A Quote by Kevin Spacey

I might have lived in England for the last several years, but I'm still an American citizen and I have not given up my right to privacy. — © Kevin Spacey
I might have lived in England for the last several years, but I'm still an American citizen and I have not given up my right to privacy.
Look, I might have lived in England for the last several years but I'm still an American citizen and I have not given up my right to privacy.
I became an American citizen three years ago, and if I'd been arrested, maybe that wouldn't have happened. That was a very proud moment, by the way. I still have my Irish passport, but becoming an American citizen was important in terms of my family.
She had lived in that house fourteen years, and every year she had demanded of John that she be given a pet of some strange exotic breed. Not that she did not have enough animals. She had collected several wild and broken animals that, in a way, had become exotic by their breaking. Their roof would have collapsed from the number of birds who might have lived there if the desert hadn't killed three- quarters of those that tried to cross it. Still every animal that came within a certain radius of that house was given a welcome-the tame, the half born, the wild, the wounded.
My education has been pro-England. I have been an England-minded citizen of Hamburg, and I am still in a way English-minded, but I have been disappointed by the Brits over the years.
I grew up in Chicago, but for the last 28 years I've lived in Moscow and London, and am now a British citizen. From 1996 to 2005, my firm, Hermitage Capital, was one of the largest investment advisers in Russia with more than $4 billion invested in Russian stocks.
In the last several years, I have been troubled by the right shift of the Republican party too far to the right.
Privacy is absolutely essential to maintaining a free society. The idea that is at the foundation of the notion of privacy is that the citizen is not the tool or instrument of government - but the reverse... If you have no privacy, it will tend to follow that you have no political freedom.
Taking privacy cues from the federal government is - to say the least - ironic, considering today's Orwellian level of surveillance. At virtually any given time outside of one's own home, an American citizen can reasonably assume his movements and actions are being monitored by something, by somebody, somewhere.
I lived a normal life for a number of years. I had kids. I lived up on a farm in Gloucestershire in rural England, and just kind of got back to reality again.
David Dhawan is the scientist of entertainment and has given me the opportunity over the last 20 years to work in several films.
I was born in Brazil, I was an American citizen for about 10 years. I thought of myself as a global citizen.
Whoever is fortunate enough to be an American citizen came into the greatest inheritance man has ever enjoyed. He has had the benefit of every heroic and intellectual effort men have made for many thousands of years, realized at last. If Americans should now turn back, submit again to slavery, it would be a betrayal so base the human race might better perish.
I still remember, 40 years ago, when I was shackled and put in prison... Being an American citizen didn't mean a thing.
Although I've lived in England for more than twenty years, I still have a foreigner's passion for all the details of English history and rural life.
If you had been a public figure from the time you were a toddler, if you'd had to fight for a life that felt real and honest and normal against all odds, than maybe to you might value privacy above all else. I have given everything up there from the time that I was three-years old. That's reality show enough, don't you think?
Facebook says, 'Privacy is theft,' because they're selling your lack of privacy to the advertisers who might show up one day.
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