Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Kay Granger.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
Norvell Kay Granger is an American Republican politician from the U.S. state of Texas. She has represented the state's 12th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives since 1997. She has been the ranking member of the United States House Committee on Appropriations since 2019, when Rodney Frelinghuysen retired.
In responding to a terrorist attack, there are only two choices - take the fight to the enemy or wait until they hit you again. In my estimation, America chose the first.
I lived in Meadowbrook. I went to church at Meadowbrook United Methodist Church. I went to school at Meadowbrook Elementary School and then Meadowbrook Middle School. I learned to dance at Meadowbrook Country Club. All those things grounded me in one place and I think most of Fort Worth is just like the area I grew up in.
The blame for the 9/11 attacks lays squarely and exclusively with the Al-Qaeda network.
I started selling insurance in 1979 and continued doing that until 1985 when I opened my own insurance firm.
Human rights are not a privilege granted by the few, they are a liberty entitled to all, and human rights, by definition, include the rights of all humans, those in the dawn of life, the dusk of life, or the shadows of life.
It was while starting my business that I saw my first glimpse of government's impact on business.
It has been said that a nation reveals its character by the values it upholds.
Bottoms line: terrorists are always at work.
Having removed the dictator, the allies have moved to put Iraqis in control of Iraq. Now, as they draft and ratify their Constitution, we will indeed see the character of a new Iraqi nation revealed through the principles it chooses to uphold.
I reached a time in college when I didn't know what I wanted to do. At that time, women's careers were essentially nursing, secretarial and teaching. My mother advised me to get my teacher's certificate.
Foreign aid must be viewed as an investment, not an expense.
Foreign aid must be viewed as an investment, not an expense...but when foreign aid is carefully guided and targeted at a specific issue, it can and must be effective.
A democracy in the Middle East must be more than a democracy in name only - it must live out its principles.