-
Imagine a scientific journal in which every single article was wrong.
FORBES: What If They Published a Science Journal Where Every Result was Wrong?
-
Your first instinct might be to defend your brand, but according to three psychologists cited in a recent Economist article, that instinct may be dead wrong.
FORBES: Reverse Cause Marketing: Coca-Cola Goes on the Defensive
-
Holder's responses to these questions before the committee, however, reveal a troubling lack of recognition that a lot can go wrong once you bring KSM and company into the Article III court system -- including having to contend with what the Supreme Court may have to say about what happens to these defendants if something indeed does go wrong at trial.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Know when to hold them
-
Thanks for a good article and my opportunity to expound on what I think is wrong.
FORBES: 5 Ways To Protect Yourself Against Obamacare
-
That article is still worth a read but I got one thing wrong: the Germans - indeed the policy elite that surrounds them, committed to sound money, balanced books etc - have taken control of and crashed southern Europe but made no moves towards a fiscal union.
BBC: How the fate of Europe could be decided 'within hours'
-
The fuss over the offshore, tax-avoiding trust held by a Treasury minister, Geoffrey Robinson (see article) does not reflect any apparent wrong-doing by Mr Robinson but rather the fact that his boss, Gordon Brown, the chancellor of the exchequer, has felt the need to attack exactly the sort of tax-avoidance schemes which his colleague has been exploiting.
ECONOMIST: Labour��s stumbles
-
One reason for the Tories' failure, as a YouGov poll for The Economist ( see article) shows, is that they keep choosing the wrong leader.
ECONOMIST: British politics
-
This article is adapted from Selling Out a Superpower: Where the U.S. Economy Went Wrong and How We Can Turn It Around, with the permission of Prometheus Books.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
In a separate Sunday Telegraph article, Defence Secretary Des Browne said concerns the covenant "is in any way broken are wrong".
BBC: Gen Dannatt said the military covenant was "out of kilter"