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Quotes About Propagate

Not only must we move forward in a monumental manner more copies of the Book of Mormon, but we must move boldly forward into our own lives and throughout the earth more of its marvelous messages.
~ Ezra Taft Benson
Hypocrisy will serve as well To propagate a church as zeal; As persecution and promotion Do equally advance devotion: So round white stones will serve, they say, As well as eggs, to make hens lay.
~ Butler
He who would propagate an opinion must begin by making sure of his ground and holding it firmly. There is as little use in trying to breed from weak opinion as from other weak stock.
~ butler samuel ii
The natural man has only two primal passions: to get and to beget.
~ William Osier
El fuego se propaga! -grito, decidida a que oiga todas y cada una de mis palabras-. ¡Y si nosotros ardemos, tú arderás con nosotros!
~ Suzanne Collins
one of software's biggest obstacles is smart people who purposefully propagate the guru myth.
~ Kevlin Henney
If a mistake occurs with regularity, it might well become the norm. If enough people believe and propagate the error, it could become gospel.
~ George Takei
I would advise no man to marry who is not likely to propagate understanding.
~ Samuel Johnson
But what would cause Yankeedom eventually to be so loathed by the other nations was its desire—indeed, its mission—to impose its ways on everyone else. For the Puritans didn't merely believe they were God's chosen people, they believed God had charged each and every one of them to propagate his will on a corrupt and sinful world.
~ Colin Woodard
The first point of contact for radicalisation is almost always a personal one. Prisons and universities, for example, tend to be easily and regularly infiltrated by radical groups, who use them as forums to propagate their ideas.
~ Maajid Nawaz
disseminated.
~ Jan Moran
Evil people must spread their evil everywhere.
~ Jane Smiley
It didn't even occur to me that I could use my strong image in cinema to propagate my political ideas. To me, cinema was cinema and politics was politics.
~ Vijayashanti
Behavior is contagious. Help it spread.
~ Chip Heath
Simultaneously, in the most complete ambiguity, they [media] propagate the brutal charm of the terrorist act, they are themselves terrorists, insofar as they themselves march to the tune of seduction.
~ Jean Baudrillard
If they are going to have war, they ought to take the old men and leave the young to propagate the race.
~ Jeannette Rankin
Another problem with callbacks is that they can make handling errors difficult. If an asynchronous function (or an asynchronously invoked callback) throws an exception, there is no way for that exception to propagate back to the initiator of the asynchronous operation.
~ Unknown
I have heard of wars for the defence of the Protestant religion: our enemies in this instance are equally enemies of all religion—of Lutheranism, of Calvinism; and desirous to propagate everywhere, by the force of their arms, that system of infidelity which they avow in their principles. I
~ Winston S. Churchill
Books are the immortality of the race, the father and mother of most that is worth while cherishing in our hearts. To spread good books about, to sow them on fertile minds, to propagate understanding and a carefulness of life and beauty, isn't that high enough mission for a man?
~ Christopher Morley
Complexities of life originate from the curiousity of men about innovations. And from these innovations that brought new discoveries and inventions caused men's health to propagate complexity.
~ Unknown
In the public eye, being a victim of past injustices does not win the right to propagate current and future ones, and that's intolerable to those in charge of the race industry today, whose power relies on maintaining forever a latent rage that can be turned on and off at the will of the nation's elites.
~ Andrew Breitbart
Music does propagate myths and people have tried to make that myth more than it was.
~ Unknown
One word set off others like a string of firecrackers.
~ John Steinbeck
I am bound by my own definition of criticism: a disinterested endeavour to learn and propagate the best that is known and thought in the world.
~ Matthew Arnold