Top 1200 Effects Of War Quotes & Sayings - Page 20

Explore popular Effects Of War quotes.
Last updated on April 21, 2025.
France and Germany were opposed to a maritime blockade of the Adriatic Sea without a mandate from the United Nations (UN). So, what we witnessed in Kosovo was an extraordinary war, a war waged solely with bombs from the air.
For the average person, all problems date to World War II; for the more informed, to World War I; for the genuine historian, to the French Revolution.
The U.S. military was segregated 'til the Korean War, and the blacks in World War Two were totally segregated. — © Clint Eastwood
The U.S. military was segregated 'til the Korean War, and the blacks in World War Two were totally segregated.
The atomic bombs will surely shorten the war, and let us hope that they will effectively end war as a possibility in human affairs.
I saw some war heroes... John Kerry is not a war hero. He couldn't tie the shoes of some of the people in Coastal Division 11.
Since war itself is the most extreme form of terrorism, a war on terrorism is profoundly self-contradictory.
Of course, the outcome of the war would not have been changed. The war was lost perhaps, when it was started. At least it was lost in the winter of '42, in Russia.
The Cold War is over. The kind of authority that the presidents asserted during the Cold War has now been diminished.
When I was growing up, everybody in charge, my parents and teachers, had all survived the war, and they talked about the war like it was the Kraken - you know, this huge beast that roamed the earth during their formative years.
The only time Republicans will shake fists and point fingers is over a war delayed, one that isn't led by the US, or a war waged without the necessary conviction (read collateral damage).
Nonviolent action on behalf of justice is no automatic forumla with promise of success: but neither is war. After all, at least half of the people who go to war for some cause deemed worthy of it are defeated.
I am insulted by the persistent asertion that I want war. Am I a fool? War! It would settle nothing.
Emancipation came to the colored race in America as a war measure. It was an act of military necessity. Manifestly it would have come without war, in the slower process of humanitarian reform and social enlightenment.
It takes a disciplined imagination to acknowledge that the less personal savageries of bombs, missiles, artillery and heavy weapons are, to those blown to smithereens, also barbaric. The main horror of what the coalition is doing is not a matter of the occasional soldier who, in the heat of battle, commits a war crime, but the steady destruction rained on cities, villages, the Iraqi people. This violence is wreaked calmly, from a distance, within the rules of engagement. The war itself is the American war crime.
Once the war started, my grandfather went to England, where he was under house arrest on the Isle of Man, and then to Ireland, but not to Germany. In no way did he, or my grandmother for that matter, ever support either the war or the Holocaust.
When I arrived in America, though I had left the war physically far behind, in my mind, the soldiers were still chasing to kill me, my stomach was always hungry, and my fear and distrust kept me from opening up to new friendships. I thought the war was over when I left Cambodia, but I realize now that for survivors and all those involved, the war is never over just because the guns have fallen silent.
As I was writing 'The Shock Doctrine', I was covering the Iraq War and profiteering from the war, and I started to see these patterns repeat in the aftermath of natural disasters, like the Asian tsunami and then Hurricane Katrina.
On one hand, it seems strange that a country that has suffered so much from violence and war would be debating if they want peace or not. But in Colombia, a part of society is deeply connected with the war as a means of making a living.
War is a fundamental aspect of human existence. It's good to know what war entails and what the human sacrifice is. — © Tim O'Brien
War is a fundamental aspect of human existence. It's good to know what war entails and what the human sacrifice is.
The Civil War is not ended: I question whether any serious civil war ever does end.
When I was six, the Korean War broke out, and all the classrooms were destroyed by war. We studied under the trees or in whatever buildings were left.
So-called "progressives" actively wage war on progress. . . . Ultimately, progressives are at war with mass prosperity.
War was always here. Before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner.
The power to declare war, including the power of judging the causes of war, is fully and exclusively vested in the legislature.
The best way to fight terrorism is to do it through a peaceful way. I believe that a war can never be ended by a war.
The first 'world' war was in reality the last European war fought by globally significant European powers.
You can go into Mark Twain's material and prove anything you want. He was against war. He was for war. He was against rich people and he was for them. He was a kaleidoscope
How then to enforce peace? Not by reason, certainly, nor by education. If a man could not look at the fact of peace and the fact of war and choose the former in preference to the latter, what additional argument could persuade him? What could be more eloquent as a condemnation of war than war itself? What tremendous feat of dialectic could carry with it a tenth the power of a single gutted ship with its ghastly cargo?
Of course, you have politics, the Vietnam war and all that monkey business. There are all kinds of reasons. At every one of those demonstrations in the late Sixties about the Vietnam war, you could guarantee there'd be a series of speeches. The ostensible purpose was to protest the war. But then somebody came up and gave a black power speech, usually Black Muslims, then. And then you'd have a women's rights speech. It was terrible to listen to these things.
War can be so impersonal yet when we put a name, a face, a place and match it to families, then war is not impersonal.
I was standing next to a famed geo-politician when the first news of the Argentine attack [on the Faulkland Islands] was received, and heard him muse incredulously: "An old-fashioned naval battle. A war between two civilized nations, perhaps with even a declaration of war, and later a peace conference. Wow." No hostages, no nukes, no ideologies, no religious fanaticism; just a fair-and-square war over national interests - hard to believe, in this day and age.
I believe that peace is not merely an absence of war but the nurture of human life, and that in time this nurture would do away with war as a natural process.
I do not believe, given her past decisions and comments on the reasons to go to war in Iraq, that Dr. Rice will be able to represent the United States without a predetermined bias from the war.
In my opinion, a war between England and Germany was a war between brothers. In my inner self I admired the English government and political system.
He who makes war his profession cannot be otherwise than vicious. War makes thieves, and peace brings them to the gallows.
I don't think I'd call myself a war writer, but I would probably say I'm a writer who has written about war.
My only consolation for the failure of the Dardanelles was that God wished things to be prolonged in order to sicken mankind of war, and that therefore He had interfered with a project that would have brought the war to a speedier conclusion.
War was the ultimate chaos, a pounding, soul-destroying snarl, ending in blown-apart men lying unburied on the cold earth. There was nothing more cosmically chaotic than war.
We have thought of peace as the passive and war as the active way of living. The opposite is true. War is not the most strenuous life. It is a kind of rest-cure compared to the task of reconciling our differences.
It would be nice if we redefined what we meant by 'war story.' If you're making $15,000 a year living in a certain area of Portland, trying to make it with three kids and no husband, that's a kind of war.
What kind of victory is it when someone is left defeated? What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans, and the homeless, whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy name of liberty and democracy. What is a war criminal? Was not war itself a crime against God and humanity, and, therefore, were not all those who sanctioned, engineered and conducted wars, war criminals? The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong. Non-cooperation with evil is a sacred duty.
If you're against war, you're against war regardless of what happens. It's a wrong method of trying to settle a dispute. — © Jeannette Rankin
If you're against war, you're against war regardless of what happens. It's a wrong method of trying to settle a dispute.
Hitler will have no war (does not want war), but we will force it on him, not this year, but soon.
War that hasn't affected us here, in the way that you would imagine a five-year war would affect a country.
The facts of life are that a child who has seen war cannot be compared with a child who doesn't know what war is except from television.
I don't like war. I particularly don't like the celebration of war, which I think the administration is a little bit guilty of.
This country of ours has committed the most serious act of aggression in its history by engaging in a war of aggression without a declaration of war by Congress.
The Italian government, a free French newspaper tartly observed, never finished a war on the same side it started on – unless the war lasted long enough to change sides twice.
We can no longer apply the classic criteria to clearly determine whether and when we should use military force. We are waging war in Afghanistan, for example, but it's an asymmetrical war where the enemies are criminals instead of soldiers.
War is the mass murder of workers. When workers refuse to obey the calls of their governments, there will be no more war.
Want to play some Battleship?” I wasn’t leaving him alone with that thing in there. Chad armed himself with a notebook, and we went to war. Historically, war has often been used as a distraction for problems at home.
The city fought a $300 million, 18-year war on graffiti. New York Mayor John Lindsay declared war in 1972, and the battle for the transit system came later.
We go to war only to make peace. We never went to war with any other design. We carry the national conscience wherever we go.
I am absolutely stunned how the Democrats were able to somehow say that the Republicans had a war on women... What was the war on women? — © Foster Friess
I am absolutely stunned how the Democrats were able to somehow say that the Republicans had a war on women... What was the war on women?
Most of my nightmares that jolt me awake either involve the cosmos or something completely out of human control. In reality, I worry more about nuclear war, or war in general.
The real peril of war lies not in military defeat. It lies in war itself, whether we win or lose.
Peace is only better than war when it's not hell too. War being hell makes sense.
We have known the bitterness of defeat and the exultation of triumph, and from both we have learned there can be no turning back. We must go forward to preserve in peace what we won in war. A new era is upon us. Even the lesson of victory itself brings with it profound concern, both for our future security and the survival of civilization. The destructiveness of the war potential, through progressive advances in scientific discovery, has in fact now reached a point which revises the traditional concepts of war.
You can go into Mark Twain's material and prove anything you want. He was against war. He was for war. He was against rich people and he was for them. He was a kaleidoscope.
Well I think what - the way things have improved obviously is that the killing has stopped in so for as there is no war. But if you talk to people in the north and east in general, there is a concern that the freedom that they expected as a consequence of the end of the war has yet to be realised.
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