
Top 16 Law Which Is Promulgated Quotes
#1. In the end you become part of everything you hate, basically.
Ray Davies
#2. His form grew fainter and fainter, and just before it went altogether, I saw the hint of a smile, that laughing and mischievous smile I'd loved so much.
Richelle Mead
#3. The question is, rather, whether or not America is to enter a new and distressing phase of history where men no longer pursue happiness but buy it.
Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
#4. I watched him carefully. He was making art because he has to, and because he's brave enough to try and make contact, right there on the edge of madness, where he dreams.
Anne Lamott
#5. Science is a particular way of thinking about things.
Lilian Katz
#6. You accomplish more with a smile, a handshake, and a gun than you do with just a smile and a handshake.
Al Capone
#7. Law is nothing other than a certain ordinance of reason for the common good, promulgated by the person who has the care of the community.
Thomas Aquinas
#8. I know from my own clinical work that when people are beaten and hurt, they numb out so that they can't feel anymore.
John Bradshaw
#10. Well, the thing about my high school, which I loved, is that we had uniforms. But whenever we had a free dress day, it was prep-ville, with sweater vests and polo shirts and khakis and Dockers.
Vanessa Minnillo
#11. If however the law is so promulgated that it of necessity makes you an agent of injustices against another, then I say to you ... break the law.
Henry David Thoreau
#12. Yearn for the opposite, to buck the trend, to be different.
Fennel Hudson
#13. The more prohibitions there are, the poorer the people will be. The more laws are promulgated, the more thieves and bandits there will be.
Laozi
#14. No matter how many awards you've won or how many sales you've got, come the next book it's still a blank sheet of paper and you're still panicking like hell that you've got nothing new to say.
Ian Rankin
#16. The Convention promulgated this great axiom: "The liberty of one citizen ends where the liberty of another citizen begins," which comprises in two lines the entire law of human society.
Victor Hugo
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