We've found 7 quotes for 'japan tallow' (0.131 seconds):
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"Be courteous, be obliging, but don't give yourself over to be melted down for the benefit of the tallow trade." »George Eliot
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"I'm sure that President Johnson would never have pursued the war in Vietnam if he'd ever had a Fulbright to japan, or say Bangkok, or had any feeling for what these people are like and why they acted the way they did. He was completely ignorant." »William Fullbright
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"Yesterday, December 7, 1941 - a date which will live on in infamy - the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of japan." »Franklin D. Roosevelt, Address to Congress, Dec. 8, 1941
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"Carter My daddy'll kick your daddy's ass all the way from here to China, japan, wherever the hell you from and all up that Great Wall too." »Rush Hour
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"I wonder if the polite thing to do is always the right thing to do. When I met the family from japan, they all bowed. I pretended like I was going to bow, but then I just kept going and flipped over on my back. I did this five times. I think they got the point." »Jack Handey Deep Thoughts
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"Yesterday, December seventh, 1941, a date which will live in infamy, the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of japan." »Franklin D. Roosevelt
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"We must never forget, that under modern conditions of life, science, and technology. All war has been greatly brutalized, and that no one who joins in it, even in self-defense, can escape becoming also in a measure brutalized. Modern war cannot be limited in its destructive method and the inevitable debasement of all participants… A fair scrutiny of the last two World Wars makes clear the steady intensification of the weapons and methods employed by both, the aggressors and the victors. In order to defeat the Japanese aggression, we were forced, as Admiral Nimitz has stated, to employ a technique of unrestricted warfare, not unlike that which 25 years ago was the proximate cause of our entry into World War I. In the use of strategic air power the Allies took the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians in Germany and Japan…. We as well as our enemies have contributed to the proof that the central moral problem is war and not its methods, and that a continuance of war will in all probability end with the destruction of our civilization." »Henry Stimson
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