A Quote by Antonio Brown

In a competition, there's always winners and losers. And I think everyone is here to win, which makes it fun for us all. — © Antonio Brown
In a competition, there's always winners and losers. And I think everyone is here to win, which makes it fun for us all.
The culture war is between the winners and those who think they're losers who want to become winners. The losers think the only way they can become winners is by banding together all the losers and them empowering a leader of the losers to make things right for them.
This is a war universe. War all the time. That is its nature. There may be other universes based on all sorts of other principles, but ours seems to be based on war and games. All games are basically hostile. Winners and losers. We see them all around us: the winners and the losers. The losers can oftentimes become winners, and the winners can very easily become losers.
I think competition is the best thing for everyone. Competition is what makes us evolve, from when we were itty bitty little tadpoles in prehistoric times to what we've turned into now. Competition makes us evolve and makes us push ourselves better.
Building a startup community is not a zero-sum game in which there are winners and losers: if everyone engages, they and the entire community can all be winners.
Our government needs to adopt a pro-market agenda that doesn't pick winners and losers, but it invites competition and it levels the playing field for everyone.
Winners expect to win before the contest starts; losers don't. Any individual becomes what he or she thinks about most. If you want to be a champion, then that thought must dominate your life. But most important, winners dwell on the rewards of winning; losers dwell on the penalties of failure.
I see life and the world simply as an arena for competition. That's just what people do, and there are always going to be winners and losers.
I believe there's an inner power that makes winners or losers. And the winners are the ones who really listen to the truth of their hearts.
Most companies want free enterprise in general because that produces better goods and services and makes people's lives better, but they don't want it in their business. They want protection from competition, they want subsidies, they want the government to pick winners and losers, and they want to be picked as winners, and that's what we're opposing, and that's what drives my whole efforts in policy, and in the political arena.
So winners, Hae-Joo proposed, are the real losers because they learn nothing? What, then, are losers? Winners?
The guys that go into the Hall of Fame are the winners, and the losers are the ones who put them in there, and I would like to see some of the great losers through the years be in the Hall of Fame. I know that that's probably impossible, but you've got to give those losers credit, they made the winners.
Global competition is about winners and losers.
Everyone kept saying, 'The terrorists didn't win. You won! We won! You survived!' That's just weird to me. Nobody wins in these situations. I don't see winners and losers in tragic events.
In a capitalistic society the losers slaved for the winners and you have to have more losers than winners.
The difference between winners and losers is that winners do things losers don't want to do.
Is it always to be a winners-losers world, or can we keep everyone in the game? Do we still have what it takes to find a better way?
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