Talk is cheap - except when Congress does it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If there's anything I have learned since returning to Congress, it's that talk is still cheap, progress is still slow, and our liberties continue to erode every day.
The focus should not be on talking. Talk is cheap. It must be on action.
If the present Congress errs in too much talking, how can it be otherwise in a body to which the people send one hundred and fifty lawyers, whose trade it is to question everything, yield nothing, and talk by the hour?
On sensitive issues, talk isn't cheap - it takes real courage to pry open topics nailed shut.
States are looking for low-cost solutions that will enable better communication, while avoiding the danger in which the chain of command breaks down in emergencies. We do not want everyone talking to everyone else all the time.
I find it really cheap when people talk about an issue just for the sake of talking and are not making any difference to the actual situation.
Talk radio is an asset to our nation because it encourages strong and healthy debate about public policy, and there is no reason to affect that debate with government legislation.
The legislator learns that when you talk a lot, you get in trouble. You have to listen a lot to make deals.
I like to get my hands dirty. Talk is cheap.
Anybody who thinks talk is cheap should get some legal advice.