Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Nick Clooney.
Last updated on November 23, 2024.
Nicholas Joseph Clooney is an American journalist, anchorman, and television host. He is the brother of singer Rosemary Clooney and the father of actor George Clooney.
In economic panics throughout history, the wiping out of the savings accounts of lower earners and the middle class has often led to social revolution, sometimes violent upheavals.
Our nest eggs, no matter how small, are safe.
What the F.D.I.C. does is to put the full faith and credit of the United States government behind every savings account in the nation, up to a limit that has changed over the years and stands now at $100,000.
One of the pleasant duties of America's most famous announcers during the relatively short swing era of the big bands was to host late-night remotes from some of the most famous ballrooms throughout the country.
For some reason, on that sparkling afternoon last week, I actually saw the coal that was passing by and it set me to thinking how important coal was to our everyday lives when I was a little boy.
We like to believe that, in our lifetime, the human condition is improving.
As I listened, it occurred to me that interest in and affection for the animals that share the planet with us may be a more unifying force than any other.
We didn't defeat the Nazis by becoming Nazis.
In my opinion, the president is right to address future funding, even though Social Security will show a surplus through 2018 and will not run out of funds until 2042.
We decided that how we react to and treat those fellow mortals, wild and domestic, tells us more about ourselves than, perhaps, some of us want to know.
Those who actually hate animals to the point of being cruel to them are outcasts to the rest of us, no matter where in the world they live.
The kind of Iraq that emerges from all of this is ultimately out of our hands.
A salute from this corner to President Bush for saying he was willing to investigate raising or eliminating the cap on salaries subject to the Social Security tax.
The quality that defines us as Americans is the courage to respond to being hit. The courage to root out and destroy the killers. And, most importantly, the courage to hold on to our values and protect our hard-won freedoms while doing it.
The worst thing that can happen to us in an ideological struggle is to become what we are fighting.
Perhaps our Irish friends should not so completely turn their backs on their historical dishes, no matter how many jokes they might have to endure.
Conventional wisdom holds that setting a timetable for getting American troops out of Iraq would be a mistake.
Our actions in the Middle East over the last 15 years have already guaranteed radical Muslims quite enough ammunition to kill Americans for the next century, even if Guantanamo did not exist.
America, the temple of invention and industry, doesn't make things anymore.
It is impossible to exaggerate the wide, and widening, gulf between the American attitude on the Iraq war and the view from our friends across the Atlantic.
We don't defeat evil by becoming evil.
It is statesmanlike for the administration and Congress to look to our nation's welfare beyond their terms in office.
No matter how many troops we have in place or how long they stay, we cannot impose a parliamentary democracy there any more than the insurgents can impose a theocracy.
Respect and affection for animals, particularly those who share our homes, recognize no geographic borders.
America has faced much more difficult times, including potential national extinction, without flinching.
When runaway inflation and bank failures struck in Germany in the 1920s, the middle class was destroyed, which led directly to the rise of the Nazis.
Currently, 94 out of 100 of us pay the Social Security tax all year round.
Social Security is at last on the nation's front burner.
Whatever its other limitations, the Big Apple and those who live there make room for their dogs and cats, take good care of them and abide by the rules made necessary by a huge population.
In matters large and small, many people seemed concerned about churlishness, an ugliness in our relationships that appears to be increasing rather than decreasing.