Love can complete you. It can also destroy you.
I love England, the people, the parks, the theatre.
I don't believe in politics. I'm an anarchist, I guess you could say. I think people could be just fine looking after themselves.
The common man or women, whether they are Israeli or Palestinian, Protestant or Catholic or Iraqi or American, the common man just wants to live in peace and justice in a clean environment. When we look around the world and we see that is not the case, we know the will of the majority is not being listened to, that's the first sign that our system is broken.
I do smoke, but I don't go through all this trouble just because I want to make my drug of choice legal. It's about personal freedom. We should have the right in this country to do what we want, if we don't hurt anybody. Seventy-two million people in this country have smoked pot. Eighteen to 20 million in the last year. These people should not be treated as criminals.
My main hope for myself is to be where I am.
You know you are in love when the two of you can go grocery shopping together.
There would be no Sherlock Holmes if it were not for serial publication.
You cannot become great women if you are not also good women. Great women respond generously to their instincts to do good.
One problem I have with talking about myself in the context of class divisiveness is that I can be - and indeed have been - used by others to demonstrate its absence and that it's only a matter of hard work to move upward socially. After all, how could I complain about anything, if the retort is: "But look where you got to? It can't be all that bad. " But this is nonsense as an argument quite aside from its empirical absurdity because no single case can invalidate a statistical claim.
I'm psyched about what I can contribute that can be meaningful to myself and to others.