A Quote by Gurpreet Ghuggi

We will stand by Punjab, Punjabis and Punjabiat, unlike Parkash Singh Badal, who makes Chandigarh, river waters and other emotive issues his bread and butter during the elections.
Administrative failures can lead to severe political crisis - Parkash Singh Badal is a perfect example.
We will protect Punjab's right over its river waters and fight hard to get back Chandigarh and Punjabi-speaking areas.
In America, unlike England, unlike Israel, unlike Japan, other democracies, we have elections that have staggered terms.
I always believe that if we Hindus are like milk, Punjabis, Sikhs are the butter, the best part of that milk. Brought up with that kind of respect for Punjabis, I always desired to play a true Sikh character on screen someday.
I like peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. In a dream world, the bread is super soft, like the Wonder Bread of my childhood, and the sandwich will have crunchy peanut butter, strawberry jam, and a cup of cold milk to go with it.
Since I belong to Chandigarh, I love coming to Punjab.
Sometimes one sees people butter their slices of bread with long, slow, admiring strokes in the same way in which Tom Sawyer's friends whitewashed the fence. Never butter an entire slice of bread at one time.
By raising bread-and-butter issues, we remind the Government of the things that it may forget or ignore.
If any of you wish to know how to have your bread fall butter side up, butter it on both sides, and then it will fall butter side up.
Toast is bread made delicious and useful. Un-toasted bread is okay for children's sandwiches and sopping up barbecue sauce, but for pretty much all other uses, toast is better than bread. An exception is when the bread is fresh from the oven, piping hot, with butter melting all over it. Then it's fantastic, but I would argue that bread fresh out of the oven is a kind of toast. Because I'm an asshole and I refuse to be wrong about something.
I am not the kind of person who makes his bread and butter on how hyped I am. I am an actor, and I do my job.
I was born in Delhi but grew up in Chandigarh, so I write about the machismo of Punjab because it was around me.
We didn't lose the Punjab State elections for any other reason but the fact that seats were wrongly allocated.
In moments of considerable strain, I tend to take to bread-and-butter pudding. There is something about the blandness of soggy bread, the crispness of the golden outer crust and the unadulterated pleasure of a lightly set custard that makes the world seem a better place to live.
You know how you put peanut butter on a piece of bread and the bread falls - it never falls on the bread side down, it always falls peanut butter side down. That's because of gravity.
I was raised in Mississippi, so heat and humidity is my bread and butter. It keeps me going. I can't stand cold weather.
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