Virtually every community in the country has legislation regulating door-to-door trade, yet telemarketers have run unchecked for years. The industry in general uses all sorts of slimy tricks to make sure you never make it to the do-not-call list.
‐‐ Julie Ann Dawson
Virtually every magazine, newspaper, TV station and cable channel is owned by a big corporation, and they've squashed stories that they don't want the public to know about.
‐‐ Tom Scholz
Virtually every one of the most far-right neocon Bush officials - including Dick Cheney himself - has spent years now praising Obama for continuing their terrorism policies which Obama the Senator and Presidential Candidate once so harshly denounced.
‐‐ Glenn Greenwald
Virtually every real breakthrough in technology had a bubble which burst, left a lot of people broke who'd invested in it, but also left the infrastructure for this next golden age, effectively.
‐‐ Tim O'Reilly
Virtually every scientist now concedes that universe and time itself had beginning. So, whatever begins to exist has a cause. The universe began to exist. Therefore, the universe must have had a cause.
‐‐ Lee Strobel
Virtually every time the U.S. fires a missile from a drone and ends the lives of Muslims, American media outlets dutifully trumpet in headlines that the dead were 'militants' - even though those media outlets literally do not have the slightest idea of who was actually killed.
‐‐ Glenn Greenwald
Virtually everything that gets printed about me is wrong anyway, so it doesn't really matter what you say.
‐‐ Zara Phillips
Virtually everywhere in the world, people still wake up and want their country to be more like the United States than any other nation. We are the envy of the world because of what we stand for and how our democratic process, flawed as it may often seem to be, operates. We should take pride in that.
‐‐ Eliot Spitzer
Virtually nothing Barack Obama has done has left America or the world better since he became president. Nearly everything he has touched has been made worse.
‐‐ Dennis Prager
Virtually nothing is impossible in this world if you just put your mind to it and maintain a positive attitude.
‐‐ Lou Holtz
Virtue alone has majesty in death.
‐‐ Edward Young
Virtue by premeditation isn't worth much.
‐‐ Georg C. Lichtenberg
Virtue can only flourish among equals.
‐‐ Mary Wollstonecraft
Virtue cannot separate itself from reality without becoming a principle of evil.
‐‐ Albert Camus
Virtue comes by nature, learning, and practice, and thanks to virtue, all of the aforesaid may deserve approval.
‐‐ Apollonius of Tyana
Virtue consisted in avoiding scandal and venereal disease.
‐‐ Robert Cecil
Virtue consists, not in abstaining from vice, but in not desiring it.
‐‐ George Bernard Shaw
Virtue could see to do what Virtue would by her own radiant light, though sun and moon where in the flat sea sunk.
‐‐ John Milton
Virtue has a veil, vice a mask.
‐‐ Victor Hugo
Virtue has its own reward, but no sale at the box office.
‐‐ Mae West
Virtue herself is her own fairest reward.
‐‐ Silius Italicus
Virtue is a habit of the mind, consistent with nature and moderation and reason.
‐‐ Marcus Tullius Cicero
Virtue is a positive quality developed by taking a firm stand for the right in temptation, or by the suffering endured in consequence of wrongdoing.
‐‐ Max Heindel
Virtue is a state of war, and to live in it we have always to combat with ourselves.
‐‐ Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Virtue is akin to holiness, an attribute of godliness.
‐‐ Ezra Taft Benson
Virtue is an inner strength. It expands your nature.
‐‐ John Bradshaw
Virtue is defined to be mediocrity, of which either extreme is vice.
‐‐ Rutherford B. Hayes
Virtue is harmony.
‐‐ Pythagoras
Virtue is insufficient temptation.
‐‐ George Bernard Shaw
Virtue is its own reward, and brings with it the truest and highest pleasure; but if we cultivate it only for pleasure's sake, we are selfish, not religious, and will never gain the pleasure, because we can never have the virtue.
‐‐ John Henry Newman
Virtue is its own reward. We only invented concepts like heaven and hell to describe how we feel. We don't feel good doing bad and it's nice to help someone.
‐‐ Alain de Botton
Virtue is like a rich stone, best plain set.
‐‐ Francis Bacon
Virtue is more to be feared than vice, because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience.
‐‐ Adam Smith
Virtue is not left to stand alone. He who practices it will have neighbors.
‐‐ Confucius
Virtue is not photogenic, so I liked playing bad guys. But, whenever I played a bad guy, I tried to find something good in him, and that kept my contact with the audience.
‐‐ Kirk Douglas
Virtue is not photogenic. What is it to be a nice guy? To be nothing, that's what. A big fat zero with a smile for everybody.
‐‐ Kirk Douglas
Virtue is persecuted more by the wicked than it is loved by the good.
‐‐ Buddha
Virtue is reason which has become energy.
‐‐ Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel
Virtue is relative to the actions and ages of each of us in all that we do.
‐‐ Plato
Virtue is something you have to get good at, like playing the trombone or tolerating bores at parties. Being a virtuous human being takes practice; and those who are brilliant at being human (what Christians call the saints) are the virtuosi of the moral sphere - the Pavarottis and Maradonas of virtue.
‐‐ Terry Eagleton
Virtue is the fount whence honour springs.
‐‐ Christopher Marlowe
Virtue is the truest nobility.
‐‐ Miguel de Cervantes
Virtue knows that it is impossible to get on without compromise, and tunes herself, as it were, a trifle sharp to allow for an inevitable fall in playing.
‐‐ Samuel Butler
Virtue knows to a farthing what it has lost by not having been vice.
‐‐ Horace Walpole
Virtue looks good but it only suits imposing figures.
‐‐ Frank Wedekind
Virtue must be valuable, if men and women of all degrees pretend to have it.
‐‐ E. W. Howe
Virtue, perhaps, is nothing more than politeness of soul.
‐‐ Honore de Balzac
Virtue rejects facility to be her companion. She requires a craggy, rough and thorny way.
‐‐ Michel de Montaigne
Virtue she finds too painful an endeavour, content to dwell in decencies for ever.
‐‐ Alexander Pope