A Quote by Oscar Isaac

There's nothing scarier than unlimited choices. — © Oscar Isaac
There's nothing scarier than unlimited choices.
In this world, there was nothing scarier than trusting someone. But there was also nothing more rewarding.
There's nothing scarier than a reckless prosecutor.
Nothing's scarier than wrestling The Boogeyman.
There is nothing scarier than a mediocre man with a mission.
I don't know about you, but there is nothing that's scarier than young people who have no future. If you take away someone's future, they have nothing to lose.
There's nothing scarier than just having a moment where you looked away and lost your child.
The promoters of the global economy...see nothing odd or difficult about unlimited economic growth or unlimited consumption in a limited world.
The world is not about Batman and Robin fighting the Joker; things are more complicated than that. And nothing is scarier than the people who try to find easy answers to complicated questions.
I'd been running for years: there was nothing scarier, to me, than to just be still with someone. And yet, there on that dark road, going home, I was.
There is nothing scarier than being ‘the designer of the moment,’ because the moment ends.
There is nothing more corrupting, nothing more destructive of the noblest and finest feelings of our nature, than the exercise of unlimited power.
When I started writing, there was nothing about zombies. It was all teen movies, which to me are scarier than zombies, but that's another story.
Unlimited power is worse for the average person than unlimited alcohol; and the resulting intoxication is more damaging for others. Very few have not deteriorated when given absolute dominion. It is worse for the governor than for the governed.
Having unlimited choices can paralyze you creatively.
Nothing is more certain than that there must be an unmade and unlimited being.
Ignorance, vulnerability, fear, anger, and desire are expressions of the infinite potential of your buddha nature. There's nothing inherently wrong or right with making such choices. The fruit of Buddhist practice is simply the recognition that these and other mental afflictions are nothing more or less than choices available to us because our real nature is infinite in scope.
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