Quotes with yourself-and

Quotes 24401 till 24420 of 25602.

  • Margaret Mead Women want mediocre men, and men are working hard to be as mediocre as possible.
    Source: Quote Magazine , 15 juni 1958
    Margaret Mead
    American cultural anthropologist (1901 - 1978)
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  • Candace Bushnell Women with money and women in power are two uncomfortable ideas in our society.
    Candace Bushnell
    American author and journalist (1958 - )
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  • Paula Nelson Women's battle for financial equality has barely been joined, much less won. Society still traditionally assigns to woman the role of money-handler rather than money-maker, and our assigned specialty is far more likely to be home economics than financial economics.
    Paula Nelson
     
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  • Midge Decter Women's Liberation calls it enslavement but the real truth about the sexual revolution is that it has made of sex an almost chaotically limitless and therefore unmanageable realm in the life of women.
    Midge Decter
     
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  • Golda Meir Women's Liberation is just a lot of foolishness. It's the men who are discriminated against. They can't bear children. And no one's likely to do anything about that.
    Golda Meir
    Prime Minister of Israel (1898 - 1978)
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  • Sister Corita Kent Women's liberation is the liberation of the feminine in the man and the masculine in the woman.
    Sister Corita Kent
    American artist, educator, and advocate for social justice
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  • Germaine Greer Women's liberation, if it abolishes the patriarchal family, will abolish a necessary substructure of the authoritarian state, and once that withers away Marx will have come true willy-nilly, so let's get on with it.
    Germaine Greer
    Australian writer and public intellectual (1939 - )
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  • Camille Paglia Women's studies is a comfy, chummy morass of unchallenged groupthink. It is, with rare exception, totally unscholarly. Academic feminists have silenced men and dissenting women.
    Source: Sex, Art and American Culture : New Essays (1992)
    Camille Paglia
    American academic and social critic (1947 - )
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  • Camille Paglia Women's studies needed a syllabus and so invented a canon overnight. It puffed up clunky, mundane contemporary women authors into Oz-like, skywriting dirigibles. Our best women students are being force-fed an appalling diet of cant, drivel and malarkey.
    Source: Sex, Art and American Culture : New Essays (1992)
    Camille Paglia
    American academic and social critic (1947 - )
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  • Andrea Dworkin Women, for centuries not having access to pornography and now unable to bear looking at the muck on the supermarket shelves, are astonished. Women do not believe that men believe what pornography says about women. But they do. From the worst to the best of them, they do.
    Andrea Dworkin
    American radical feminist and writer (1946 - 2005)
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  • Robert South Wonder is from surprise, and surprise stops with experience.
    Robert South
    English churchman (1634 - 1716)
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  • Abraham Joshua Heschel Wonder, or radical amazement, is a way of going beyond what is given in thing and thought, refusing to take anything for granted, to regard anything as final. It is our honest response to the grandeur and mystery of reality our confrontation with that which transcends the given.
    Source: Who Is Man? (1965)
    Abraham Joshua Heschel
    Polish-American rabbi (1907 - 1972)
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  • Sophocles Wonders are many, and none is more wonderful than the power that crosses the white sea, driven by the stormy wind, making a path under surges that threaten to engulf him...
    Sophocles
    Greek poet (496 - 406)
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  • Thomas Carlyle Wondrous is the strength of cheerfulness, and its power of endurance - the cheerful man will do more in the same time, will do it ;better, will preserve it longer, than the sad or sullen.
    Thomas Carlyle
    Scottish writer and historicus (1795 - 1881)
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  • Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe Wood burns because it has the proper stuff in it; and a man becomes famous because he has the proper stuff in him.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
    German writer and poet (1749 - 1832)
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  • Brett Ratner Woody Allen is in his '70s and he's making movies, so I look forward to getting there.
    Brett Ratner
    American director and producer (1969 - )
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  • Ralph Waldo Emerson Words are alive; cut them and they bleed.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson
    American poet and philosopher (1803 - 1882)
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  • William Butler Yeats Words are always getting conventionalized to some secondary meaning. It is one of the works of poetry to take the truants in custody and bring them back to their right senses.
    William Butler Yeats
    Irish poet (1865 - 1939)
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  • Samuel Butler Words are not as satisfactory as we should like them to be, but, like our neighbors, we have got to live with them and must make the best and not the worst of them.
    Samuel Butler
    English poet (1835 - 1902)
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  • Hugh Reginald Haweis Words are poor interpreters in the realms of emotion. When all words end, music begins; when they suggest, it realizes; and hence is the secret of its strange, inexpressible power.
    Hugh Reginald Haweis
    English cleric and writer (1838 - 1901)
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