For me, the live show is sort of the ultimate expression of this journey that I've been on.
I think all of us, politicians and churchmen, should do our utmost to change the society so that there would be no need for violence.
Obviously I prefer freedom, but I know, and I think all history has told us, that freedom cannot flow from anarchy and disorder.
I don't see any easy way of disqualifying people on the basis that they decide not to work.
I bear solemn witness to the fact that NATO heads of state and of government meet only to go through the tedious motions of reading speeches, drafted by others, with the principal objective of not rocking the boat.
When they are 50 yards from Parliament Hill, they are no longer honourable members, they are just nobodies.
I think that the only ultimate guide we have is our conscience, and if the law of the land goes against our conscience I think we should disobey the law.
The important thing was that we were being polite and not saying all the things that were making us unhappy, which was the only way we knew how to love each other.
I like the level of fame that I have. You get nice tables in restaurants sometimes, but fame isn't something that I find comfortable.
It's like you can't even go on the radio anymore and condemn a whole subset of people to hell without getting some blowback.
If she [Hillary Clinton] had not stood by the guy at any point, that might have meant the end of his [Bill Clinton's] career.