I readily admit I was not an expert on foreign policy but I was knowledgeable and I didn't need a man who was the Vice President of the United States and my opponent turning around and putting me down.
Vice president - it has such a nice ring to it!
People don't vote for vice president, they vote for president.
The details are the very source of expression in architecture. But we are caught in a vice between art and the bottom line.
Our faith comes in moments; our vice is habitual.
Everybody knows they're on the Obama team: There isn't vice presidential vs. presidential division, there's not a generational pull. People have internalized that this is a real moment in history.
Cruelty, like every other vice, requires no motive outside of itself; it only requires opportunity.
As far as I'm concerned, I prefer silent vice to ostentatious virtue.
The facts are the vice president's company that he was CEO of, that did business with sworn enemies of the United States, paid millions of dollars in fines for providing false financial information, it's under investigation for bribing foreign officials.
I think women can be as cruel as men, and men as tender as women, and vice versa.
Every vice was once a virtue, and may become respectable again, just as hatred becomes respectable in wartime.
Vice is a creature of such hideous mien... that the more you see it the better you like it.
In a network situation, a vice president, while he's shaving, can decide your history.
Art is vice. You don't marry it legitimately, you rape it.
No. 1, Halliburton. Certainly, if they've overcharged they should be whacked and whacked good, but the idea that the vice president somehow is involved in this, whether they got contracts because of him, that's nonsense.