- Conrad Black was born on August 25, 1944 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He has been married to Barbara Amiel since 1992.
- SpouseBarbara Amiel(1992 - present)
- His father, George Black, was a wealthy brewery executive.
- Owns houses in London, New York City, Toronto, and Palm Beach, Florida.
- Renounced his Canadian citizenship in order to be eligible for British life peerage. He was indeed elevated to the peerage by Queen Elizabeth II on the advice of Tony Blair and became Lord Black of Crossharbour, on Oct. 31, 2001.
- At one point he was the third largest newspaper publisher in the world.
- He weighed in heavily with his controversial views that Britain should join NAFTA or that Canada should become part of the U.S.
- [on the 'War on Drugs'] It's just a political gasconade, a shambles. There are over a million incarcerated people in the U.S., almost all of them for Mickey Mouse offences - you know, driving a truck with marijuana. There are 48 million Americans with criminal records. Now, about 20 million or more of them are driving under the influence 10 years ago, or being disorderly at a fraternity party 25 years ago - not the sort of thing that would influence anybody into wondering, 'Will I hire this man?'.. The ones who end up in prison sit there like zombies and then go back, not empowered to do anything to earn a livable amount of money than the sort of conduct that got them there in the first place.
- [on the U.S. Constitution] I don't think it's working well now. To start with, they've got to restore individual liberties. Their whole claim to being the land of the free is the Bill of Rights, and it's been put to the shredder. For notorious reasons I could wax quite declarative on this subject and I won't inflict that on you, but the fifth, sixth, eighth amendments have all gone over the side. That's what American exceptionalism has come down to.
- [on being incarcerated in the U.S. for fraud and the obstruction of justice] It's not the kind of experience that expands your affection for the jurisdiction responsible for you being in prison, and it didn't. What I hope is that I am a person with a greater sense of humility, a greater concern for disadvantaged people and stylistically more rigorous writing, and less self-indulgent, a little less bemused and more focused. That is not a massive condemnation of the former me. I wasn't a bad person, but I hope I have grown from this.
- Unionized teachers have destroyed much of the state school system.
- I may have made a mistake in renouncing my Canadian citizenship, which I have never ceased to promise to try to regain.
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