Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi: [after hiding from the stormtroopers on the Millennium Falcon] Who's the more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows him?
Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi: Mos Eisley spaceport: You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy. We must be cautious.
Princess Leia Organa: Aren't you a little short for a stormtrooper? Luke Skywalker: Huh? Oh, the uniform. [Luke takes off Stormtrooper mask]
Princess Leia Organa: I don't know who you are or where you came from, but from now on you'll do as I tell you, okay?
Princess Leia Organa: Your friend is quite a mercenary. I wonder if he really cares about anything... or anybody. Luke Skywalker: I care.
Han Solo: Not a bad bit of rescuing, huh? You know, sometimes I amaze even myself. Princess Leia: That doesn't sound too hard.
Han Solo: This is *not* gonna work. Luke Skywalker: Why didn't you say so before? Han Solo: I *did* say so before.
[first lines] C-3PO: Did you hear that? They shut down the main reactor. We'll be destroyed for sure. This is madness.
C-3PO: Now don't you forget this! Why I should stick my neck out for you is far beyond my capacity!
Private Witt: [narrating] War don't ennoble men. It turns them into dogs... poisons the soul.
Reverend Otto Witt: One thousand British soldiers have been massacred. While I stood here talking peace, a war has started.
Because of my voice, speaking words which had been carefully chosen, women had used money they had set aside for other purposes to buy war bonds.
When you try to find funding for a VVA function, it doesn't seem like it's any trouble at all. People come out of the woodwork with their money to help out because we went over and fought a war.
Well, the fact that the news industry doesn't have enough money to only send salaried staff to war zones means there is an enormous, wide-open opportunity for young people who want to be on staff and don't know how to get there.
The Founders who crafted our Constitution and Bill of Rights were careful to draft a Constitution of limited powers - one that would protect Americans' liberty at all times - both in war, and in peace.
He would see civilization in danger of perishing under the oppression of a gigantic paradox: he would see multitudes of people starving in the midst of plenty, and nations preparing for war although pledged to peace.
Nobel was a genuine friend of peace. He even went so far as to believe that he had invented a tool of destruction, dynamite, which would make war so senseless that it would become impossible. He was wrong.
War as Napoleon knew it just not possible any more. However, we're very unlikely to accept or recognize 'world peace' even when we get it.
It is highly probable that in most cases, war could be avoided or ended. For discussions allow passion to subside, and to persuade alienated neighbors, or at least one of them, to listen to the voice of a conciliator is a step in the direction of pea...
We tried war, we tried aggression, we tried intervention. None of it works. Why don't we try peace, as a science of human relations, not as some vague notion - as everyday work.
The soldier above all others prays for peace, for it is the soldier who must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war.