We have the duty to protect the life of an unborn child. |
We have the means to change the laws we find unjust or onerous. We cannot, as citizens, pick and choose the laws we will or will not obey. |
We in America have learned bitter lessons from two world wars: It is better to be here [in Europe] ready to protect the peace, than to take blind shelter across the sea, rushing to respond only after freedom is lost. We've learned that isolationism never was and never will be an acceptable response to tyrannical governments with an expansionist intent. |
We might come closer to balancing the Budget if all of us lived closer to the Commandments and the Golden Rule. |
We must not look to government to solve our problems. Government is the problem. |
We must reject the idea that every time a law's broken, society is guilty rather than the lawbreaker. It is time to restore the American precept that each individual is accountable for his actions. |
We need you, we need your youth, your strength, and your idealism, to help us make right what is wrong. |
We ought to take a serious look and see if we haven't interfered with the democratic rights of the people. |
We relax at the ranch, which if not heaven itself, probably has the same zip code. |
We seek a constitutional amendment to permit voluntary school prayer. God should never have been expelled from America's classrooms in the first place. |
We share this pain with all of the people of our country. This is truly a national loss. Nineteen years ago, almost to the day, we lost three astronauts in a terrible accident on the ground. But we've never lost an astronaut in flight. We've never had a tragedy like this. |
We should declare war on North Vietnam - we could pave the whole country and put parking strips on it, and still be home by Christmas |
We should measure welfare's success by how many people leave welfare, not by how many are added |
We think there is a parallel between the Federal involvement in education and the decline in quality over recent years. |
We who live in free market societies believe that growth, prosperity and ultimately human fulfillment, are created from the bottom up, not the government down. Only when the human spirit is allowed to invent and create, only when individuals are given a personal stake in deciding economic policies and benefiting from their success -- only then can societies remain economically alive, dynamic, progressive, and free. Trust the people. This is the one irrefutable lesson of the entire postwar period contradicting the notion that rigid government controls are essential to economic development. |