It is the people who scream the loudest about America and Freedom who see to be the most intolerant for a differing point of view.
I can remember when Democrats believed that it was the duty of America to fight for freedom over tyranny.
The voters are going to decide in November who is going to fix their personal family dismay over not having jobs in America. They are going to pick Mitt Romney.
America's political system has evolved over the last 50 years in ways that have enhanced the power of business lobbies.
Business deals are successfully negotiated every day throughout America. The common thread is a mutual desire to reach an accord. And the media business is no different.
America is one of the biggest businesses in the world, and the people who run it can't balance their budget. We need business people in there and lobbyists out of there.
That is why I strongly believe we should working in Congress to make America a better place to run a business by reducing the costly burdens of bureaucracy and red tape.
I think that New York is not the cultural centre of America, but the business and administrative centre of American culture.
I think Steve Jobs is a historic figure. He's not only a historic figure in business, but really in America.
America needs jobs, smaller government, less spending and a president with the courage to offer more than yet another speech.
America is the land of the second chance - and when the gates of the prison open, the path ahead should lead to a better life.
People want to get to know you. I don't think America got a chance to know me in that short time.
The federal government has failed us, so we, the elected officials of small-town America, are getting tough with illegal immigration.
This man called President Bush has a lot to answer for. I don't know if this man is really taking care of America. This government has been shameful.
I will work with anyone that wants to get America back on track and make sure that the government is the servant and no longer the master.
Europe, in legend, has always been the home of subtle philosophical discussion; America was the land of grubby pragmatism.
America changed my life, but I still think of home and working in Scotland was an important part of that.
This November, with the re-election of President Barack Obama, this generation of Americans will ever expand upon the hope, the truth and the promise of America.
I'd actually rather have a talk show in Australia than even America; I hope I do end up with a talk show.
How can you tell somebody whose is pursuing happiness that they're somehow not American when that was the very first promise that America made?
I think the Canadian sense of humor is dryer than America's and juicier than Britain's. I think it's a cross between the two of them, really.