A Quote by Dave Myers

I live in France a lot of the time, in the Loire Valley. — © Dave Myers
I live in France a lot of the time, in the Loire Valley.
The Loire Valley is grossly underestimated. The prices are fair, and the wines are real.
I was chased through a chateau in the Loire Valley by a bunch of American school girls.
I'm opposed to wearing headscarves in public places. That's not France. There's something I just don't understand: the people who come to France, why would they want to change France, to live in France the same way they lived back home?
I wouldn't say that I know a lot about 'Silicon Valley'. I live in Boston, for one thing. And I don't live and breathe this stuff the way most of the guys out there do.
There are a lot of billionaires in Silicon Valley, but in the end, we are all heading to the same place. If given the choice between making a lot of money or finding a way to make people live longer, what do you choose?
Once you've lived in France, you don't want to live anywhere else, including France.
Listen, if the people in my district wanted to live in France, they'd move to France.
In France, you can sell a lot, but nobody outside of France ever hears of it.
I spend a lot of time in the Valley. I'm probably down there every other week or so.
A lot of folks are still demanding more evidence before they actually consider Iraq a threat. For example, France wants more evidence. And you know I'm thinking, the last time France wanted more evidence they rolled right through Paris with the German flag.
There's a big difference between France and the U.S. In the U.S., immigrants must work to live. In France, they're taken care of by public finances. In France, there are millions of unemployed people already. We cannot house them, give them health care, education... finance people who keep coming and coming.
The reason why all of us naturally began to live in France is because France has scientific methods, machines and electricity, but does not really believe that these things have anything to do with the real business of living.
France has neither winter, nor summer, nor morals. France is miserable because it is filled with Frenchmen, and Frenchmen are miserable because they live in France.
I spent a lot of time in a small town in France, growing up.
France has lived a long time - eight or nine centuries - and yet art in France, too, was derivative up until the 19th Century.
The study of social progress is to-day not less needed in literature than is the analysis of the human heart. We live in an age of universal investigation, and of exploration of the sources of all movements. France, for example, loves at the same time history and the drama, because the one explores the vast destinies of humanity, and the other the individual lot of man. These embrace the whole of life. But it is the province of religion, of philosophy, of pure poetry only, to go beyond life, beyond time, into eternity.
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