Charles Foster Kane: Don't believe everything you hear on the radio.
Nausicaä: It's so beautiful. It's hard to believe these spores could kill me.
Floyd: Red, I do believe you're talking out of your ass.
Caroline Wakefield: None of my friends can fucking believe my Dad's actually the drug's... Barbara Wakefield: Caroline.
When I left 20th Century-Fox to freelance, my agent believed that getting big money was the way to establish real importance in our industry.
I don't believe that I personally have been changed by the money. The bad thing is people assume you've changed because now you have money.
I am a strong believer in the intertwined nature of the personal and the political; I think they move together.
I never believed that surrendering the executive power should be a condition of getting the second term. The second term should stand on its own feet.
The most important responsibility we have as journalists is to question those who are in power. I honestly believe that.
The goal of this Nation, I so strongly believe, is to be a preeminent world power. We have to understand what comes with that: The responsibility to be strong.
By burning nuclear waste as fuel, we believe we can power the United States cleanly for hundreds of years without ever touching new resources.
Galileo was no idiot. Only an idiot could believe that science requires martyrdom - that may be necessary in religion, but in time a scientific result will establish itself.
The Christian religion not only was at first attended with miracles, but even at this day cannot be believed by any reasonable person without one.
I firmly believe that the mission of religion in the 21st century must be to contribute concretely to the peaceful coexistence of humankind.
No man ever believes that the Bible means what it says: He is always convinced that it says what he means.
The biggest mistake is believing there is one right way to listen, to talk, to have a conversation - or a relationship.
What I do believe is that there is always a relationship between writing and reading, a constant interplay between the writer on the one hand and the reader on the other.
I have always been a romantic, one of those people who believes that a woman in pink circus tights contains all the secrets of the universe.
The nineteenth century believed in science but the twentieth century does not.
Fruitful discourse in science or theology requires us to believe that within the contexts of normal discourse there are some true statements.
The hardest thing to get is true emotion. I always believe you need to earn that with the audience. You can't just tell them, 'Ok, be sad now.'