Zitat des Tages von Jack Kemp:
People want opportunity so they can earn security.
Every time in this century we've lowered the tax rates across the board, on employment, on saving, investment and risk-taking in this economy, revenues went up, not down.
There are no limits to our future if we don't put limits on our people.
Its no secret that I've never liked tax credits.
My passion for ideas is not matched with a passion for partisan or electoral politics.
There is a kind of victory in good work, no matter how humble.
I don't use labels a lot.
There really has not been a strong Republican message to either the poor or the African American community at large.
You don't boo at a Kemp rally. You boo at football games.
I wasn't a great debater.
Winning is like shaving - you do it every day or you wind up looking like a bum.
I think Bush understands the Internet and the incredible expansion of global e-commerce.
Democracy without morality is impossible.
Republicans many times can't get the words 'equality of opportunity' out of their mouths. Their lips do not form that way.
Councils of war breed timidity and defeatism.
The Democratic Party is the party of the status quo.
Economic growth doesn't mean anything if it leaves people out.
When people lack jobs, opportunity, and ownership of property they have little or no stake in their communities.
He'll call that trickle-down. I call it Niagara Falls.
I am shocked that Republicans can't explain why our technological and economic advantages are the result of sound monetary and economic policy.
There's no limit to what free men and free women in a free market with free enterprise can accomplish when people are free to follow their dream.
I can't help but care about the rights of the people I used to shower with.
Just as the left has to be more willing to question 'Government knows best,' the right has to rethink its laissez-faire attitude toward government.
I believe in civil liberties for homosexuals. I guess I'd have to say I'd draw the line at letting them teach in the schools.
The problem is that the economy isn't growing fast enough to accommodate the level of spending produced through the democratic process.
Of course, every job I ever had I thought I was born for.
There ought to be a thoughtful welfare-reform debate that doesn't turn into something that could be called scapegoating.
We don't need to bring down the rich folk to help the poor.
The only thing I can do is tell the truth as I see it and let the chips fall where they may.
There's always cause for concern if bad policies are pursued.
Quarterbacks are always ready.
The real problem is deflation. That is the opposite of inflation but equally serious to the borrower.