The baby boomers have dropped the ball on their burden of responsibility.
Meghan McCain
I consume media in a very frenetic, overtweeting way.
I am pro-life, but because life is complicated, that choice is between a woman and her idea of a higher power.
As I watched on TV the nest of reporters and groupies surround Palin at the Iowa State Fair, I couldn't help but sit back and wonder if she's become the ultimate party crasher for the Republican Party.
President Obama is a poker player, which the media used as part of the narrative that he was more calculated and careful as a politician.
I am often invited to speak at colleges, and whenever I do Q and A's, a question that inevitably comes up is, 'How do you put up with the blogosphere?' It's a valid question, and I don't really know what answer to give. The truth is that I don't know what to do.
Hell would freeze over before I would do a reality show. I've been offered everything you could possibly imagine, and it just doesn't interest me. You certainly won't see me dancing on TV.
Ashlee Simpson kicking her dressing room door after getting caught lip-synching - that was interesting to watch.
I do believe that unless we start reaching out to minorities and women and honestly start supporting the LGBT community, there is no more future for the Republican party.
It's because of women like my grandmother Roberta - women who have lived their lives fearlessly, on their own terms - that I am who I am. I'm grateful to have such an inspiring woman as a grandmother.
We all know that Sarah Palin loves attention.
I was raised in an open-minded home. I was raised a Christian, but I was raised open-minded Christian - one to accept people, love people, not pass judgment.
I love tattoos.
The only bus tours to political events I ever went on with my father were when he was running for president. Why else would you be touring the nation in a bus?
I spent almost two years trying to get my father elected president.
When I was a little girl, and we would visit my grandmother whenever we were in D.C., she would always greet us at the door in elegant suits or gowns with matching pearls and earrings.
I'm a nonstop extrovert, a people person who loves mingling and gabbing and getting out in the world.
Aside from the likability factor, I can criticize Hillary's politics all day long, but I never question her intelligence. I have never doubted that she is a strong, capable, smart leader.
I can't really regret things; you just have to move on and live your life.
My family is really good at letting go of things and moving on.
I'm so thankful to Fox News for the chance to be on 'Outnumbered,' but I'm leaving to focus on other things. I have no doubt the show will continue to do well and wish all my friends and colleagues at the network nothing but success.
When people don't like my politics, I am happy to have a political discussion with them.
Washington is a complete mess. It's become a venue for partisan bickering, where the needs of the working class just don't matter.
It's no secret that the blogosphere is more vicious on women than it is on men.
I don't take private phone calls from the Trump Administration anymore.
I spend a lot of time dancing in gay bars and want my gay friends to be able to get married, but I don't know if I ever want to get married and have kids. And I think that's a common struggle.
I just think I'm the average all-American girl.
I like men who confidently flirt with women they have just met.
Some fathers raise their daughters to be seen and not heard; they raise their daughters not to speak out. Raise strong women!
America cannot function if we are a society fueled by riots.
What do I predict with the HBO 'Game Change' movie? I expect my family and Sarah Palin to be nothing short of crucified.
I care more about my economy, national security, and fiscal conservatism than I do about what other women do with their bodies. It's not my place, and I don't believe it's the government's place, to make such decisions.
My dad's about character and bipartisanship and something greater than yourself and believing in this country and believing in the fact that we as Americans can still come together, and that's something I grew up in and feeds me every day.
The America of John McCain is generous and welcoming and bold.
I hate to rain on anyone's parade or burst the enthusiasm bubble, but talk is especially cheap during an election season.
I want to say that since my dad has been diagnosed, I really feel like I understand the meaning of life, and it is not how you die: it is how you live.
I'm not scared of death anymore.
'Game Change,' the infamous bestseller written by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, has plagued anyone directly associated with the 2008 election cycle.
I grew up in Arizona listening to Hank Williams Jr., Johnny Cash, Tammy Wynette, and Dolly Parton.
I make my living talking about serious subject matter, but I'm a weirdo.
My generation grew up in the heyday of the '90s, with the Internet boom and the birth of overnight millionaires. But our politicians seem to be pushing personal agendas over the idea of making the world a better place for their children.
Come 2012, I am not going to be voting for someone based on who I think would be the most fun to hang out and have a beer with. I am going to be voting for the person that I think will have the best chance of beating President Obama and gaining votes from independents.
If you're a public figure, and if you're working in the White House, you should expect everything you're saying in any context to be leaked.
I can't give into hate. It's too great a burden to bear. I have to stick with love.
I'm the daughter of one of the most long-standing senators in politics, and I have been given every opportunity that anyone could possibly dream of. I was given those opportunities as a result of the hard work from both sides of my family.
Whatever historical or ideological relevance the Iowa caucus has will more than likely not get you to the White House, but it will probably get you a sweet gig at Fox News.
The America of John McCain has no need to be made great again because America was always great.
President Obama makes fantastic stump speeches, but putting together an actual agenda is more complicated.
The infamous political ads like Carly Fiorina's 'Demon Sheep' and Christine O'Donnell's 'I Am Not a Witch' are so confusing, it's almost like they were paid for by Democrats.
I really try every day. I really try to come into work thinking about what rhetoric I'm going to put out in the world and what my father would've done if he was still here.