Top 14 Quotes & Sayings by Dan Glickman

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Dan Glickman.
Last updated on April 15, 2025.
Dan Glickman

Daniel Robert Glickman is an American politician, lawyer, lobbyist, and nonprofit leader. He served as the United States Secretary of Agriculture from 1995 until 2001, prior to which he represented Kansas's 4th congressional district as a Democrat in Congress for 18 years.

Technology has not only changed the way people are able to view movies, it has changed the way our industry produces and advertises movies.
Meat and poultry is safe. It's safer than it's probably ever been.
If China wants to be a constructive, active player in the world economy, it's got to respect intellectual property rights or it makes it pretty impossible to do business with them.
The creative works of the entertainment industry belong to the millions of people who make them and are not for others to steal or unlawfully distribute. — © Dan Glickman
The creative works of the entertainment industry belong to the millions of people who make them and are not for others to steal or unlawfully distribute.
I don't think we can go back to the old days. But I think that what the government needs to do is it needs to make sure that the pricing is fair, that you don't have monopolies out there, so that people don't have a chance to compete fairly.
Where there is a problem, the risks to the public are greater than they've ever been before.
The only way to see a movie is in a big theater, on a big screen, with a big bag of popcorn.
There's a tremendous intellectual fervor among independent filmmakers, and that has to be cultivated.
The movie industry is committed to working with the technology sector to find innovative new ways to deliver entertainment to consumers.
I'm someone who believes the only way to see a movie is in a big theater, on a big screen, with a big bag of popcorn.
The success of the movie industry comes from the story. And the story comes from somebody putting something down on paper.
Each year-in the fields, commercial kitchens, markets, stores, and restaurants-millions of pounds of food go to waste... We need to find ways to get this food into the mouths of the hungry and not into the mouth of the dumpster.
One of the trends we're seeing in food and agriculture is more and more consumers wanting to know things about their food and where and how it's grown and what's in it.
America's dumpsters should not be better fed than its people.
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