Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Dr. Lucas D. Shallua

Quote by Dr. Lucas D. Shallua

“A full house in disorder is better than an empty one in perfect harmony. Better to refine disorderly success than perfect orderly failure.”

Quote by Dr. Lucas D. Shallua

Author

Dr. Lucas D. Shallua

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Dr. Lucas D. Shallua. more

You May Also Like

“آدم علی رغم همه ی استقلال طلبی ها و خودخواهی هایش به این که شرایطش، محیطش و حرف هایش را با کسی سهیم باشد تمایل دارد. هیتلر با آن همه خودکامگی عاشق اوا براون بود. چرا؟ چرا کسی که میخواهد دنیا را به سلطه ی خودش دربیاورد هم، نیاز دارد تمام دستاوردهایش را با کسی شریک شود و حتی قبل خودکشی شان آن را رسمی هم بکند!" پیک "شاید روزهای آخر فهمیده فتح نگاه یک زن از فتح تمام مرزهای دنیا با ارزش تر است." ------------------------------------------------- Despite all his independence and selfishness, one tends to share one's circumstances, one's environment and one's words with someone. Hitler loved Eva Braun with all his dictatorship. Why? "Why does anyone who wants to dominate the world need to share all his achievements with someone and make it official even before they commit suicide?" "Perhaps in the last days he has realized that conquering a woman's gaze is more valuable than conquering all the borders of the world.”

“Hitler was invading every European country surrounding Germany, and it was obvious that eventually we would also be at war. At the time, some Americans joined the German American Bund that backed what Hitler was doing. Others advocated that we stay out of the war.... Charles Lindbergh was of that persuasion and supported the isolationist “America First Movement,” advocating that the United States remain neutral. You could not blame people for their hostile feelings towards the German-Americans, when Nazi Bund meetings were being held at many locations around New York City, as well as in the neighboring Schuetzenpark, the German word for the riflemen’s or shooters’ park, in North Bergen. In April of 1941, after President Roosevelt accused Lindbergh of being a fascist sympathizer, Lindbergh resigned his commission as a colonel in the United States Army Air Forces. Later in the war, Lindbergh flew 50 combat missions in the Pacific Theater as a civilian consultant, but Roosevelt refused to reinstate his commission. The majority of Americans just wanted to stay out of what they considered a European matter.”

“[Germany's] political establishment--big business, the military, and the Church--had initially dismissed the Nazis as a band of loudmouthed hooligans who would never attract wide support. Over time, they saw value in the party as a bulwark against Communism, but nothing more. As for Hitler, they were not nearly so scared of him as they should have been. They underestimated the man because of his lack of schooling and were taken in by his attempts at charm. He smiled when he needed to and took care to answer their questions with reassuring lies. He was, to members of the old guard, clearly an amateur who was in over his head and unlikely to remain popular for long.”

“So the largely homosexual Nazi leadership now could eliminate its opponents by charging them with the crime of homosexuality, which also served as a way of defaming their character as well. If any actual homosexuals ended up in concentration camps, it was simply because they happened to be at the wrong end of the political equation, and not because of their homosexuality, a tactic which the contemporary homosexual movement evidently learned as well, recently “outing” a congressman who voted against recognizing homosexual marriages.”

“Her soul died that night under a radiant silver moon in the spring of 1918 on the side of a blood-spattered trench. Around her lay the mangled dead and the dying. Her body was untouched, her heart beat calmly, the blood coursed as ever through her veins. But looking deep into those emotionless eyes one wondered if they had suffered much before the soul had left them. Her face held an expression of resignation, as though she had ceased to hope that the end might come.”