[On the asteroid] Princess Leia: I have a bad feeling about this...
Darth Vader: Bring my shuttle.
C-3PO: R2, why did you have to be so brave?
The Emperor: And now, young Skywalker... you will die.
C-3PO: I have decided that we shall stay here.
Padmé: Obi-Wan... there... is good in him. I know there is... still... [Padme dies]
I believe - though I may be wrong, because I'm no expert - that this war is about what most wars are about: hegemony, money, power and oil.
Each one of these treaties is a step for the maintenance of peace, an additional guarantee against war. It is through such machinery that the disputes between nations will be settled and war prevented.
Civil strife is as much a greater evil than a concerted war effort as war itself is worse than peace.
Religious wars are not caused by the fact that there is more than one religion, but by the spirit of intolerance... the spread of which can only be regarded as the total eclipse of human reason.
War kills men, and men deplore the loss; but war also crushes bad principles and tyrants, and so saves societies.
In many ways, the crumbling of the institution of marriage is the real 'war on women.' Marriage is the civilizing influence for men and for families.
I grew up with 'Star Wars' and was a massive fan of the original films.
After the 'war to end war' they seem to have been pretty successful in Paris at making a 'Peace to end Peace.
We're living through a time where we are fighting wars fostered by politics, admittedly not on the same scale as the First World War, but with equally tragic realities for our soldiers and their families.
To declare the Cold War over, and declare democracy has won out over totalitarianism, is a measure of arrogance and wrong-headedness.
The only lesson to extract from any civil war is that it's pointless and futile and ugly, and that there is nothing glamorous or heroic about it. There are heroes, but the causes are never heroic.
I began to see during the civil war, in that part of the states of Missouri and Kansas where the doctors were shut out, the children did not die.
I was arrested in 1965 for opposing the war in Vietnam. There were 39 of us arrested that day. But thousands opposed us. And the majority of the people in the country supported the war then.
America must continue diplomacy, even as we continue the war, to expand the coalition of the willing to share the burden of war and to share the responsibility and the economic cost of rebuilding Iraq.
Since the end of the Cold War, Soviet aggression had been replaced by a number of particularly venomous threats, from Timothy McVeigh to Osama bin Laden.