I decline to accept the end of man.
The end of wisdom is to dream high enough to lose the dream in the seeking of it.
I'll be in Los Angeles for two weeks and I'll have a laugh, get battered and have a buzz, but at the end of the day, I'll go home. It's just me earning a few more stories to tell everyone at home and all.
The thing about rights is that in the end you can't prove what should be considered a right.
The hardest thing is at the end you have to say bye to all these people who you have worked with for so many months. It was really sad not to see them anymore. But you have the parties that you go to and you get to see them, like the premieres and the screenings.
I can spot empty flattery and know exactly where I stand. In the end it's really only my own approval or disapproval that means anything.
We are an age without leaders. We stopped having leaders at the end of the 20th century.
Wojtyla was a warrior, who did more to end the Soviet Union than even America.
By the end of high school I was not of course an educated man, but I knew how to try to become one.
But Maastricht was not the end of history. It was a first step towards a Europe of growth, of employment, a social Europe. That was the vision of Francois Mitterrand. We are far from that now.
If you don't do what's best for your body, you're the one who comes up on the short end.
I disagree with a lot of those changes, however at the end of the day - I go down to recruit graduation at least once or twice a year.
Even though I disagree with many of the changes, when I see the privates graduate at the end of the day, when they walk off that drill field at the end of the ceremony, they are still fine privates; outstanding, well motivated privates.
Even as we ought to accept that each country would progress with a different method and speed toward that goal, the standard for the expected end-state should not be lowered.
The advanced levels which the democratic world has attained at the end of lengthy processes may have created the perception in the region that democracy is a distant concept; this perception can be addressed.