The Pledge of Allegiance says, "liberty and justice for all.

[And what does this tell us about the woman whom President Bush has nominated for the Supreme Court?] I don't mean to sound flip, but I'm a very handicapped person, ... I am not able to read people's hearts and souls and brains . . . the way he can.

You'd carry on a logical debate, but you'd read about it later and say, 'Was I there?' ... But what are you going to do? Put out a press release and say, 'We weren't screeching'?

When people ask me why I am running as a woman, I always answer, "What choice do I have?"

I think we're much more comfortable with women as policy makers, ... We're not there yet, but the comfort zone is much wider than it was when I came.

I was cooking breakfast this morning for my kids, and I thought, "He's (Ronald Reagan) just like a Teflon frying pan: Nothing sticks to him.

The initiative seems to respect the rights of creators to determine how their works will be used, and this has been our concern and objective all along.

To think that here we are, 31 years later, and they (now) know absolutely no more about massive hemorrhaging than they did then.

Spine transplants are what we really need to take Reagan on.