1. Success does not matter, and failure is not fatal. The courage to move on is the most precious.
2. Pessimists see difficulties in every opportunity. An optimist sees an opportunity in every difficulty.
3. Courage is the ability to stand up and talk about Kan Kan. Courage is also the ability to sit down and listen quietly.
4. Do you have enemies? It's good. This shows that at some point in your life, you have shouted.
5. I am an optimist myself, because it seems useless to do anything else.
6. Don't wait until tomorrow to make an excuse, but do it today.
7. Everyone should love animals, because they are delicious.
8. I like pigs. Dogs worship humans. Cats despise humans. Pigs treat us equally.
9. Sir, you are drunk. Lady, I am drunk today. But tomorrow when I wake up, you will be ugly.
1. A psychopath just refuses to listen to advice and change the subject.
11. It is not enough to do our best, sometimes we have to meet the requirements.
12. If you are trapped in hell, move on.
I don't like any of his virtues. He doesn't have any bad things I like.
14. We live by making money. We live by giving.
15. I am always ready to study, but I don't like being taught.
profile:
Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (November 3, 1874-January 24, 1965), a British politician, historian, painter, speaker, writer and journalist, was born in a noble family, and his father Lord Randolph was the British Chancellor of the Exchequer.
Political experience:
In October p>19, Churchill, who stood for election on behalf of the British Conservative Party, was successfully elected as a member of parliament, and since then, his political career has lasted for 61 years. However, although he was a member of the Conservative Party in Parliament, he criticized many policies of the Conservative Party government, criticized the government's policies in the Ying Bu War, and insisted on opposing the government's military expansion plan. After successfully preventing the government's military expansion proposal from being passed in the House of Commons, Churchill went to the opposite side of the government on trade issues. He publicly expressed his opposition to the trade barrier policy of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and insisted on maintaining the principle of free trade, which made him completely break away from the Conservative Party.