I'm an American. I'm for prosperity. I've discovered, from 40 years of reporting, that what creates prosperity is limited government.
My position is that it isn't government's job to mandate patriotism. To me, mandating a pledge of allegiance to a government is something Saddam Hussein would do.
My actions constituted pure hacking that resulted in relatively trivial expenses for the companies involved, despite the government's false claims.
The secondary attack was made against The Hague. Its aim was to get a hold upon the Dutch capital, and in particular to capture the Government offices and the Service headquarters.
I'm tired of being lied to by government, by the media, and by every corporation I have anything to do with.
Government is a health hazard. Governments have killed many more people than cigarettes or unbuckled seat belts ever have.
Whatever it is that the government does, sensible Americans would prefer that the government does it to somebody else. This is the idea behind foreign policy.
If it were not for government regulation of big corporations, executives at companies like Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, they could have cheated investors out of millions.
The federal government is doing less than it is lawfully entitled to do to protect New York City, and the City is less safe as a result.
The fact is that in a way, journalists become a kind of default in the system when you don't have substantive two-party back-and-forth inside of the government.
Forty states have sued tobacco companies over the costs of health care for residents on Medicaid and public assistance.
City governments ought to be abolished, if only as a public health measure.
Pain adds rest unto pleasure, and teaches the luxury of health.
There's a certain kind of cultural energy pursued by the gatekeepers of elite discourse, who want to argue that Americans fundamentally agree with each other, and that's the health of the nation.
A minister has to be able to read a clock. At noon, it's time to go home and turn up the pot roast and get the peas out of the freezer.
Women fight for democracy and engage in the world. But they shouldn't try and be copying men and be masculine; they should anchor on the home and build on those fundamentals.
In civilized life, where the happiness and indeed almost the existence of man, depends on the opinion of his fellow men. He is constantly acting a studied part.
In conversation, humor is worth more than wit and easiness more than knowledge.
Certain periods in history suddenly lift humanity to an observation point where a clear light falls upon a world previously dark.
Of the twenty-two civilizations that have appeared in history, nineteen of them collapsed when they reached the moral state the United States is in now.
The history of American women is all about leaving home - crossing oceans and continents, or getting jobs and living on their own.