What you see is when the government gets involved, you run out of money and health care gets rationed.
Rather than improving the wealth of their own nation, the Mexican government encourages its poor to come to the U.S. and send money home.
If you make any money, the government shoves you in the creek once a year with it in your pockets, and all that don't get wet you can keep.
The worst thing that can happen to a man is to lose his money, the next worst his health, the next worst his reputation.
The old problems - love, money, security, status, health, etc. - are still here to plague us or please us.
As every American who has ever received a paycheck is aware, the amount of money earned and the amount actually brought home are not the same.
If you care about yourself and what you do, you get nervous about it. You just don't take the money and go home.
I've seen the ticket, and I still can't believe it. When I see the money, I hope I don't hit the floor.
I hope to goodness I would not still be working in the corporate world - the money is OK but it is no life at all.
Money can't buy you happiness, but it can buy you a yacht big enough to pull up right alongside it.
The only really important thing, at the end of the day, is your health. If you haven't got that, then all the money in the world isn't going to bring you happiness.
We get the worrywart, the hypochondriac, the money-grubbing miser, the intractable negotiator... Some would say certain of these refer to the stereotypical, or 'stage' Jew. But objectively speaking, the only crime in humor is an unfunny joke.
Bankers know that history is inflationary and that money is the last thing a wise man will hoard.
When I saw all those other drivers, I realized that they wanted to win that money just as much as I did. But I didn't have to worry. A tire came off my car and I was lucky I got it off the track.
I've always listened to a lot of rap. It's all, 'Look at this car that cost me so much money, look at this Champagne.' It's super fun.
When you do a film, you get picked up in a car, lunch is free. Theatre is really hard, and you get absolutely no money.
I never did films for the money or because I needed to buy a house or car. I do it because I love my job.
It is because my dad died suddenly that I became an actor. I thought, I'm going to make money doing this thing I enjoy.
My dad is extremely successful, so I've seen the money and luxury growing up. I'm nowhere close to his stature.
It's really unfair to working women in America who read celebrity news and think, 'Why can't I lose weight when I've had a baby?' Well, everyone you're reading about has money for a trainer and a chef. That doesn't make it realistic.
I always had dreams. I knew I wanted to have money to buy things at the flea market. That's worked out well.