Buddhism has become a socially recognized religious philosophy for Americans, whereas it used to be considered an exotic religion.
I certainly saw science as a kind of calling, and one with as much legitimacy as a religious calling.
There's never been a particular band that I've followed religiously. But I do tend to listen to sadder music.
The religious lifestyle keeps you focused. It's helpful when trying to manoeuvre through the music scene.
I'm not super, super religious. If this is okay to say, I'm more culturally Jewish.
I consider myself more of a cultural Jew; I'm not religious in any way.
The thirties were troublesome in Belfast, and then of course there was no work for people, and it was terribly religiously divided.
We'll limit in all ways the work of religious faiths which are foreign to us.
We had better dispense with the personification of evil, because it leads, all too easily, to the most dangerous kind of war: religious war.
Liberty depends on self-restraint. Freedom is freedom only when controlled and limited.
It doesn't matter what color, sex, religion, age, sexual orientation, etc., everyone should have the same freedoms and liberties.
Men make the moral code and they expect women to accept it. They have decided that it is entirely right and proper for men to fight for their liberties and their rights, but that it is not right and proper for women to fight for theirs.
The beliefs which we have the most warrant for have no safeguard, but a standing invitation to the whole world to prove them unfounded.
I'm too sexy for a grocery store. John Carter Quinn
Now-a-days, men wear a fool's cap, and call it a liberty cap.
Among the natural rights of the colonists are these: First a right to life, secondly to liberty, and thirdly to property; together with the right to defend them in the best manner they can.
The Statue of Liberty's gender changed nothing. It was the same here as anywhere: men and their wars.
Under the rule of a repressive whole, liberty can be made into a powerful instrument of domination.
The Pledge of Allegiance says 'liberty and justice for all'. Which part of 'all' don't you understand?
The ideology of capitalism makes us all into connoisseurs of liberty - of the indefinite expansion of possibility.
Liberty, taking the word in its concrete sense, consists in the ability to choose.