Choose quotes font
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
When I see a blatant injustice, I can't keep quiet. I've been that way since I was a little kid.
Next quotes
Francisco Goldman:
What's important about me is that I really have, in ways I never could have foreseen when I was youFrancisco Goldman:
'Say Her Name' was a book I never wanted to write and never expected to write. I wasn't trying to dFrancisco Goldman:
I think the fact that my wife died in Mexico City makes it very important to me; my life went up inFrancisco Goldman:
My earliest memories of going to Fenway with my father are a blur: many games, me too young to careFrancisco Goldman:
The U.S., like any other country, allows tourists into its borders in order to make money off them,Francisco Goldman:
You witness a lot as a journalist, and what you witness becomes a part of you.Francisco Goldman:
In U.S. discourse, immigrants are mostly represented as less than human, a policy problem, or as juFrancisco Goldman:
My only way of processing anything for me is by writing.Francisco Goldman:
I had one of those farcical bar mitzvahs where they spell out the words phonetically on index cardsFrancisco Goldman:
I identify myself as what I am. I'm half Jewish, like Proust. I have no other way to put it.