I think we are at the dawn of a new era in commercial space exploration.
In 2003 Scotland had 36 new business registrations per 10,000 adults. It's still the same.
There is this permanent hope in America that there is some new technology around the corner that will change the world.
My leadership will end the Obama era and begin a new era of American prosperity.
What I love about New York is just the electricity I feel right away.
Television, as you know, can kind of jettison you into a whole new world.
I volunteer a lot of my time with an organization in New York called The Center for Children and Families.
My first waitress job was at Johnny Rockets in New Jersey, and then I waited tables at a sports bar.
Many people mistakenly think a new technology cancels out an old one.
Any new technology tends to go through a 25-year adoption cycle.
All I really want is a three-room house. The home I have designed at my new farm in Bedford, New York, is a three-room house: bedroom on top, living room in the middle, and kitchen on the ground.
With the spirit of my administration, New York City is poised for dramatic change. The era of fear has had a long enough reign.
Certainly, we continue to bring in new people. We'll hire, net new, over 4,000 people this year, and attract great people into the company. I'm very bullish about the employee base and what it can accomplish.
If I could live in New York the rest of my life, I absolutely would, but it's also prohibitively expensive and you have to be working. New York is a lot nicer when you have a job.
There are three capitals of entertainment in the world: Las Vegas, New York and London. So far the only one I truly conquered is Vegas. New York and London are still on my checklist.
I'm naturally curious, and I've always been driven by my curiosity. Curiosity gets people excited. Curiosity leads to new ideas, new jobs, new industries.
'The New York Times' is inherent in what we are, but not worn as 'what we are'; it's important and crucial to all of us, but not something that was drilled in, in any specific ways.
There is no change - I'm as deep or as shallow as I ever was. What's new is on-the-job experience. This is what you gain with years.
We need to work together, on a bipartisan basis, to create new jobs, increase job training, enact real and substantive middle class tax relief, and reward companies that create jobs at home.
NAFTA recognizes the reality of today's economy - globalization and technology. Our future is not in competing at the low-level wage job; it is in creating high-wage, new technology jobs based on our skills and our productivity.
Customers want new things, and the way that they get them isn't written in stone.