A Quote by Susan Collins

What I find is with all due deference to - deference to our male colleagues, that women's styles tend to be more collaborative. — © Susan Collins
What I find is with all due deference to - deference to our male colleagues, that women's styles tend to be more collaborative.
I just think that we show an awful lot of deference to chefs in our culture and maybe not enough deference to customers.
There is great power in deference. Deference works with everybody.
Democrats, myself included, tend to respect and value expertise and find that people who have established a record of accuracy and developed a model that's proven to be beneficial over time should be people accorded great deference when they opine on a topic that they have demonstrated past mastery over.
I think women bring a different perspective into Senate and that we tend to be more collaborative in our approach.
Among the arts of conversation no one pleases more than mutual deference or civility, which leads us to resign our own inclinations to those of our companions, and to curb and conceal that presumption and arrogance so natural to the human mind.
It is unjust to exact that men shall do out of deference to our advice what they have no desire to do for themselves.
If we wish our civilization to survive we must break with the habit of deference to great men.
... it would be impossible for women to stand in higher estimation than they do here. The deference that is paid to them at all times and in all places has often occasioned me as much surprise as pleasure.
Men do tend to talk about things on a much higher level. Many of my male colleagues, when they go to the House floor, you know, they've got some pie chart or graph behind them and they're talking about trillions of dollars and how, you know, the debt is awful and, you know, we all agree with that we need our male colleagues to understand that if you can bring it down to a woman's level and what everything that she is balancing in her life - that's the way to go.
Nothing is more natural to men in office, than to look with peculiar deference towards that authority to which they owe their official existence.
Deference and intimacy live far apart.
Great men always pay deference to greater.
People who expect deference resent mere civility.
Most of our fellow-subjects are guided either by the prejudice of education or by a deference to the judgment of those who perhaps in their own hearts disapprove the opinions which they industriously spread among the multitude.
I hate to say there are female and male ways of dealing with power, because I think each of us has a male and a female part. But based on my own experience, women will tend to be inclusive, to reach out more, to care a little more.
The most congenial social occasions are those ruled by cheerful deference of each for all.
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