Quotes about Honesty
I have a perfect horror of words that are not backed up by deeds.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Let the watchwords of all our people be the old familiar watchwords of honesty, decency, fair-dealing, and commonsense."... "We must treat each man on his worth and merits as a man. We must see that each is given a square deal, because he is entitled to no more and should receive no less.""The welfare of each of us is dependent fundamentally upon the welfare of all of us.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Far-seeing patriots should turn scornfully from men who seek power on a platform which with exquisite nicety combines silly inability to understand the national needs and dishonest insintcerity in promising conflicting and impossible remedies.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Let these innocent people be careful not to invest in corporations where those in control are not men of probity, men who respect the laws; above all let them avoid the men who make it their one effort to evade or defy the laws.
— Theodore Roosevelt
Simplicity ought to be in the intention, purity in the affection.
— Thomas a Kempis
Whom shall I trust, O Lord, whom shall I trust but Thee? Thou art the Truth, and deceivest not, nor canst be deceived. And on the other hand, Every man is a liar,(3) weak, unstable and frail, especially in his words, so that one ought scarcely ever to believe what seemeth to sound right on the face of it.
— Thomas a Kempis
Jerome says (Ep. ad Nepot. lii): "Shun, as you would the plague, a cleric who from being poor has become wealthy, or who, from being a nobody has become a celebrity.
— St. Thomas Aquinas
In my neighborhood, when you've got something to say to a guy, you look him in the eye and you say it to him.
— Joe Biden
Truth is not affected by the attitude of the one professing it.
— Norman Geisler
we humans have a fatal tendency to try to adjust the truth to fit our desires rather than adjusting our desires to fit the truth. But
— Norman Geisler
In fact, we humans have a fatal tendency to try to adjust the truth to fit our desires rather than adjusting our desires to fit the truth.
— Norman Geisler
The man who backbites an absent friend, nay, who does not stand up for him when another blames him, the man who angles for bursts of laughter and for the repute of a wit, who can invent what he never saw, who cannot keep a secret -- that man is black at heart: mark and avoid him.
— Cicero