You know that American dream and American spirit of innovation we always talk about? Turns out, the bulk of it was built by people who came to America from somewhere else, not people born American. We have no birthright or natural lock on these thing...
four meta-movements that separately and together are redefining the American dream: living with limits, embracing diversity, looking inward, and demanding authenticity.
One must ease the public into it - that's an art in itself.
Success is a public affair. Failure is a private funeral.
The first mistake in public business is the going into it.
The doctor has been taught to be interested not in health but in disease. What the public is taught is that health is the cure for disease.
There's a great public disinclination toward politicians.
My private life became public.
The public is a part of my real life.
I'm not one for a public display of my life.
The public doesn't particularly care for advertisements.
I don't crave publicity, you know.
Public sharing is an important part of science.
The price of justice is eternal publicity.
'Hotel Rwanda' is an American product, not a Rwandan one, made primarily for American audiences.
That's the heart of it: My shows were not that controversial with the American people. They were controversial with the people who think for the American people.
When I was in school, all our history books were American, so we learned American history, not Canadian history.
The death tax punishes the American dream - making it virtually impossible for the average American family to build wealth across generations.
We must stop talking about the American dream and start listening to the dreams of Americans.
Unless we make education a priority, an entire generation of Americans could miss out on the American dream.
Americans are nervous; Americans are restless; and what troubles me the most is that Americans are uncharacteristically pessimistic.