Top 9 Quotes & Sayings by Georgie Anne Geyer

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American journalist Georgie Anne Geyer.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Georgie Anne Geyer

Georgie Anne Geyer was an American journalist who covered the world as a foreign correspondent for the Chicago Daily News and then became a syndicated columnist for the Universal Press Syndicate. Her columns focused on foreign affairs issues and appeared in approximately 120 newspapers in North and South America. She was the author of ten books, including a biography of Fidel Castro and a memoir of her life as a foreign correspondent, Buying the Night Flight.

The United States must keep what it has - diversity and tolerance - which make us what we are.
We should not and cannot change all our differences. Each of us brings from our own background things which we should share. There is good in diversity.
The more revolutions occur, the less things change. — © Georgie Anne Geyer
The more revolutions occur, the less things change.
An idea is growing in foreign policy circles in Washington ... that there is no turning back. We are stuck in Iraq and Afghanistan for 25 to 40 years, we are embedded in our prideful unilateralism, and nothing can return us to more traditional American values and principles of action. The hubristic creators of this "inevitability" planned it this way. ... Their failures in Iraq have not stopped the fanatic, power-hungry neoconservatives. ... The hard-liners who dominate this administration ... have led us to eternal conflict with Muslims.
Not only does the world scarcely know who the Latin American man is, the world has barely cared.
The world's culture is changing, adapting. People are keeping what's good in a culture, and sweeping out the rest.
I truly believe that women of my generation can bring a new cleansing element to American public life.
Follow what you love!... Don't deign to ask what they are looking for out there. Ask what you have inside. Follow not your interests, which change, but what you are and what you love, which will and should not change.
It was when reporters became journalists and when objectivity gave way to searching for truth, that an aura of distrust and fear arose around the New Journalist.
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