1.
The benefits of biomedical progress are obvious, clear, and powerful. The hazards are much less well appreciated.
Leon Kass
2.
Being pregnant is an occupational hazard of being a wife.
Queen Victoria
3.
The liberties of our country, the freedom of our civil constitution, are worth defending against all hazards: And it is our duty to defend them against all attacks.
Samuel Adams
4.
Our technological powers increase, but the side effects and potential hazards also escalate.
Alvin Toffler
5.
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words, but a great deal in a few.
Pythagoras
6.
Golf without bunkers and hazards would be tame and monotonous. So would life.
B. C. Forbes
7.
The difficulties and hazards of marriage are greatly increased where backgrounds are different
Spencer W. Kimball
8.
The Christian's chief occupational hazards are depression and discouragement.
John Stott
9.
If we are intended for great ends, we are called to great hazards.
John Henry Newman
10.
Incoherence is a common hazard for journalists who dabble in ethical judgments.
Andrew Ferguson
11.
Of all the hazards, fear is the worst.
Sam Snead
12.
Embryonic stem cell research is at the leading edge of a series of moral hazards.
George W. Bush
13.
The occupational hazard of making a spectacle of yourself, over the long haul, is that at some point you buy a ticket too.
Thomas McGuane
14.
You have the gift of a brilliant internal guardian that stands ready to warn you of hazards and guide you through risky situations.
Gavin de Becker
15.
Risk management is a more realistic term than safety. It implies that hazards are ever-present, that they must be identified, analyzed, evaluated and controlled or rationally accepted.
Jerome F. Lederer
16.
Optimism is an occupational hazard of programming; feedback is the treatment.
Kent Beck
17.
Running toward danger is foolhardy. ... But so is closing your eyes to it. Many perils become less dangerous once you understand their potential hazards.
Brandon Mull
18.
Surely there is a time to submit to guidance and a time to take one's own way at all hazards.
Thomas Huxley
19.
There are hazards in everything one does, but there are greater hazards in doing nothing.
Shirley Williams
20.
I consider C++ the most significant technical hazard to the survival of your project and do so without apologies.
Alistair Cockburn
21.
I earnestly pray that the Omnipotent Being who has not deserted the cause of America in the hour of its extremest hazard, will never yield so fair a heritage of freedom a prey to 'Anarchy' or 'Despotism'.
George Washington
22.
It is an occupational hazard that anyone who has spent her life learning how to lie eventually becomes bad at telling the truth.
Ally Carter
23.
The main health hazard in the world today is people who don't love themselves.
Kinky Friedman
24.
We have a natural right to make use of our pens as of our tongue, at our peril, risk and hazard.
Voltaire
25.
It is essential that we take steps to prevent chemical substances from becoming environmental hazards. Unless we develop better methods to assure adequate testing of chemicals, we will be inviting the environmental crisis of the future.
Richard M. Nixon
26.
Calling noise a nuisance is like calling smog an inconvenience. Noise must be considered a hazard to the health of people everywhere.
William H. Stewart
27.
A writer's occupational hazard: I think of eavesdropping as minding my business.
Barbara Kingsolver
28.
The chief occupational hazard of leadership is pride.
John Stott
30.
The prime occupational hazard of a manager is superficiality.
Henry Mintzberg
32.
Take those road hazards- the potholes, ruts, detours, and all the rest- as evidence that you were on the right route. It's when you find yourself on that big, broad, easy road that you ought to worry.
Joni Eareckson Tada
34.
Government prohibitions do always more mischief than had been calculated; and it is not without much hesitation that a statesman should hazard to regulate the concerns of individuals, as if he could do it better than themselves.
Albert Gallatin
35.
I was the worst bricklayer in the world. I can show you buildings I worked on - they're a hazard. I closed a window one time. I forgot to set back a brick and I just kept going - there I was singing 'There's no business like show business'.
Pat Cooper
36.
What would be a road hazard anywhere else, in the Third World is probably the road.
P. J. O'Rourke
37.
Natural hazards, however formidable, are inherently less dangerous and less uncertain than fighting hazards. All conditions are more calculable, all obstacles more surmountable than those of human resistance.
B. H. Liddell Hart
38.
Impotence is one of the major hazards of cigarette smoking.
Loni Anderson
39.
Of the mental hazards, being scared is the worst. When you get scared, you get tense.
Sam Snead
40.
Ratings agencies are highly conflicted, unimaginative dupes. They are blissfully unaware of adverse selection and moral hazard. Investors should never trust them.
Seth Klarman
41.
What prudent merchant will hazard his fortunes in any new branch of commerce when he knows not that his plans may be rendered unlawful before they can be executed?
James Madison
42.
In every case, the environmental hazards were made known only by independent scientists, who were often bitterly opposed by the corporations responsible for the hazards.
Barry Commoner
43.
Men that hazard all
Do it in hope of fair advantages:
A golden mind stoops not to shows of dross.
William Shakespeare
45.
Where thought is free in its range, we need never fear to hazard what is good in itself.
Thomas Jefferson
47.
Without vanity a writer's work is tepid, and he must accept his vanity as part of his stock in trade and live with it as one of the hazards of his profession.
Moss Hart
48.
Here life itself, life at its best and healthiest, awaits the caprice of the bullet. Let us see the development of the day. All else may stand over, perhaps for ever. Existence is never so sweet as when it is at hazard.
Winston Churchill
49.
To be sick and helpless is a humiliating experience. Prolonged illness also carries the hazard of narcissistic self-absorption.
Richard Hofstadter
50.
The diver plunges deep to find pearls, and we must accept any labor or hazard to win a soul
Charles Spurgeon