Quotes on the topic: Wealthy


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Spiritual people should not be ashamed of being wealthy.


Now, twenty years old, I come out and I go back to Greenwich Village. Now, of course, I'm a wealthy man.


You aren't wealthy until you have something money can't buy.


The SAT allows less-privileged students access to universities that previously were the bastions of the wealthy.


I'm not a wealthy person because I was never a star. I was a working actor and a supporting actor.


All my life I've been prejudiced against wealthy people.


When you look at the 'New York Times,' you look at other elite media, what you largely get are pictures of very wealthy nations and the nations we've invaded.


I'm a very wealthy man.


If the wealthy get wealthier, no one has to become one penny poorer.


There are many Saudi women doctors, and there are many wealthy and powerful and well-educated Saudi women who circumvent the restrictions put upon them, quietly or otherwise.


The ability to live for five hundred years would be an incredible gift. But I greatly fear it would be a gift only for the wealthy - one that might greatly widen the gap between those with access and those without.


We have a lot of things we give away to people who are very, very wealthy in this country. And I'm not sure that our federal government can afford that.


I always wanted to be wealthy. I did.


In 2001, Republicans used reconciliation to pass President Bush's $1.35 trillion tax cut that mainly benefited the wealthy.


No, I'm not wealthy.


Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.


I came from a wealthy family. I made over my share of the estate to various charities.


Wealthy people in Australia tend to give, and give very quietly.


Contrary to the myth that Mr. Bush cut taxes only for the wealthy, the 2001 tax cut reduced taxes for every income-tax payer in the country.


Acadia was founded in 1916 by Woodrow Wilson as the first Eastern national park, aided by rich men, often with middle initials, the 'rusticators,' as they were known then, the first of our wealthy out-of-state visitors.