I'm an activist; I have to be angry all the time. That's what we do!
I have an activist's desire to improve people's lives.
I was an activist long before I even entertained the possibility of being an actor.
I and you and everyone else has to be a political activist.
My fans are activists they will fight with you to defend me.
When they put me in jail, that's when they turned me into an activist. Up until the time I went to jail, I was just a comedian.
I have been a lifelong community activist and frankly did not dream of being in public office.
I have learned that a woman can be a fighter, a freedom fighter, a political activist, and that she can fall in love, and be loved, she can be married, have children, be a mother. . . Revolution must mean life also; every aspect of life.
It never hurts to be involved in any political or activist organization. I can never see how participation would be a bad thing. The key is being true to what you participate with and who.
Being an activist is about getting things done. It's not about standing around shaking your fist in anger.
If you are an activist, you have to stay active on a daily basis.
You're either an activist or an inactivist. I want to stop this.
An activist is someone who makes an effort to see problems that are not being addressed and then makes an effort to make their voice heard. Sometimes there are so many things that it's almost impossible to make your voice heard in every area, but you can sure try.
I never really saw myself as an activist but at some point the activist is the only moral position to take.
Obviously the transgender movement has not progressed in the way that the gay and lesbian movement has. But Im an activist - thats just the kind of person I am.
John Brown first swam into my vision in the 1960s when I was a political activist in the civil rights movement and the anti-war movement at Chapel Hill, where I went to university.
I have my writing therapy. For me, writing and friends therapy is an internal journey where you go in deep, you reflect, you try to heal your inner child. But as an activist, there's the outward, going wide therapy, where you get to realize at a certain point that talking about yourself gets boring. And it's also unhealthy to be so much into yourself. At some point, you have got to be able to look at the issue and say, "It's not about you. It's about a culture, a people, a nation, a family. "
I can't remember when I wasn't an animal rights activist.
I have referred to myself as an accidental activist on more than one occasion.
I learned a lot about what it was like to have to use different hotels and not use the bathrooms, which made me more determined to be an activist.