I'm tired of this discussion of capitalism and socialism; we live in the 21st century, we need an economic system that has democracy as its underpinnings and an ethical code.
You don't feel like you have to interact with a whole bunch of people when you get on Flipboard. It's not a source of social anxiety.
More young people believe they'll see a U.F.O. than that they'll see their own Social Security benefits.
Social networking platforms drove man closer to those in neighboring continents, while driving him further apart from those in his neighborhood.
Before social networking platforms, people needed to know you to know your name. Today, people only need to know your name to know you.
Through the evolutionary process, those who are able to engage in social cooperation of various sorts do better in survival and reproduction.
A lot of attention has been going to social values - abortion, gay rights, other divisive issues - but economic values are equally important.
I've got a presence on all the social networks, in fact, but I've never once sent a message. I'm there because otherwise, someone's going to pretend to be me.
Only after awhile. After it came out and people began to engage in discussions about the social reflections of the film that I realized it had an importance I hadn't thought of.
Noting that Huckleberry Finn was originally both valued and reviled because it shows the reader that the accepted moral code and social hierarchy is not always correct.
As a kid, I never thought I'd be an actress. Never, ever, ever, no way. I was really shy - bordering on social disorder shy - and I was really academic.
Sometimes losses in life are not losses at all. They are simply the evidence God provides, in order to build a story so profound, that it will cause social change.
I'm not here to affect you politically or socially. I'm here to make you laugh. I use the news as the palette for my jokes.
We need scientists and mathematicians explaining why they are excited about their subjects but also why they are important for solving social problems, informing political debate and for the economy.
In the early 1980s, I burned my Social Security card at the New Orleans Investment Conference in protest of the state pension system.
Right now, with social networks and other tools on the Internet, all of these 500 million people have a way to say what they're thinking and have their voice be heard.
I did actually like school. When I was 17, I was in college, but before that, I was home-schooled. I was very social. I liked to know everyone.
The effort to try to present the Social Security program as if it's a major problem, that's just a hidden way of trying to undermine and destroy it.
I was never a very convincing social conservative, and always avoided associating myself with that part of the broader conservative movement.
My body really, really wanted to reproduce when I was 15. It took a lot of civilization, socialization, willpower and some emulsion polymerization technology for me not to reproduce at 15.
I emerged in that incredible moment in the 1980s when all kinds of social questions about subjectivity and objectivity, about who was making, who was looking.