My girlfriend works at Hooters. In the kitchen.
If I am to be known for anything, I would like it to be for encouraging Canadians, for knowing a little bit about their daily, extraordinary courage. And for wanting that courage to be recognized.
We owe the Aboriginal peoples a debt that is four centuries old. It is their turn to become full partners, in developing an even greater Canada. And the reconciliation required may be less a matter of legal texts than of attitudes of the heart.
I am told that there is a proverbial phrase among the Inuit: 'a long time ago, in the future. ' Let the children see our history, and maybe it will help to shape the future.
The hope of courage lies in every heart, together with the fear that we will fail. When the test came, you did not fail.
We send our [peacekeepers] off to some disputed zone, full of local intrigue and power blocs and uncertainty and danger, and they are supposed to save lives not with their weapons, but through their competence and their character. And they do it.
I fear that by gaining a limit, we'll lose an excuse.
If you have great people around you, they will take you higher than your dream will. Leaders are never self-made. Those closest to you determine your level of success, so choosing the right companions as partners in pursuit of your vision is an important decision. My advice is to surround yourself with talented people who will challenge you, help you grow and inspire you to maximize your potential.
Everyone experiences tough times, it is a measure of your determination and dedication how you deal with them and how you can come through them.
What men deny is not God, but some preposterous idol of the imagination.
The road itself is informative, because it forces you to respond spontaneously and to encounter the unexpected. It forces you to reassess what you felt about people or issues or places, and it forces you to live in the present.