Questions that have no right to go away are those that have to do with the person we are about to become; they are conversations that will happen with or without our conscious participation.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I believe in individual rights so much that I don't like any sort of 'what's good for the cause'-type questions.
Sometimes, in public life, people ask inappropriate, off-the-wall kinds of questions, don't they?
My father has never once asked me a question, any question. There's a freedom that came from that. It allowed me to create my own way of thinking.
Freedom is coming to mean little more than the right to ask permission.
So the point is, I don't have a right to tell anybody what's right or wrong about their lives. Who am I to tell you at any given moment of the day what would be right for you?
What are you? What am I? Those are the questions that constantly persecute and torment me and perhaps also play some part in my art.
I realized I didn't want there to be anything left unsaid with my mom. I didn't want there to be questions that I still had about who she was and what her life was like. And I didn't want her to have questions about me as an adult.
No individual has any right to come into the world and go out of it without leaving behind him distinct and legitimate reasons for having passed through it.
No one questions the validity, the urgency, the essentiality of the Voting Rights Act.
It is one of the chief skills of the philosopher not to occupy himself with questions which do not concern him.
No opposing quotes found.