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prejudice virtue unkindness
William Ellery Channing God deliver us all from prejudice and unkindness, and fill us with the love of truth and virtue.
prejudice evidence
Richard Dawkins Science replaces private prejudice with public, verifiable evidence.
prejudice weak has-beens
Samuel Johnson To be prejudiced is always to be weak; yet there are prejudices so near to laudable that they have been often praised and are always pardoned.
prejudice speech free-speech
Vladimir Lenin Free speech is a bourgeois prejudice.
prejudice ethics print
Walter Cronkite The ethic of the journalist is to recognize one's prejudices, biases, and avoid getting them into print.
prejudice crowds vulgar
Voltaire Prejudices are what rule the vulgar crowd.
prejudice facts opinion
Samuel Johnson Prejudice is a great time-saver. You can form opinions without having to get the facts. Prejudice not being founded on reason cannot be removed by argument.
prejudice open-mindedness narrow-minded
William Hazlitt The most learned are often the most narrow minded.
virtue oversight packages
Will Durant It is one of the most culpable oversights of nature that virtue and beauty so often come in separate packages.
virtue easy form
Samuel Taylor Coleridge Persecution is a very easy form of virtue.
virtue innocent
Ward Churchill Guess what? By virtue of being American, you are not innocent.
virtue idleness
William Faulkner Idleness breeds our better virtues.
virtue economics budgets
Ronald Reagan Balancing your budget is like protecting your virtue. You have to learn when to say no.
virtue commit fatherland
Witold Gombrowicz Wherever I see some mystique, be it virtue or family, faith or fatherland, there I must commit some indecent act.
virtue economy devices
William Graham Sumner There is no device whatever to be invented for securing happiness without industry, economy, and virtue.
virtue capacity humans
William Godwin The virtue of a human being is the application of his capacity to the general good.
virtue mask dangerous
Washington Irving Villainy wears many masks; none so dangerous as the mask of virtue.