Executives can no longer hide behind the corporate veil. They need to be accountable for what their companies do, because entities are responsible for socially irresponsible behavior.
By finding waste and abuse in entitlement programs, and eliminating it, we can ensure that the funds that are put into these programs go to the people that need them the most.
Every entrepreneur doesn't need to be technical - there are plenty of opportunities out there for people who aren't coders.
We need to unleash the entrepreneurial spirit that is alive in Colorado.
We firmly believe the environmental issues cannot be addressed without extensive public participation, but people need to be informed before they can get involved.
What is new is that environmentalism intensely illuminates the need to confront the corporate domain at its most powerful and guarded point - the exclusive right to govern the systems of production.
'The Skeptical Environmentalist' was much more the idea of the scientific argument of realizing that we need to be skeptical about a lot of these stories that we hear and to put them in context.
Our hubris needs to be downsized, thinking that profiteering on Earth, on whatever level - environmentally, economically, culturally - is unlimited and everybody should get as much as he wants or she wants. Humans need to be shrunk again to their actual size.
The flower which is single need not envy the thorns that are numerous.
We need responsible regulations, not regulations that have gone wild. For example, the EPA has a rule that is going to be implemented Jan. 1, 2012, where they're going to begin to regulate dust. That's right, dust. It's called PM 2.5. That is focusing on the wrong thing.
We need to improve our horrible position within the petroleum game by eliminating the EPA and other crippling bureaucracies that have turned the U.S. from the game's biggest winners into its worst losers.
I didn't need to write historical epics, no, or science fiction, though I read a lot of science fiction as a kid and rather liked it. But I didn't have the mentality.
We can afford to pay workers fairly, and it is the right thing to do. We also need equal pay for equal work.
I do whatever is necessary in order to maintain the equanimity we all need to withstand the disappointment and rejection that are the lot of every writer, no matter where we are in our careers.
In a 21st-century economy, it is critical that we equip our nation's children with the tools they need to compete in a global marketplace.
I am unapologetic about the need for social change, greater inclusion, and equity.
We need to really focus on getting this digital equity across the board in all of our public school systems, for both girls and boys.
It takes a special, selfless person to make music that accommodates the universal need for mindless escapism - or what I call oblivion.
Europe has what we do not have yet, a sense of the mysterious and inexorable limits of life, a sense, in a word, of tragedy. And we have what they sorely need: a sense of life's possibilities.
There's no question that we need tougher drunk-driving laws for repeat offenders. We need to take a lesson from European countries where driving isn't a right but a privilege.