you step out on one you can never leave it behind; it follows you forever. Even if you make it home unharmed, you will never make it home unchanged.
Jenelle Schmidt
#16. No doubt these rocky islands have suggested the idea worked out in gardens, and they have been well imitated.
Robert Fortune
#17. What the diary does not reveal, for it stops too soon, is the appalling fact that from late 1945 until 1952 Japanese medical researchers were prohibited by U.S. occupation authorities from publishing scientific articles on the effects of the atomic bombs.
John W. Dower
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