A Quote by Raoul Peck

If there is something that determines my motivation in the work I do, it's the sense of injustice. — © Raoul Peck
If there is something that determines my motivation in the work I do, it's the sense of injustice.
Ability is what you're capable of doing. Motivation determines what you do. Attitude determines how well you do it.
Desiring to excel is not a sin. It is motivation that determines ambition's character. Our Lord never taught against the urge to high achievement, but He did expose and condemn unworthy motivation.
Personnel determines the potential of the team. Vision determines the direction of the team. Work ethic determines the preparation of the team. Leadership determines the success of the team.
The nature of our motivation determines the character of our work.
When I lose the sense of motivation and the sense to prove something as a basketball player, it's time for me to move away from the game.
Unfortunately, race still determines too much, often determines where people live, determines what kind of education in their public schools they can get, and, yes, it determines how they're treated in the criminal justice system.
The law of property determines who owns something, but the market determines how it will be used.
Nobody can write such ironic things unless he has a deep sense of injustice-injustice to those members of the race who are victims of the stupid, the pretentious and the hypocritical.
I have come to believe that one thing people cannot bear is a sense of injustice. Poverty, cold, even hunger are more bearable than injustice.
Motivation remains key to the marathon: the motivation to begin; the motivation to continue; the motivation never to quit.
A personal injustice is stronger motivation than any instinct for philanthropy.
I never struggle for motivation, that's for sure. Motivation is something that burns within.
Actors always ask their directors what their motivation is in this scene or that scene, so I've always had this joke where I ask the director what my motivation is too. As a stunt person your motivation is usually to fall over a bench or something.
I write what I think is funny and I write from a sense of popping a balloon or a sense of injustice, whether it's about yourself, or whether it's about something else. It's my worldview; it doesn't mean that everybody has to agree with it.
Who we listen to determines what we hear. Where we stand determines what we see. What we do determines who we are.
It takes a certain kind of mind to narrate, to work through character motivation, to be unforgiving to one's writer-self when it comes down to creating the minutiae of detail. Writing fiction requires stamina, a sense of how people's lives work, how people work toward and against one another and, above all, precision.
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