Top 12 Bollier Senate Quotes
			
		    
                #1. As long as a person is breathing, there is hope for them.
                Anthony Kiedis
							 
            
                    
		    
            
            
		    
                #3. Every human being born within the United States of parents not owing allegiance to any foreign sovereignty is in the language of your Constitution itself, a natural born citizen.
                John Bingham
							 
            
            
		    
            
                    
		    
            
            
		    
                #6. I have rarely talked to anyone about my mother, for I believe that I am capable of killing a person, without hesitation, who happened to make the wrong kind of remark about my mother. So I purposely don't make any opening for some fool to step into.
                Malcolm X
							 
            
            
		    
                #7. It is a must to excel in the area God has called us.
                Sunday Adelaja
							 
            
            
		    
                #8. If you think you can do it, your body will find a way to make it happen.
                Greg Plitt
							 
            
                    
		    
                #9. A lot of stand-up comedy is embarrassing: too many idiots doing it in orange neckties against brick walls. I find most sitcoms embarrassing, too, because they seem so forced.
                Tracey Ullman
							 
            
            
		    
                #10. I'm my own person, and I want people to know me for who I am.
                Chanel Iman
							 
            
            
		    
                #11. What if I turned out to be a great kisser, and suddenly, girls everywhere wanted to kiss me? Did I really want to risk losing my free time to watch people so I could kiss every girl in town?
                S.L. Madden
							 
            
            
		    
                #12. In fact, the figure in The Last Supper is not a woman: only the most partisan reading can place Mary Magdalene in the scene. Viewers in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries would have read the painting quite differently.
                Ross King