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Quotes about Energy

Let's make Marco Rubio explain why he thinks oil companies should write our energy policy.
- Ted Deutch
I get energy from one-on-one conversations most often, and I lose energy from group conversations most often.
- Reid Hoffman
When we walk onto that stage I'm not feeling like I'm ruled by any other band.
- Keith Flint
Everyone is brilliant at breakfast.
- Oscar Wilde
Most people don't remember names, for the simple reason that they don't take the time and energy necessary to concentrate and repeat and fix names indelibly in their minds. They make excuses for themselves; they are too busy.
- Dale Carnegie
The world-famous scientist, Dr Alexis Carrel, said: "Prayer is the most powerful form of energy one can generate." So why not make use of it? Call it God or Allah or Spirit—why quarrel with definitions as long as the mysterious powers of nature take us in hand?
- Dale Carnegie
We sing from this passage, "When we've been there ten thousand years, bright, shining as the sun…." But we should understand that brightness always represents power, energy, and that in the kingdom of our Father we will be active, unimaginably creative.
- Dallas Willard
The secret of the easy yoke, then, is to learn from Christ how to live our total lives, how to invest all our time and our energies of mind and body as he did. We must learn how to follow his preparations, the disciplines for life in God's rule that enabled him to receive his Father's constant and effective support while doing his will.
- Dallas Willard
The tractor's arrival had signaled, among other things, agriculture's shift from an almost exclusive dependence on free solar energy to a total dependence on costly fossil fuel.
- Wendell Berry
the basic cause of the energy crisis is not scarcity; it is moral ignorance and weakness of character.
- Wendell Berry
Gratitude is a quality similar to electricity; it must be produced and discharged and used up in order to exist at all.
- William Faulkner
Like a long sighing of wind in trees it begins, then they sweep into sight, borne now upon a cloud of phantom dust. They rush past, forwardleaning in the saddles, with brandished arms, beneath whipping ribbons from slanted and eager lances; with tumult and soundless yelling they sweep past like a tide whose crest is jagged with the wild heads of horses and the brandished arms of men like the crater of the world in explosion.
- William Faulkner