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Chelsea clinton insights

Explore a captivating collection of Chelsea clinton’s most profound quotes, reflecting his deep wisdom and unique perspective on life, science, and the universe. Each quote offers timeless inspiration and insight.

I am excited to work with NBC News to continue to highlight stories of organizations and individuals who make their communities and our world healthier, more just and more humane.

I've tried really hard to care about things that were very different from my parents. I was curious if I could care about [money] on some fundamental level, and I couldn't. That wasn't the metric of success I wanted in my life. I've talked about this to my friends who are doctors and whose parents are doctors, or who are lawyers and their parents are lawyers. It's a funny thing to realize I feel called to this work both as a daughter and also as someone who believes I have contributions to make.

I had seen people who had lost everything and everyone they loved to war, famine, and natural disasters.

I'm sorry, I don't talk to the press. Even though I think you're cute.

He has always provided me a safe place to land and a hard place from which to launch.

My grandmother was determined that everyone feel a sense of optimism and opportunity. Marc and I want to make sure we're doing that. This period of our lives is not just a tribute to her, it's inspired by her. And it's for when we have our own children — I want to help make sure we've got a world I want them to live in.

Fried chicken is my husband's favorite food.

We need women who are at the head of a boardroom, like at the head of the White House, at the head of kind of major scientific enterprises so that little girls everywhere can then think, you know what? I can do that, I want to do that, I will do that.

Celebrate those who have the courage to be second, because I do think that often there really is this claustrophobic pressure to innovate instead of to adapt.

I have a boyfriend and a dog, and I still haven't figured out what I want to be when I grow up.

Celebrate those who have the courage to be second.

My most important identity now is as a mother.

We proved we could be safe and secure at home, and still have more allies and friends in the world.

I've always been incredibly proud of both of my parents and proud of the work I had done privately as a person, professionally and academically.

I can't imagine anything that would make the world look more different than if women and girls were unequivocally enfranchised.

A tin roof is one of the greatest indicators of prosperity in the developing world.

I think we need to care about the metrics of success in life, and I'm a pretty competitive person.

I hope to make a positive, productive contribution, as cheesy as that may sound.

I believe that engaging in the political process is part of being a good person.

Of course [I'm a feminist]. And everyone I know is a feminist.

I really believe that with a little bit of information, kids can make a big difference.

I certainly believe that all of my friends should have the right, as Marc and I did, to marry their best friend. I certainly expect my straight friends to help us achieve that for all New Yorkers, for all Americans, and for the children that, at least, Marc and I hope to have someday.

Over the summer I thought that I would seek out non-Americans as friends, just for diversity's sake. Now I find that I want to be around Americans - people who I know are thinking about our country as much as I am.

Every day at some point I encounter some sort of anti-American feeling.

I just kept thinking about what my mom [Hillary Clinton] has said repeatedly when people have asked her similar questions, she's tough and she can take whatever people say about her.

For me it's just so exciting to have a daughter because I do think she will have even more opportunities than I had, and I had more opportunities than certainly my grandmother had. It's the arc of history, always bending toward justice and opportunity, and she will be part of that.

Intellectually, I loved my job, but I didn't get any meaning from it.

Even during my father's 1984 gubernatorial campaign, it was, 'Do you want to grow up and be governor one day?' 'No. I am four.'

My parents always asked me what I thought, listened to my opinions, articulated their diagnoses of our challenges at home and abroad, and shared their ideas for how to build a more equal and prosperous country. I always felt part of their call to serve and part of my father's journey.

I am so proud and grateful to be my mom's daughter.

I hope telling stories though 'Making a Difference' - as in my academic work and nonprofit work - will help me to live my grandmother's adage of 'Life is not about what happens to you, but about what you do with what happens to you.'

You'd better talk to my dad. My mom's pretty busy.

I think that we need women role models everywhere. I think that it's really hard to imagine yourself as something that you don't see.

Millennials are often portrayed as apathetic, disinterested, tuned out and selfish. None of those adjectives describe the Millennials I've been privileged to meet and work with.

I know I'm late, but I've finally joined Facebook!

I'd ask myself, 'What do I think is really unjust?' That should be a starting point for how you engage with the world.

Caricatured as navel-gazers, Millennials are said to live for their 'likes' and status updates. But the young people I know often leverage social media in selfless ways.

I hope that young people will also look to politics as a vehicle to not only have their voices heard, but actually to be the change makers that they want to see. They are disaffected, understandably, but I hope that young people will not only turn out to vote but also run for office.

As a mom, what I found so disturbing were the things that were being said on a national stage - I mean, literally on the stage and off the stage, around the convention about women, about minorities, about Muslims, about immigrants.

My parents have been incredibly supportive from perhaps the first real independent decision I made to become a vegetarian at 11, which was certainly not consistent with their diet at the time.

At the fourth grade level, girls at the same percentages of boys say they're interested in careers in engineering or math or astrophysics, but by eighth grade that has dropped precipitously.

I'm definitely voting for First Gentleman.

That's not what I want my children to hear. That's not representative of the country that I want my children to grow up in. And so that actually I found far more upsetting as a mom, as a woman, as an American, and even as my mother's daughter than anything they said about my mom.

What inspires me most are people who imagine and implement solutions to challenges in their own lives, in their communities, in our country and around the world.

It is frustrating, because who wants to grow up and follow their parents?

I love the right words. I think economy and precision of language are important.

I do really well in the traditional board games: Backgammon, Checkers.

For most of my life, I deliberately led a private life in the public eye.

He [Bill Clinton] likes to hearken back to his kind of Irish roots, so I think he'd love to be called First Laddy.

My marriage is incredibly important to me. It's the place from which I engage in the world every day, and the place to which I return every day.

For most young Americans I know, 'serving' in the broadest sense now seems like the only thing to do.

I unapologetically and unabashedly am deeply biased toward my mother.

My parents taught me to approach the world critically, but also to approach it with a sense of responsibility.

Patience is a virtue, but impatience gets things done.

I'm always struck by how innately curious kids are about the world around us and how engaged and sensitive they are to what is happening .. and how many kids do want to be engaged and do what to make a difference.

My parents and my grandmother inspire me every day and, every day, in my work and personal life.

I was working full time and going to school at night and on the weekends. It was just crazy. At one point a month had gone by, and Marc - my then boyfriend, now husband, and I hadn't gone out on a date. I was like, I don't want to be this person. I want to be a person who cares where she's investing her time and energy. And I want to be a good wife, daughter, and friend.

My grandmother, who passed away at the beginning of November, had a core adage in her life that life is not about what happens to you but about what you do with what happens to you. She recently had been cajoling me and challenging me to do more with my life. To lead more of a purposefully public life.

Service is an opportunity for young women to really empower themselves.

Thinking about the world writ large, I am more optimistic than not that we will tackle our most pressing challenges, whether poverty or equality for women and girls or climate change; but I also know we'll only tackle them if people are really informed about the challenge and what's proven to work.

I'm a big health-food freak and a vegetarian devotee.

When my father announced his campaign for president on Oct. 3, 1991, I had already cast my vote in favor of his candidacy.

I'm a big believer in listening to my body's cravings.

My parents were very firm about me always getting my homework done.

My mother has often said that the issue of women is the unfinished business of the 21st century. That is certainly true. But so, too, are the issues of LGBT rights the unfinished business of the 21st century.

When I first held my daughter, right after she was born, I felt like it was the moment I'd been waiting my whole life for, and it just felt even more miraculous than I ever could have imagined.

I loved working on Wall Street. I loved the meritocracy of it and the camaraderie of the trading floor.

When we look at that jingoism and the sexism and the racism and the homophobia, that's not who we are, and that's not the country that I want my daughter to grow up in.

I just hope I will be as good a mom to my child and, hopefully, children as my mom was to me.

Determination gets you a long way.

It just seems so fundamental to me. I'm able to marry the person I wanted to marry. That's the fundamental human imperative. Those of us who have been lucky enough should expand these rights to others.