Till this moment I never knew myself.
Don't liken me to that [SOB]. Anybody that lets his public policies be mixed up with religious prejudice is a plain [GD] fool.
I'm suspicious of any man or woman who approaches their own liberation with any kind of gender bias
. . . the worst aspect of our time is prejudice. . . In almost everything I've written, there is a thread of this - man's seemingly palpable need to dislike someone other than himself.
Fundamentalism, in and of itself, is benign and can be personally beneficial, but the anger and prejudice generated by extreme beliefs can permanently damage your brain.
But the need for conflict to expose prejudice and unclear reasoning, which is deeply embedded in my philosophy of science, has its origin in these debates.
We are all apt to think that an opinion that differs from our own is a prejudice.
It's good to remember that in crises, natural crises, human beings forget for awhile their ignorances, their biases, their prejudices. For a little while, neighbors help neighbors and strangers help strangers.
I had thought everyone in the electronic world would be so laid back, but there's as many cliques and prejudices as any other world.
The air is the only place free from prejudices.
I love the best of all the traditions. My discipline is the take-no-prisoners language of good poetry, but a language that actually frees us from prejudice, no matter what religion or political persuasion they are. I try to create a river-like discourse. The river is not political, it's not on your side or against you. It's an invitation into the onward flow.
To break down prejudice is to get to a place of understanding, that can erode the ignorance.
The rule for traveling abroad is to take our common sense with us, and leave our prejudices behind.
That is why I come forward tonight without any political label, without any bias, but just simply as an Englishman to say to you: a crime is being committed against civilization.
People have prejudices against a nation in which they have no acquaintances.
If I had ever learnt, I should have been a great proficient.
I don't think any human being is truly free. We're so tethered to our own insecurities and hampered by our fears and our prejudices. I think it's human nature that we're never going to be free.
Free speech is a bourgeois prejudice.
The bird that would soar above the plain of tradition and prejudice must have strong wings.
The parallel between antifeminism and race prejudice is striking. The same underlying motives appear to be at work, namely fear, jealousy, feelings of insecurity, fear of economic competition, guilt feelings, and the like. Many of the leaders of the feminist movement in the nineteenth-century United States clearly understood the similarity of the motives at work in antifeminism and race discrimination and associated themselves with the anti slavery movement.