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Julius Erving
The Great and Wondrous Dr. J
Julius Erving: Take the time to assess your talent yourself, and then be willing to listen to others who can tell you what you have, and what you don't have. Just deal with the reality of the situation, the statistics. If there are 350 basketball players, and 350 million in America, then you're one in a million if you're going to make it into the pro ranks. Now with the game becoming a world game as it is, there will be more professional teams, which will create more jobs. But proportionately speaking, if you start dealing with the world, with 3 billion people or more, the percentages becomes even less that you'll make it. That's just getting in the door, not that you will become a superstar, then it shrinks again. View Interview with Julius Erving View Biography of Julius Erving View Profile of Julius Erving View Photo Gallery of Julius Erving
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Paul Farmer
Founder, Partners in Health
FDR called it "freedom from want," as the fourth freedom, is freedom from want. I do believe, even someone of modest origins like me, still had freedom from want. I never experienced want. You asked me earlier about my childhood, living in a bus. But that's not the same thing as living in a bus and having to run from violence, or not having enough to eat. It's a very different kind of thing. So those are my sort of twin definitions of being an American, is a certain amount of protection from vulnerability around want. And then the civil and political liberties that we have. It's terrific to be able to write what you want, and say you want and, and I've done that my whole life. View Interview with Paul Farmer View Biography of Paul Farmer View Profile of Paul Farmer View Photo Gallery of Paul Farmer
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Paul Farmer
Founder, Partners in Health
I would say that it's hard to have an American Dream if you can't get an education and you can't feed your family. Again, I learned this as an adult, not as a child, because I was shielded from those problems as a child. I didn't know that across the world, hundreds of millions of people would never enjoy education or basic health services. I didn't know that. A big part of the American Dream for me is, again, yes, the ability to speak one's mind, and the civil and political liberties that we enjoy there. But also, making sure that there's some sort of safety net, so that people just don't hit the ground and end up in the ground. That's a big part of the American Dream in my view, is not having to worry if you're going to not have another meal to eat, or not worrying that if you lose your job, then your whole family, you know, collapses into the poor house. View Interview with Paul Farmer View Biography of Paul Farmer View Profile of Paul Farmer View Photo Gallery of Paul Farmer
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Paul Farmer
Founder, Partners in Health
I think that's what's going on in the United States now, is people are saying, "Well, if unemployment hits ten percent, what do we do?" Well, in the Depression it was 25 percent, maybe more. And a lot of effort had to go into addressing the needs of the most vulnerable Americans then. That's a big part of the American Dream. I think it's worth restoring, and sort of rehabilitating, and talking more about that, about what was done after the Depression, during the Depression. What was done to say, "Hey people need not to be ill-clad, ill-housed and ill-fed." The Second Bill of Rights, Roosevelt's last inaugural -- if I'm not mistaken, in 1944 -- and he laid this all out very clearly. What did that mean, "freedom from want?" And he talked about, people ought to be able to get good jobs and good education and be safe, and I think that is a huge part of the American Dream. And people sometimes forget, we all forget. I get vivid reminders, because I go to places where there is danger and a great deal of want, and no sound safety net. So I get these reminders of what privilege we have. That's really something that's worth hanging onto. View Interview with Paul Farmer View Biography of Paul Farmer View Profile of Paul Farmer View Photo Gallery of Paul Farmer
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Sally Field
Two Oscars for Best Actress
I'm frightened for the American Dream. I'm so terribly frightened for America. The American Dream really was to have possibilities, to be safe and have possibilities. It is what -- my children say this to me sometimes, that I shouldn't have said, and I can't help it -- I will still say it, but you can be whatever you want to be. If you want it, work on it, devote your life to it. And anything's possible. And my children say, "Well, we're the generation that you've said that to, and that was bad because we expect that anything's possible." Well, God damn it! And I would be censored if that were Fox. I do think that anything is possible. It doesn't mean you won't be drug behind the wagon for some length of time. That's what America once was. I am very worried about our country though. We need some leadership. We need some bold, brave leadership. We need Abraham Lincoln. View Interview with Sally Field View Biography of Sally Field View Profile of Sally Field View Photo Gallery of Sally Field
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