Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I am an affirmative action hire.
The affirmative of affirmatives... is love.
I answer in the affirmative with an emphatic 'No.'
The third fallacy is that affirmative action doesn't work.
Affirmative action was always racial justice on the cheap.
I think that affirmative action programs can be very important.
I don't know what this definition of affirmative action is for some.
I don't want affirmative action - too much affirmative, not enough action.
I support affirmative action. I support special measures when you need it.
So many of our conversations (about affirmative action) have been dishonest
Affirmative action is something that I think is very crucial and necessary.
Affirmative action is not something that the World Bank believes in or promotes.
It is always easier to believe than to deny. Our minds are naturally affirmative.
Affirmative action is an effort to include every aspect of society in the decision making.
To abandon affirmative action is to say there is nothing more to be done about discrimination.
If they're all so brilliant and I'm such an affirmative-action hire, how come they didn't catch me?
If you don't like affirmative action, what is your plan to guarantee a level playing field of opportunity?
You can't be a minority in this society without having someone express disapproval about affirmative action.
Affirmative action was never meant to be permanent, and now is truly the time to move on to some other approach.
Affirmative action works but we're going to need to muster all our political resources if we are to keep it in place.
A Confucian or Jewish love of learning would gain minorities far more than any affirmative action laws we might pass.
There's been the same kind of demonizing of the word 'feminism' as words like 'liberal,' 'affirmative action,' and so on.
When I call myself an affirmative action baby, I'm talking about the essence of what affirmative action was when it started.
Everything is possible. Anything is possible at any time and at any time in life. That's such an affirmative kind of feeling.
Affirmative action based on quotas is wrong - wrong because it is antithetical to the genius of the American idea: individual liberty.
Affirmative action has a negative effect on our society when it means counting us like so many beans and dividing us into separate piles.
I looked up affirmative action once in Wikipedia, and it said, 'A measure by which white men are discriminated against,' and I got so mad.
If we are prepared to invest the necessary time and effort, affirmative action can contribute to Harvard's quality and not detract from it.
I think Bush has capitulated on affirmative action and government spending. Apart from that, he's OK, I guess. About the same as Howard Dean.
I was critical of race-based affirmative action early on in my career and I've changed my mind. And I've publicly acknowledged that I was wrong.
I think it's worth putting energy into affirmative action in terms of having diversity in positions of power because the door was shut for so long.
Perhaps McCain has opposed affirmative action for so long that he doesn't know it's about inviting more people to meet standards, not lowering them.
To be sure Plato did not favor 'affirmative action' to fill political and military offices in his own society; nor did he enroll women in his school.
In theory, affirmative action certainly has all the moral symmetry that fairness requires. It is reformist and corrective, even repentent and redemptive.
There are cultural biases built into testing, and that was one of the motivations for the concept of affirmative action - to try to balance out those effects.
When population shifts - brought about by fair housing laws, affirmative action and landmark school desegregation rulings - political power is challenged as well.
I'm always excited when I make it on anyone's list - even if it's for affirmative action. My attitude is, 'Am I the token woman on this list? Because I'll take it.'
The question of whether there exists a Creator and Ruler of the Universe has been answered in the affirmative by some of the highest intellects that have ever existed.
The call of death is a call of love. Death can be sweet if we answer it in the affirmative, if we accept it as one of the great eternal forms of life and transformation.
What is so remarkable about the success of affirmative action is that it has been accomplished despite the Justice Department and the policies of the federal government.
Republicans can be a funny bunch. They're against affirmative action, but they always seem to be able to find people of color to fill a slot just when they're most needed.
Here's the point - you're looking at affirmative action, and you're looking at marijuana. You legalize marijuana, no need for quotas, because really, who's gonna wanna work?
I regard affirmative action as pernicious - a system that had wonderful ideals when it started but was almost immediately abused for the benefit of white middle-class women.
For a long time, the Court has moved toward outlawing all forms of racial preference, including affirmative action, and Obama seems accepting, even supportive, of the change.
There's a lot of Americans, black and white, who think that we've arrived where we need to be and nothing else needs to be done and affirmative action needs to be dismantled.
Well, certainly one of the ironies of the success of affirmative action is that the middle class within the black community no longer lives within 'black community' by and large.
Affirmative action has been generally cast in terms of race. I think women themselves are not as cognizant of the role affirmative action has played in opening the doors for women.
Art for Duchamp, all the arts, obey the same law: meta-irony is inherent in their very spirit. It is an irony that destroys its own negation and, hence, returns in the affirmative.
And nothing embittered me, which is important, because I think ethnic people and women in this society can end up being embittered because of the lack of affirmative action, you know.
My views on everything from welfare to a balanced budget to affirmative action can be traced to what Buddy and Helen Watts taught me as a young boy growing up poor but proud in Eufaula.