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Children born today have a fifty-fifty chance of living to 100.
William Greider
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William Greider
Age: 83 †
Born: 1936
Born: August 6
Died: 2019
Died: December 25
Author
Editor
Journalist
Writer
Cincinnati
Ohio
William Harold Greider
Fifty
Chance
Born
Living
Today
Children
More quotes by William Greider
The rich nations of the world are acting like ancient usurers, lending money to the desperate poor on terms that cannot possibly be met and, thus, steadily acquiring more and more control over the lives and assets of the poor.
William Greider
Everyone cares for disabled people, right? What they don't care for are genuine civil rights for disabled people. MARY JOHNSON tells the tortuous, enraging story of how Congress enacted a law that instead of protecting against discrimination has turned 'the disabled' into a political punching bag.
William Greider
If one benefits tangibly from the exploitation of others who are weak, is one morally implicated in their predicament? Or are basic rights of human existence confined to the civilized societies that are wealthy enough to afford them? Our values are defined by what we will tolerate when it is done to others.
William Greider
The do-it-yourself version of pensions is a flop, as many Americans have painfully learned.
William Greider
Maybe the reason some folks lag behind in our free enterprise system is because they depend too much on the free part and not enough on their own enterprise.
William Greider
If US per capita income continues to grow at a rate of 1.5 percent a year, the country will have plenty of money to finance comfortable retirements and high-quality healthcare for all citizens, including those at the bottom of the wage ladder.
William Greider
The economy is not governed with the bottom half in mind.
William Greider
Efficiency obliterates identity
William Greider
If we have wealth, it will be protected from inflation and possibly even enhanced in value.
William Greider
Aside from sending someone to war or to prison, government s ability to make people involuntarily give over their money is its strongest exercise of authority over private citizens and their institutions.
William Greider
Americans cannot teach democracy to the world until they restore their own.
William Greider
Leaks and whispers are a daily routine of news-gathering in Washington.
William Greider
The present struggle seems less about abolishing big government than about who gets to use it.
William Greider
Democracy is held captive, not just by money, but by ideas - the ideas that money buys.
William Greider
In 1900 Americans on average lived for only 49 years and most working people died still on the job.
William Greider
A newly elected representative quickly discovers that his job in government-aside from making new laws-is to act as a broker, middleman, special pleader and finagler.
William Greider
The threat to globalization is not the wasted American dollars but Washington's readiness to mix US commercial interests with its self-appointed role as global protector.
William Greider
Democracy begins in human conversation. A democratic conversation does not require elaborate rules of procedure or utopian notions of perfect consensus. What it does require is a spirit of mutual respect-people conversing critically with one another in an atmosphere of honesty and shared regard.
William Greider
In the deregulated realm of US banking and finance, crime does occasionally pay for its foul deeds, not in prison time but by making modest rebates to the victims.
William Greider
Everyone's values are defined by what they will tolerate when it is done to others.
William Greider