A Quote by Beyonce Knowles

I don't like to gamble, but if there's one thing I'm willing to bet on, it's myself. — © Beyonce Knowles
I don't like to gamble, but if there's one thing I'm willing to bet on, it's myself.
If nuclear power plants are safe, let the commerical insurance industry insure them. Until these most expert judges of risk are willing to gamble with their money, I'm not willing to gamble with the health and safety of my family.
I'm an amused observer. I don't bet or gamble; that's the worst thing.
Although I don't gamble in life - I've never played poker - I do gamble on stage. I gamble with myself: 'Can I do this?'
I needed to bet on myself. And if you're willing to bet on yourself then sometimes it works out and if you believe in yourself and your abilities that will be the case.
Like I've said, you've got to bet on yourself sometimes... I bet on myself and it worked.
I'd be willing to bet you, if I were a betting man, that I have never bet on baseball.
I'd be willing to bet you, if I was a betting man, that I have never bet on baseball.
Life is a gamble, at terrible odds - if it was a bet you wouldn't take it.
How do commercial interests usually protect themselves from liability claims? Through insurance. In fact, in our society, the litmus test for safety is insurance. You can be insured for almost anything if you pay enough for the premium, but if the insurance industry isn't willing to bet its money on the safety of [biotechnology], it means the risks are simply too high or too uncertain for them to take the gamble.
For more than two decades Chicagoans have routinely traveled to neighboring cities like Rosemont, Elgin, Joliet, Gary and Hammond to gamble. If people in Chicago want to gamble, then they should be able to gamble in Chicago at a city-owned, land-based casino.
Bet you never eat, he says. Bet you drink up the oxygen like it's butter. Bet you can go for days on nothing but thoughts.
If I'm not going to bet on myself, why would anyone else bet on me.
If there is one thing BP's 'watery improv act' made clear, it is that, as a culture, we have become far too willing to gamble with things that are precious and irreplaceable, and to do so without a back-up plan, without an exit strategy.
You don't gamble to win. You gamble so you can gamble the next day.
I bet on everything. Everything. It's just like, 'I bet you I can spin my chair longer.' Everything, I say 'I bet you.' I love to win.
I understand the horrors of having no insurance, but, believe me, eight hours of sleep and good meals are NOT going to prevent you from getting sick. Don't gamble with your life; it's a stupid bet.
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