It Takes A Village Quotes by Hillary Clinton, Ray Lewis, Katy Perry, David Guerrero, Thomas Sowell, Peter Breggin and many others.

When I am talking about “It Takes a Village”, I’m obviously not talking just about or even primarily about geographical villages any longer, but about the network of relationships and values that do connect us and binds us together.
We’re in a tough place in this world. There are a lot of kids giving up very early. Scripture says it takes a village to raise one child, and that’s what these coaches are going to have to go back and understand.
I’m every woman. It takes a village to make me who I am.
It takes a village to raise a child.
If it takes a village to raise a child, it takes a whole agency to make a successful campaign.
Hilary Clinton said you know, it takes a village to raise a child and somebody said it takes a village idiot to believe that … it is part of the whole thing of third parties wanting to make decisions for which they pay no price for when they’re wrong.
In part I’m just mystified. Here’s a woman, Hillary [Clinton], who wrote a book about it takes a “village” to raise children. It wasn’t about a book about “it takes a pill.” There’s a “double think” that the modern person often has. Anything that’s called “science” is accepted as an absolute and sweeps reason away.
Ahh! Lady Pillows. So much fluffier than mine.” He took a giant whiff. “Why does everything girlie smell so delightful?” “Because we acknowledge the importance of basic hygiene. And periodically clean our bathrooms.” “Brilliant. I should write that down. After all, it takes a village.
People say it takes a village to raise a child. People ask me how my daughter is doing. She’s only doing good if your daughter’s doing good. We’re all one family.
How many times did we hear [Barack] Obama say, ‘You didn’t build that. You didn’t build that – no, you need government.’ We even saw Hillary Clinton say – remember her phrase – ‘It takes a village to raise a child.’ In other words, your children are not your children – they belong to the community.