Top 1200 World War One Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular World War One quotes.
Last updated on November 16, 2024.
My father had been a Wehrmacht officer in the second world war and was a violent and damaged man.
So great are the psychological resistances to war in modern nations, that every war must appear to be a war of defence against a menacing, murderous aggressor. There must be no ambiguity about whom the public is to hate. Guilt and guilelessness must be assessed geographically and all the guilt must be on the other side of the frontier.
We sit at our consoles and play "Gears of War", but we don't see images from war. We don't turn on the news and see the evidence of war, the result of war. Maybe twice a year, Memorial Day, Veterans Day, we'll go out, we'll hang our flags, we'll try to inculcate in our children some sense of national honor for the fallen. But really, we don't see it. We just don't see the pictures. There's no drive-by on the freeway of death up close. So we don't really see bravery.
From 1967 to '70, Nigeria fought a war - the Nigeria-Biafra war. And in the middle of that war, I was 14 years old. We spent much of our time with my mother cooking. For the army - my father joined the army as a brigadier - the Biafran army. We were on the Biafran side.
When a war is over I think it's a cowardly thing to leave the war behind you in minefields that hit women and children and the most vulnerable. Imagine the war is finished and you go to work and there are snipers shooting at you. Imagine taking your kids to the beach and you find that the beach is blowing up beneath you. Like there's nowhere safe.
A key U.S. initiative in this trade war must be to develop reliable trading partners in the world. — © Jo Ann Emerson
A key U.S. initiative in this trade war must be to develop reliable trading partners in the world.
You have to take chances for peace, just as you must take chances in war. Some say that we were brought to the verge of war. Of course we were brought to the verge of war. The ability to get to the verge without getting into the war is the necessary art... If you try to run away from it, if you are scared to go to the brink, you are lost. We've had to look it square in the face... We walked to the brink and we looked it in the face. We took strong action.
The war now is away back in the past, and you can tell what books cannot. When you talk, you come down to the practical realities just as they happened. You all know this is not soldiering here. There is many a boy here today who looks on war as all glory, but, boys, it is all hell. You can bear this warning voice to generations yet to come. I look upon war with horror, but if it has to come, I am there.
I acquired a hunger for fairy tales in the dark days of blackout and blitz in the Second World War.
The First World War was a horror of gas, industrialised slaughter, fear, and appalling human suffering.
The chief fruit of the First World War was the Russian Revolution and the rise of Communism as a national power.
I am sick of war. Every woman of my generation is sick of war. Fifty years of war. Wars rumored, wars beginning, wars fought, wars ending, wars paid for, wars endured.
My father, who had lost a brother, fighting on the Austrian side in World War I, was a committed pacifist.
We experienced similiar fears in the 1880s, at the end of World War I and II. And we ran out in the 1970s.
My mother lived in Holland, and during World War II was incarcerated in a Japanese camp for three years.
Like other conflict-affected regions, Africa continues to see religious, ethnic, and politically motivated conflicts. Extremist violence is now entrenched in several parts of the world. Armed conflicts are leading to protracted refugee crises to the scale that has not been seen since World War II.
Whichever country you are, if you lose games you are criticised. It's only when it's England it's like a new world war. — © Sven-Goran Eriksson
Whichever country you are, if you lose games you are criticised. It's only when it's England it's like a new world war.
My grandmother was German. She was an immigrant, and my great grandfather fought in World War I and was stationed in France.
I've read my grandmother's memoirs and she served as a nurse during World War II. What they had to do was incredible.
Barack Obama commits war crimes - Somalia, Yemen. He commits war crimes in Pakistan, Afghanistan. Martin Luther King Jr. tried to keep a spotlight on war crimes, to keep track of the innocents killed... There is a major clash.
I have an uncle who was heavily involved in World War 2, so over the years, I've talked to him many times.
The adverse economic events following the First World War turned me toward economics.
The great body of our citizens shoot less as times goes on. We should encourage rifle practice among schoolboys, and indeed among all classes, as well as in the military services by every means in our power. Thus, and not otherwise, may we be able to assist in preserving peace in the world... The first step – in the direction of preparation to avert war if possible, and to be fit for war if it should come – is to teach men to shoot!
The whole kind of post-World War I settlement that formed the modern Middle East is in danger of collapsing, and we can - we, the United States, you know, the preeminent power in the world - we can say that we want to ignore that, but how long can we avert our gaze? And how long can we stay out?
I think that the war on drugs is domestic Vietnam. And didn't we learn from Vietnam that, at a certain point in the war, we should stop and rethink our strategy, ask ``Why are we here, what are we doing, what's succeeded, what's failed?'' And we ought to do that with the domestic Vietnam, which is the war on drugs.
It's kind of a terrible irony, in a way, that the solution to America's problems was World War II.
I studied history at university, so I'm always quite fascinated by the Second World War and France. That's one of my interests.
If a country develops an economic system that is based on how to pay for the war, and if the amounts of fixed capital investment that are apparent are tied up in armaments, and if that country is a major exporter of arms, and its industrial fabric is dependent on them, then it would be in that country's interests to ensure that it always had a market. It is not an exaggeration to say that it is clearly in the interests of the world's leading arms exporters to make sure that there is always a war going on somewhere.
From the time of the Revolutionary War, when citizens stood forward to defend their liberties against the depredations of tyranny. All the way through Civil War, through the great World Wars, this nation has been defended by the tradition of common ordinary folks who come from behind the plow, come from the store-clerking, come from the classrooms, and so forth to get on the battlefields - ordinary citizens turned into heroes in defense of their liberty, because that's the potential of freedom.
The main force used in the evolving world of humanity has hitherto been applied in the form of war.
In World War II, a British mathematician named Alan Turing led the effort to crack the Nazis' communication code. He mastered the complex German enciphering machine, helping to save the world, and his work laid the basis for modern computer science. Does it matter that Turing was gay?
If a sufficient number of people who wanted to stop war really did gather together, they would first of all begin by making war upon those who disagreed with them. And it is still more certain that they would make war on people who also want to stop wars but in another way.
I realize it is normal to argue. I almost missed World War II watching my parents fight.
All the other large and small nationalities and peoples are destined to perish before long in the revolutionary world storm. The next world war will result in the disappearance from the face of the earth not only of reactionary classes and dynasties, but also of entire reactionary peoples. And that, too, is a step forward.
First New York was a sort of provincial capital, bigger and richer than Manchester or Marseilles, but not much different in its essential spirit. Then, after the war, it became one among half a dozen world cities. Today it has the appearance of standing alone, as the center of culture in the part of the world that still tries to be civilized.
And, gentlemen, they have not yet done so, and it is quite clear that no Americans, no people in the world probably, are going to war with the Soviet Union.
I don't quite understand how a generation and a half after the Second World War we've gotten where we are now.
The World War demonstrated the importance of Field Artillery. The majority of casualties were inflicted by the arm.
We experienced similar fears in the 1880s, at the end of World War I and II. And we ran out in the 1970s.
Exploitation and domination of one nation over another can have no place in a world striving to put an end to all war.
Don't forget we are in a state of war and no peace. But it's very dynamic and challenging compared to the rest of the Arab world. — © Walid Jumblatt
Don't forget we are in a state of war and no peace. But it's very dynamic and challenging compared to the rest of the Arab world.
The world going insane and evil letting slip the birds of war is no excuse for sloppy vocabulary.
I was born during the war and grew up in a time of rationing. We didn't have anything. It's influenced the way I look at the world.
The science of weapons and war has made us all one world and one human race with one common destiny.
I'm glad to see a lot of patriotism in this country - I haven't seen that since World War II.
In 1945, just at the end of World War II, the American poet Muriel Rukeyser wrote a remarkable book called The Life of Poetry. In it she says that on any particular day in the world, if poetry ceased to exist, it would immediately be reinvented on that same day.
War should be not a war of choice; it should be a war of necessity. And it should be a last resort.
There is no direct evidence that nuclear weapons prevented a world war. Conversely, it is known that they nearly caused one.
My mother had a son from previous marriage and her husband died in Second World War.
During the Vietnam War, which lasted longer than any war we've ever been in - and which we lost - every respectable artist in this country was against the war. It was like a laser beam. We were all aimed in the same direction. The power of this weapon turns out to be that of a custard pie dropped from a stepladder six feet high.
Every country has its own perspective on the Second World War. This is not surprising when experiences and memories are so different.
This unprecedented crisis, which is without doubt the worst since the second world war, is not over. — © Giorgio Napolitano
This unprecedented crisis, which is without doubt the worst since the second world war, is not over.
It is not the conservative psyche that needs analysis. Conservatives were right in the Cold War --so right that liberals are pretending they were with us all along -- and they are right about Iraq. It is Leftists who need to account for their consistently disgraceful positions throughout the Cold War and into the War on Terror.
From space travel to organ transplants, one of the most important influences shaping the modern world is science. Amazingly, people who lived during the Civil War had more in common with Abraham than with us. If Christians are going to speak to that world and interact with it responsibly, they must interact with science.
Even I had no opportunity to conduct very many concerts after World War II.
A common lament of the World War II generation is the absence today of personal responsibility
In the '60s we fought for peace, when the Vietnam war was on. We were against the cops and against the politicians, and there was a lot of waving banners and all that. And I think in a way, just as they were enjoying that machoism of war, we were enjoying the machismo of being anti-war, you know?
My favorite period is World War II, and I'm in the middle of writing my fourth novel set in that era.
Heaven is supposed to be a perfect place. Yet, it experienced a war (Revelation 12:7). How can there be a war in a perfect place and if it happened before why couldn't it happen again? Why would I want to go to a place in which war can occur? That's exactly what I'm trying to escape, aren't you?
I don't know what weapons will be used in the Third World War. But I can tell you what they'll use in the Fourth - rocks!
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