Anything worth doing is worth overdoing.
If it is worth doing, it is worth overdoing.
Sometimes something worth doing is worth overdoing.
If something is worth doing, it's worth overdoing.
When a thing is not worth overdoing, leave it alone!
My motto in life is, 'If anything is worth doing, it's worth overdoing.'
And their pals vote for their stuff when they're not on the panel, and it just keeps going that way. And they tend to be very fringe artists, so anything before the 20th century is not worth considering. This is out of date.
There is no problem that is not improved by effort, and no effort that is too paltry to be worth undertaking.
Any historian worth their salt should be aware of wars, conflicts, catastrophes. They happen. This is part of the panorama.
I think I am intrigued by paradoxes. If something seems to be a paradox, it has something deeper, something worth exploring.
Perhaps the prevalence of pedantry may be largely accounted for by the common error of thinking that, because useful knowledge should be remembered, any kind of knowledge that is at all worth learning should be remembered too.
It doesn't take a brain surgeon... or a cardiologist... or a pediatrician... or even a policy wonk to figure out that a penny's worth of preventive care is worth many dollars of sick care.
It is not worth the paper it is written on unless it is backed by the kind of force that will make the other side consider the penalties too heavy to break the agreement.
The words of Christ are of more worth than the opinions of all the physicians in the universe.
I've had grand pianos that are more expensive than, like, a year's worth of rent.
One picture is worth 1,000 denials.
A picture is worth a thousand words.
In politics, a picture is worth a thousand words.
A picture is worth a thousand words. A satellite image is worth a million dollars.