1.
We have to raise our young boys to respect women and our young girls to demand respect and to get their values from something other than their physicality.
Paula Broadwell
2.
I'm not in love with David Petraeus. But I think he does present a terrific role model.
Paula Broadwell
3.
I haven't had senators advocating for me.
Paula Broadwell
4.
I was encouraged, though, because I saw feminist writers - male and female - calling out the bias. I feel like more and more writers are cognizant of the problems and are willing to try to challenge them.
Paula Broadwell
5.
As an intelligence officer, if you don't have a security clearance, you really don't have a job. My military position was, and has been, frozen, for four years.
Paula Broadwell
6.
Having a bunch of medals and badges doesn’t necessarily mean you’ve achieved anything, you’ve got to do something beyond yourself to make a difference in life. Seek to be consequential in whatever you do.
Paula Broadwell
7.
Hopefully women can work with [Ivanka Trump ] to influence up the chain of command. I think it's good for us, for women. It's a glimmer of hope.
Paula Broadwell
8.
I think Ivanka Trump she has this power and powerful women are reaching out to her and she needs to take advantage of that.
Paula Broadwell
9.
Imagine what Ivanka Trump life has been like? She's been eaten alive by the media. I have empathy for that.
Paula Broadwell
10.
You can reclaim your own narrative.
Paula Broadwell
11.
You need to accept responsibility for your mistakes. And I've done that.
Paula Broadwell
12.
The word is a label and I don't like it at all.
Paula Broadwell
13.
I just genuinely believe in the concept of redemption and renewal, so I was happy. When I get beyond my feelings, I had my own family and friends and so many women across America come to me and say their blood was boiling, asking me how this could happen.
Paula Broadwell
14.
It's reducing my entire professional career and background to this one word [mistress].
Paula Broadwell
15.
I was a Ph.D. student at a very reputable university, I was a Harvard research associate at one of the world's premier leadership institutions.
Paula Broadwell
16.
As a feminist, I'll wear whatever I want to.
Paula Broadwell
17.
I'm really happy for [David Petraeus]. He's exceptionally talented.
Paula Broadwell
18.
It's part of the reason I decided to speak out now. This was the tipping point for me. If it's O.K. for [David Petraeus ] to campaign for a job in the administration, then I'm going to campaign to get back out there, too.
Paula Broadwell
19.
I've moved on with my life and I'm trying to find a path to re-establish my career.
Paula Broadwell
20.
When I get this kind of support, I feel validated in my decision to stand up for myself.
Paula Broadwell
21.
[My kids] were very young at the time and didn't realize what was going on. We told them that mom made a mistake and people want to talk about it in the news so they're outside our house.
Paula Broadwell
22.
I'm 100 percent serious. I've been fighting for equality for women's issues my entire life, in the military included.
Paula Broadwell
23.
[Fighting for equality for women] that's what my mission has been for the last years.
Paula Broadwell
24.
If Ivanka Trump called, I think good people need to serve.
Paula Broadwell
25.
I was an academic and I lost my assignment at Harvard. Meanwhile, [David Petraeus] gets invited to Harvard to become a fellow.
Paula Broadwell
26.
I want to serve. I love my country. I love service above self and I don't want my talents to go to waste. I also want to send a message to other men and women who've tripped over themselves, or over life: that you need to serve your time in purgatory.
Paula Broadwell
27.
We [in Think Broader.] went through and looked at coverage in different industries and were able to point out to newsrooms that they had these hidden biases. We'd do a review and provide a report card, and provide our suggestion on how to avoid bias.
Paula Broadwell
28.
A lot of women were betting on me because there were so few role models and I let them down. They had put me on a pedestal. I maybe enjoyed being in that limelight, but I couldn't reverse what I had done.
Paula Broadwell
29.
If I'm strong, I'm not going to apologize for being strong.
Paula Broadwell
30.
The national media don't know me. They know the caricature that was created of me by journalists who were frankly jealous of my access. And it was a very negative caricature. There's this propensity for blaming a woman. It comes down to implicit bias. There are so many studies that show this.
Paula Broadwell
31.
When I fell, some people were in such shock that they didn't reach out. They were so mad at me, rather than having compassion for what happened. I lost a lot of friends.
Paula Broadwell
32.
I was in such a state of mental shock and quickly spiraled into a depression at the multitude of loss. My husband, I thought, was going to leave me. I was cut off from this mentor and someone I cared for very much, David Petraeus, who also did nothing to stand up for me and in fact, empowered his surrogates to throw me under the bus, and that was devastating.
Paula Broadwell
33.
My local paper, The New York Times, Yahoo News, CBS, and The Washington Post, all agreed to stop using the word 'mistress.' The big one was the Associated Press. They made a style change, and it's the gold standard that sets the guide for news outlets around the world. That's a small step for the American language, a medium step for feminism, and a huge step for me personally.
Paula Broadwell
34.
We had to communicate through our lawyers a couple of times over the years, and [David Petraeus] told me that people have been like, "Good job, Dave." Congratulating him. That's the double standard. I've concluded that sharing it won't change anything.
Paula Broadwell
35.
My husband and I each had careers and two babies at home. They just demand everything from you. All the domestic duties fell to me and this resentment builds, as I think happens to a lot of young parents who have competing careers.
Paula Broadwell
36.
While I fully recognize I had made a mistake in the whole relationship, and I'll call it a human error, I hesitate to call myself a victim because I strongly believe one should take responsibility for their actions.
Paula Broadwell
37.
I had been sort of a rising star - an athlete, a scholar, a leader. My dream was to become a high-level national security adviser.
Paula Broadwell
38.
The story is framed around [avid Petraeus] resignation. So many headlines that followed talked about his ruined career. They completely ignore the fact that my career was ruined, other peoples' careers were ruined. They focus on him as the victim.
Paula Broadwell
39.
I just figured, for the most part, mainstream networks stopped using [mistress word]. Those are small brush fires. The election made me realize we've got forest fires that we collectively need to be focused on.
Paula Broadwell
40.
It's the fact that you can reduce my whole life to one word, whatever it is, my entire career, my service to my country, my academic rigor, my courage in going to interview terrorists, and refugee camps, and third-world prisons.
Paula Broadwell
41.
I also feel like I've done plenty of wrong things. I'm not innocent here, and I'm certainly not going to be righteous about that.
Paula Broadwell
42.
I think the public doesn't understand that one of the reasons I haven't stood up for myself is because in order to do that, I have to stoop to a level that further humiliates other people.
Paula Broadwell
43.
I think Donald Trump is the best person for the job. It comes back to redemption campaign rhetoric. They all say that stuff.[Barack] Obama and [Hillary] Clinton said that about each other.
Paula Broadwell
44.
I had been working on a second book with [David] Petraeus called Relentless. Obviously that book and the income that it would have generated went away.
Paula Broadwell
45.
Sometime ago, I teamed up with a former Marine attack helicopter pilot. We were both frustrated by biased coverage of women in the military and said, let's form some kind of nonprofit entity where we can start highlighting the prevalence of bias in the media.
Paula Broadwell
46.
My peers are all in sensitive jobs - at the C.I.A., the National Security Council, working for the Department of Defense. They can't stand up for me in public.
Paula Broadwell
47.
I don't have the advocates. I don't have a good old boys network. Part of what I want to do is to create a good old girls network.
Paula Broadwell
48.
It really felt like a tidal wave of bias washed over our country and we're still soaked in it.
Paula Broadwell
49.
I was incredulous as the bias of the media in terms of the candidates [for presidency]. I was incredulous at the fake news.
Paula Broadwell