Like sex in Victorian England, the reality of Big Business today is our big dirty secret. |
Look around: Almost no one, including former strong supporters, is calling for you to run. Ralph, please think of the long term. Don't run. |
MasterCard should lighten up, they are taking their name 'Master' too seriously, ... This is America. |
Microsoft doesn't respect the antitrust laws, and it has amply demonstrated that it can't be trusted. The company has shown its contempt for any court-imposed changes in its conduct. If the government ends the antitrust case by seeking changes in its conduct, but not in its structure, Microsoft can be expected to creatively evade the thrust of such agreements. |
Most of them (Democrats and Republicans) are politicians with fingers to the wind, ... And if I win, we'll be giving them a lot of wind. |
Mr. James, you are in a unique position to stand up for the people who make the products you endorse and to make the world a better place in the process. You can improve their working conditions in the contracted factories and pressure the entire sports shoe and apparel industry to change, |
Neither party can afford to stand tall for the American people and oppose the takeover of our political government by big business, |
No presidential candidate should visit Las Vegas without condemning organized gambling. |
Not a single candidate who I am aware of ever looks at the American people and says to them, 'Do you want to be more powerful against the rich and powerful? That's why this campaign is so different. |
O'Neill is in the minority. They take it as a deduction. If it isn't compensation, then what is it? |
Obviously, the answer to oil spills is to paper-train the tankers. |
Obviously, the answer to oil spills is to paper-train the tankers. |
Of course not, no. Less chance than John Kerry and George W. Bush dropping out. |
of increasing the number of presidential debates and including more voices in those debates. |
Often you used the name of your home town as a metaphor for your 1992 presidential campaign, 'The man from Hope. Well, I am sure that many Katrina-displaced families now homeless, or huddling with friends or relatives or in shacks wish that you would give them some hope. |