Universal health care is, for me, the most sacred part, the most important pillar, of British citizenship.

Part of me thinks that innovation, real innovation in health care delivery, needs to happen from the bottom to the top.

A common denominator among big guys like me who are trying to take care of our health is that we're not getting enough sleep.

Protecting Medicare and Social Security, health care, workers' rights, and a woman's right to choose remain top priorities for me.

The issues that matter to me are the social safety nets for people, health care, middle-class concerns. We need to take care of the middle class and the poor in our country.

I taught in Belize for a year, and before I left, my parents were birddogging me to get health care coverage. So what I did was, I reenrolled in college, and then got coverage through my college.

Average Americans are going to win this, not me. And not just your organization, not just the providers of health care, but the American people are going to cause this to happen. But they have to keep sending those cards and letters.

I got sent to a health camp when I was about 6 years old, and we all had to wear the same starchy blue uniform. The lady who took care of me after school knit me a burgundy sweater. It was the only thing that gave me any individuality.

There are a lot of Democrats that tell me that they are just distressed over what Obama has done to the health care industry and to jobs. They are afraid to say anything about it because of recriminations, because this regime fights back.

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