Not exact matches
In all fairness their first goal was offside, but the
biggest problem is that only one of our four defenders
actually protested, the other three just shrugged so it
made the
decision for the linesman an easy one.
kronkes influence over the club is minimal at best how many
decisions does he
actually make in the public club domain that we all know of, i am only guessing here but just because he is majority shareholder it doesn't mean he can just do what he wants without the other board members say so, i suppose the rest of the board would vote him out of power and liquidate his shares if he did something really wrong like leveraged the club against a
big debt.
I very much doubt whether the attempt by Arsene Wenger to curtail the planned protest from Arsenal fans today will have any effect, unless his ill advised
decision to suggest that the Gunners» failures at home were down to the atmosphere created by the fans rather than their lack of grit, ability, spirit or tactics
actually make the protest
bigger and louder than it would have been.
saying that the keynesian conception is about spending what you earn is the opposite of what it stands for (its
actually what you haplessly describe as the neoclassical position) beyond the even more meaningless claim that wenger adheres to it... keynes broke with the idea that the economy was simply a collection of perfectly informed individuals and firms responding rationally to price incentives generated by market forces and that the
big variables that frame an economies performance — output, employment, price level, wages, etc — tend to move in cycles and are shaped by
decisions and judgements
made under hugely uncertain conditions that if left to markets generate bad outcomes..
But the truth of the matter is that what happens in these localized governments
actually has a
bigger impact on our daily lives — and a lot of the
decisions made at the state or local level
actually inform the
decisions your reps
make federally.
Problem is, many
decisions made in the name of boosting returns or increasing diversification are
actually futile attempts to outguess the markets or to throw money into the Next
Big Thing being touted by Wall Street's marketing machine.
Many associates at firms claim they hate taking orders, but
actually fear
making the
big decisions and blazing the trails.
Todd Smith: Well, no, you're right, and that's kind of the next point where I was going is the next
decision I had to
make of course after what computer to buy, is what software to get, and those are the days of going and
actually getting those CDs and installing the software on your hard drive, on your 120 gigabyte hard drive, if it was that
big or whatever the size was, that was about the limit.
What's more, some say that procrastination might
actually be the smartest choice when we're confronted with
making a
big decision.