Top 1200 Retirement Speech Quotes & Sayings - Page 7

Explore popular Retirement Speech quotes.
Last updated on November 24, 2024.
Everyone thinks about retirement at some point.
Anyone with a pension or retirement is an investor in the stock market.
I actually think it is people like myself who have been fighting for our rights to free speech and I would like the right to defend my own right to free speech, not have soldiers doing it for me. I don't think I need soldiers.
There's no retirement for an artist,its your way of living so theres no end to it. — © Bono
There's no retirement for an artist,its your way of living so theres no end to it.
I didn't realise I had a speech impediment until I came back to England. I spent the whole of my life working abroad, and no-one mentioned it. I came back to England and suddenly realised I had a speech impediment.
Retirement? You're talking about death, right?
Retirement is having nothing to do and someone always keeping you from it.
A short retirement urges a sweet return.
Returnless risk is not how you prepare for a decent retirement.
I think that retirement is the first step towards the grave.
'Returnless risk' is not how you prepare for a decent retirement.
I grew up in a retirement community in Florida.
My father settled in Chandigarh after his retirement.
I'm part of a speech therapy programme called the McGuire Programme. It teaches you a new way to breathe, a new way to speak, a brand new way of tackling the mind-sets that come with having a speech impediment. Mainly, it teaches you how to slow things down, and that has really helped me.
I believe in freedom of speech, and at the same time I think that sometimes it can be worth it to not say something. In my opinion there is a sort of limit to that freedom, but where that limit exactly lies is open for discussion. As soon as there is no longer any discussion possible, than it has reached its limits and therefore freedom of speech will no longer exist.
In China, your freedom is always limited, but this limitation applies to almost everyone. If someone does injustice to you, though, you have to find a way to avenge yourself - even by illegal measures. In a sense, injustice is more personal. This idea has always been in Chinese history. I think we read about freedom of speech, or lack of freedom of speech, in China so often. But I don't think people here in America think about how justice, or the idea of justice, is so important in a Chinese setting. It's probably more important than freedom of speech in the Chinese mindset at this moment.
I just don't like people taking debt into retirement. — © Michelle Singletary
I just don't like people taking debt into retirement.
As in all successful ventures, the foundation of a good retirement is planning.
Retirement is not in my vocabulary. They aren't going to get rid of me that way.
[Larry Kramer] got really mad at me once. The precipitating incident was a speech at Yale by the first President Bush's Secretary of Heath and Human Services, Louis Sullivan, against which Larry led a demonstration. He got the demonstrators to drown out Sullivan's speech, which wasn't allowed.
I cannot imagine not working. I don't understand the word 'retirement.'
To enjoy a long, comfortable retirement, save more today.
Maybe forced retirement isn't necessary after all.
The word 'retirement' is not in my vocabulary right now.
Death is an endless retirement with a pension of nothingness.
Retirement is a waste of time. The economy needs you!
The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off.
Gramophone and movies were merely the mechanization of speech and gesture. But the radio and TV were not just the electronification of speech and gesture but the electronification of the entire range of human personal expressiveness. With electronification the flow is taken out of the wire and into the vacuum tube circuit, which confers freedom and flexibility such as are in metaphor and in words themselves.
My daughter Mira's first media experience was with the first-generation iPad more than five years ago. Her speech therapist used this with her to encourage her to talk, as she was speech delayed. I watched as she immediately navigated the iPad naturally, with such ease.
Retirement should be a happier time, conditioned upon not being ill.
There is no such thing as absolute free speech; there are only absolute rights of private property. Speech is circumscribed by private property rights. You may deliver a disquisition in my virtual or actual living room only if I permit you to so do.
My retirement plan was in place but Bernie Maidoff with my money.
Hang in there, retirement is only thirty years away!
Paula, your retirement is the one that every athlete dreams.
Retirement without the love of letters is a living burial.
Traveling is really exhausting. That will force me into retirement.
For now I'm building up stories for the retirement home!
There is nothing wrong with athletes coming back from retirement.
The First Amendment's language leaves no room for inference that abridgments of speech and press can be made just because they are slight. That Amendment provides, in simple words, that "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." I read "no law . . . abridging" to mean no law abridging.
I don't hate the idea of retirement. I am looking forward to it. — © Edwin van der Sar
I don't hate the idea of retirement. I am looking forward to it.
Its harder for people to seek retirement from themselves than from the law
I was honestly contemplating retirement. A lot of people don't know that, but I was done.
And you can save more money for retirement. It’s not just about marshmallows.
[On retirement savings:] Gone today, here tomorrow.
I expect to work for as long as I can. I can't imagine retirement.
There's nothing in the Bible that talks about retirement.
I'm not going to play volleyball until the retirement age.
I never had the sense that there was an end: that there was a retirement or that there was a jackpot.
I think, you know, we always tell candidates, show, don`t tell, what you`re all about. I think Hillary Clinton's speech was an important speech that people are going to look at and they`re going to see not just the attacks on Donald Trump, but also her admission that maybe she`d been part of the polarization problem as well and she could do better.
Earlier in my political career, I had the opportunity to read the speech, and I almost threw up. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/post/santorum-says-he-almost-threw-up-after-reading-jfk-speech-on-separation-of-church-and-state/2012/02/26/gIQA91hubR_blog.html)
We need to respect free speech, but we need to respect one another's rights to free speech, too.
I have to think about the possible ramifications of an early retirement. — © Ehud Olmert
I have to think about the possible ramifications of an early retirement.
Retirement: a brand new beginning! How wonderful!
When you get to 60, the word "retirement" comes in on every conversation.
I thought that one of the things that we were losing sight of is the basic reasons that we do protect free speech and freedom of the press and the essentiality and centrality in our lives of really giving broad protection to freedom of speech and freedom of the press in America. I thought I could do that by telling stories of some of the cases that established those principles on a real life on the ground basis.
What if we thought of health and security in retirement as one basket?
The speech we hear is an indication of that which we don't hear. It is a necessary avoidance, a violent, sly, and anguished or mocking smoke screen which keeps the other in its true place. When true silence falls we are left with echo but are nearer nakedness. One way of looking at speech is to say that it is a constant stratagem to cover nakedness.
Most of my columns at National Review focus on PC culture, and sometimes, when I write about some idiotic, anti-free-speech idea presented by some idiotic, anti-free-speech student or professor, people will ask me why I wasted my time writing about it.
Let there be but two occasions for speech - when the subject is one which you thoroughly know and when it is one on which you are compelled to speak. On these occasions alone is speech better than silence; on all others, it is better to be silent than to speak.
We civilians defend our own right to free speech. The military in Iraq does not defend our right to free speech.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!