Once your name becomes well known, politicians come courting.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The judgment means a lot. As a journalist being accused of invading someone's privacy, there is always a risk that it will stick to your name.
What's important to me now is to uphold my good name and achieve a fair court decision - the past cannot be recovered anyway.
If you call your opponent a politician, it's grounds for libel.
While the government can tell you that I am an innocent man, the government's letter cannot give me back my good name or my reputation.
There will be no name-calling when I disagree with anyone, no disparaging remarks toward anyone, no taking sole credit for collective achievements or blaming others when things go wrong.
I've slipped on occasion into the realm of irresponsible invective, but I try to avoid it and generally recant when I fall short. Because name-calling does nothing to improve understanding or move the political debate forward.
I'm entitled to collect my fair share of community property without being called names.
I don't want to be known as a politician.
Don't name it, as they say, because instantly you offer it to this peculiar authority.
The world is apt to judge of everything by the success; and whoever has ill fortune will hardly be allowed a good name.
No opposing quotes found.