Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
My first memory of cinema is my mother taking me to see 'Silkwood,' which is about a whistleblower at a nuclear power plant.
There is no direct evidence that nuclear weapons prevented a world war. Conversely, it is known that they nearly caused one.
I think my mom drove by a nuclear power plant when she was pregnant. But I wouldn't be in 'The Station Agent' if she hadn't.
We [The United States] should be prepared to launch a pre-emption strike against Iran to eliminate their nuclear capability.
My feeling is that nuclear is a distraction. It stops us doing what we all know we need to do invest urgently in renewables.
My comedy is a nuclear bomb inside my mind. It's a weapon that's never been tested. It just blows up and flattens everybody.
By unleashing an active diplomacy on its nuclear activities, Iran has effectively neutralized the European and US policies,.
It would be our policy to use nuclear weapons wherever we felt it necessary to protect our forces and achieve our objectives.
Once our carrier fleet went all nuclear in 2005, we went from having two aircraft carrier homeports on the East Coast to one.
After he saw what happened to Saddam Hussein, he (Gadhafi) did not want to be Saddam Hussein. He gave up his nuclear program.
There's detailed information on how to assemble a nuclear weapon from parts. There's books about how to build a nuclear bomb.
We need to force Iran to dismantle its nuclear program entirely or face the threat of military force to destroy that program.
The thing that makes countries want to pursue some kind of nuclear deterrent is precisely the fact that they feel threatened.
I have heard that the Saudi Arabians are paying Greenpeace to campaign against Nuclear Power. It wouldn't surprise me at all.
The JCPOA is working - preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. It's time for the Republicans to start working, too.
We are one with God and He loves us. Now if that isn't a hazard to this country-How're we gonna keep building nuclear weapons?
I mean science was blamed for all the horrors of World War I, just as it's blamed today for nuclear weapons and quite rightly.
They [Iran] are going to end up getting nuclear. I met with Bibi Netanyahu the other day. Believe me, he's not a happy camper.
Football isn't nuclear physics, but it's not so simple that you can make it simple. It takes some explaining to get it across.
In the 1990s, the United States offered to help North Korea with its energy needs if it gave up its nuclear weapons programme.
Boys like Peter are afraid of alot of things, like nuclear annihilation and flunking algebra, but they're not afraid of wolves.
The nuclear industry is currently undergoing a rebirth. The uranium market will remain tight for at least the next three years.
We must not allow the Iranian regime to use the nation's vast energy resource as a financial pipeline for its nuclear ambitions.
As we speak, Iran has rolled back its nuclear program, shipped out its uranium stockpile, and the world has avoided another war.
Look, Israel doesn't intend to introduce nuclear weapons, but if people are afraid that we have them, why not? It's a deterrent.
We have wide-ranging joint projects in the nuclear energy sphere, logistics, machine building and trade as a whole [with China].
In the late '30's when I was in college, physics - and in particular, nuclear physics - was the most exciting field in the world.
It is in the U.S. interest to engage Iran in serious negotiations - on both regional security and the nuclear challenge it poses.
Crabgrass can grow on bowling balls in airless rooms, and there is no known way to kill it that does not involve nuclear weapons.
For while the threat of nuclear holocaust has been significantly reduced, the world remains a very unsettled and dangerous place.
Climate change poses an existential threat to the planet that is no less dire than that posed by North Korea's nuclear ambitions.
I'm not a film-school guy. I was a high-school dropout. I was on a nuclear submarine. I was an electrician. I was a house painter.
I especially remain firmly opposed to a nuclear Iran and will review all related policies and proposed actions from that position.
If we had adhered to the concept of connectedness, then we would not have created nuclear weapons, huge armies and global warming.
As a nuclear power - as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon - the United States has a moral responsibility to act.
I think that Iran with a nuclear weapon is extremely destabilizing. I think it could precipitate a nuclear arms race in the region.
The only countries that have successfully moved from fossil fuels to low-carbon power have done so with the help of nuclear energy.
No one in the United States has become seriously ill or has died because of any kind of accident at a civilian nuclear power plant.
Walt Disney had a nuclear imagination before the advent of nuclear, some comprehension of apocalypse and rapture deep in his genes.
When the world has 1,000, 2,000, 3,000 nuclear plants, can we call that a safe world? I think we need to properly have this debate.
No amount of sanctioning will persuade North Korea to give up nuclear weapons, nor will China step up and solve the problem for us.
Washington's adventuristic policy, whipping up international tension to the utmost, is pushing mankind towards nuclear catastrophe.
Nuclear arms kill many people all at once, but other weapons kill many people, little by little, every day, everywhere in the world.
The nightmare of the Cold War was nuclear weapons in the hands of an irrational person. I don't want to live through that nightmare.
Crimea was not a non-nuclear zone in an international law sense but was part of Ukraine, a state which doesn't possess nuclear arms.
The Arabs are ready to accept a strong Israel with nuclear arms - all it has to do is open the gates of its fortress and make peace.
Iran is a state sponsor of terrorism. And for them to be able to provide nuclear technology to non-state actors, that's unacceptable.
For decades, Iran has covertly worked to develop a nuclear weapons program and has repeatedly violated its international obligations.