So, whether or not God has that foreknowledge that doesn't change the point that free will is still given and that we still have that power to choose in the meantime.
Didn't change points and even more yummy!
Here are some rough and probably minimal cost figures if you go traditional (several of you think the costs might be less than this, but that doesn't change the point):
I was tempted to correct that 2W / m2 in the past but the correction didn't change your point so I didn't.
Not exact matches
That irony
points to what I see as an inescapable conclusion: The world probably can't solve climate
change without nuclear power.
Shum and Colaco
point out that any reclassification of risk would be heavily scrutinized by Canadian regulators, in order to make sure that
changes aren't self - serving on the part of policy providers and in fact benefit consumers.
«At some
point, the cost of capture intersects with the cost of carbon, and all of a sudden you don't have to subsidize industry to do it,» explains Rob Savage, director of Alberta Environment's Climate
Change Secretariat.
If TV shows hadn't given him so much coverage, or had challenged his erroneous statements more directly, or
pointed out his obvious flaws as a president, would that have
changed anything?
Even apart from the fact that they don't know what they're talking about because they don't know what's out there, the bigger issues are that: (a) almost all of these reports come back with a variety of related findings that may be precisely on
point; and (b) the very age of the prior research may be invaluable if the new questions and inquiries have to do with trend lines,
changes in attitudes or different behaviors.
Perhaps most concerning is the study's findings that the smoking rate hasn't
changed in poor populations; among the rich, it's fallen more than five percentage
points.
You can start off small by making just a few
changes to an integral part of your business — one you probably don't give much thought to anyway — your
Point of Sale (POS) system.
His question to them: «If I'm completely stupid in a world that is
changing beyond recognition, in ways that we can
not imagine at this
point in time, and we do
not take account of it in our decision - making, what is the likelihood that I will end up with value at risk?»
Since I'm writing for Data Sheet this week, and
not CEO Daily, I should
point out that all of this
Change - the - World - Don't - Be-Evil stuff started in the tech sector — even if some players (looking at you, Facebook) have wandered astray.
That's
not soon enough if the world wants to mitigate the worst effects of climate
change while providing cheap, clean energy to the poor — a
point not lost on a handful of American billionaires including Jeff Bezos, Paul Allen, and Peter Thiel.
Trump called this claim a «joke» during a January appearance on Fox & Friends after Sen. Bernie Sanders
pointed out the 2012 tweet but he quickly added that, «this is done for the benefit of China, because China does
not do anything to help climate
change.»
Sobeys
changed the things Safeway customers, employees and suppliers didn't want
changed, like house brands,
point - of - sale systems and long - standing relationships, and didn't alter those that needed refreshing, like the fading state of the stores.
Because Slack hasn't yet reached the
point where it has tens of thousands of workers on its books, «[i] t is relatively easy for us to move the lever a small bit right now to make a significant
change in our trajectory,» CEO Stewart Butterfield and HR chief Anne Toth write in a blog post disclosing the numbers.
It continues, in bullet -
pointed sentences: «Try to
change your location as soon as possible and don't tell anyone about your location.
«While that doesn't
change the price that we necessarily sell products through to these retail channels, it starts driving price
points in the marketplace.»
Jim Pishue, president of the Washington Bankers Association,
points out that guidelines don't supersede federal law, which categorizes marijuana as a controlled substance that can
not be legally sold anywhere in the U.S. And guidance, he noted, can
change at any time.
There is no
point value or weighting assigned to these leakages, so you don't need to tally your answers — even one checkmark is cause to make a
change.
More business owners may be feeling that the economy is
not improving, but they aren't drastically
changing their hiring or pay habits at this
point.
The
point is that when you encounter a crisis, it primes your organization to go through major
changes it might
not otherwise be capable of making.
My
point in sharing these insights isn't to scare you straight or to get you to make any major life
changes.
The
point is
not to occupy Wall Street, but to
change it.
The company has responded with statements saying that it's
not as dependent on drug price increases as critics have claimed; it has also
pointed out that while attention has focused on
changes in list prices for drugs, those prices don't reflect the actual cost for insurers, governments and other group purchasers, which typically receive discounts that aren't publicly disclosed.
Far better, at least from the bank's
point of view, is to have the government step in and re-level the playing field for everyone — providing, of course, the
changes don't take too big a bite out of profits.
Changing the script in your head is a huge step, but Dweck's site ends with a healthy reminder that the whole
point of doing so is to
change not just your thoughts, but your actions as well.
Blank says he initially thought the lean startup model wouldn't work in healthcare, but then he realized the prototypical customer had
changed to the
point where entrepreneurs could indeed learn something by surveying their markets first.
«The process of execution includes real customer development,
changing your product into what people actually want and tons of other hard work and learning moments that an idea - stealer wouldn't have in his or her arsenal,»
points out entrepreneur Brent Goldstein.
That might
not sound like a lot, but Basu
points out that these small
changes add up.
Many experts don't expect that the world will adopt Level 4 autonomy — the ability to summon a car that goes from
point A to
point B without human interference — for 25 years, or a full generational
change.
In that case, you can
point out to them that their task might be simpler - perhaps they don't have to
change their behavior, but simply
change your perceptions.
The
point is, you can't share an inspiring vision — or stimulate meaningful
change — without providing some context about why your vision and the
change are long overdue.
«Here's some big, dumb industry that hasn't
changed for 30 years and could be made a hell of a lot better,» he
points out.
The company's chief financial officer David Wells says the amount isn't significantly more than what it is otherwise paying third parties, to the
point where, «We're
not going to be interested in doing something that's going to meaningfully
change the economics for us on that.»
Bell
points out reducing insurance rates won't overheat the housing market since it doesn't
change any of the other eligibility criteria; it would simply lower the price.
Capital raise after capital raise obviously signals an intense cash burn rate, but if Tesla is going to
change the world and push electric cars to a
point where they constitute more than 1 % of global auto sales, chilling out on the spending and letting the balance sheet take a breather doesn't make much sense.
When doing away with these recommendations, the DOL issued a brief press release in which it affirmed the informal nature of the recommendations and
pointed out that enforcement of all relevant laws, including those under the FLSA, will
not change.
Yet at some
point something
changes: the founder gets bored, the company starts making money in a pivot that wasn't part of the original vision or even funds run low but
not low enough to justify shutting the doors - especially when there's revenue involved.
«The moving averages [are] within the context of a larger uptrend at this
point, that hasn't
changed,» he said.
While Facebook can (and probably will) retroactively
change its terms of service so that such ads aren't considered unwanted, the ombudsman may have a
point.
The proposal has generated a great deal of often vitriolic debate over the future of the wheat board, and the C.D. Howe Institute recently weighed in with a report arguing that global grain markets have
changed significantly over the past few decades, to the
point that the CWB is more often than
not a price taker.
Photos became the essential ingredient in our growth» he also
points out that «without these brand evangelists typing captions under their photos of how they fed 10 children in the Horn of Africa we would
not have been able to
change a million lives.
While I'm
not sure your motives need to be that nefarious, the
point stands: To really effect
change, first gather your power base.
Let them help you find that place where you don't just make your
point, you
change how others think about an issue.
This means that Canada need
not match U.S. personal tax
changes point by
point.
The
point here is
not to make major business
changes on a whim based on something a customer — or even several customers — does or says.
«It doesn't want other claimants or the international community to know what it's claiming so it can
change it at any
point.»
And that's how, over time, you can lose a few percentage
points of fat even if you don't
change your exercise routine and don't
change what you eat; keep all the other variables consistent and intermittent fasting will cause you to lose fat.