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In advertising, not to be different is virtual suicide.
In advertising, not to be different is virtual suicide.
The nucleus is there on the line, but the depth is a major, major question.
The nucleus is there on the line, but the depth is a major, major question.
I'm personally not against billboards, but I am worried about the looks within the city limits. I see billboards as read more
I'm personally not against billboards, but I am worried about the looks within the city limits. I see billboards as more of a process of, as you're coming into town, wanting people to stop and service our businesses, buy their gas and stuff like that. Once you come into town and get into high density growth and mini-stores it becomes more of a distraction and a nuisance.
We have to look at how shall we regulate the so-called political market. Should it be very free, or moderately read more
We have to look at how shall we regulate the so-called political market. Should it be very free, or moderately free, or somehow restricted? It's my opinion it's too restricted nowadays.
It would have been nice, but we took care of what we needed to take care of.
It would have been nice, but we took care of what we needed to take care of.
Microsoft has stepped up to the plate in a way we've never seen before.
Microsoft has stepped up to the plate in a way we've never seen before.
It's like taking over This Is Your Life from Eamonn Andrews - you just open your mouth and hope you read more
It's like taking over This Is Your Life from Eamonn Andrews - you just open your mouth and hope you sound like yourself. That's all you can possibly do.
The cops aren't going to touch this case, ... They only have enough resources to go after the big cases.
The cops aren't going to touch this case, ... They only have enough resources to go after the big cases.
[Abrams described a historically significant episode that revealed how the medical establishment -not just the government- has upheld prohibition.] In read more
[Abrams described a historically significant episode that revealed how the medical establishment -not just the government- has upheld prohibition.] In 1997 after the law was changed in California, Jerome Kassirer, who was Editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, wrote an editorial on medical marijuana called 'federal foolishness,' saying 'We know this drug works, everybody has their anecdotal experience of people who have benefited from it, get over it, reschedule it, make it schedule 2.' Unfortunately, ... he very shortly thereafter became no longer the editor in chief of the New England Journal of Medicine.