Some would argue that free societies are too soft to fight brutal wars too long.
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Some would argue that Samsung, which has nearly 65, 000 patents, is in a stronger position.
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Some would argue that true glamping means living like royalty while paying a king's ransom.
Some would argue that, in matters of great public import, scientific dissent should be silenced.
Some would argue that this is premature, as long as our scientific knowledge remains incomplete.
Moreover, some would argue that, whatever the old rules of diplomacy, times have moved on.
Of course, some would argue that this 120-seat restaurant is the least desirable place in the country to dine.
Some would argue that the fundamental stories for these companies are still intact, and most of them are.
Some would argue that the commander who sends a robot on a mission would be responsible (last point of contact).
Even with those reforms, some would argue that only a switch to a different system would rid France's judiciary of political influence.
Some would argue that such change is easier to achieve in the capital where distances between sites is shorter - and that maybe true.
Indeed, some would argue that the spur of such a tax leads to more efficient allocation of the resources and thus to a negative deadweight cost.
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Some would argue that the TFG itself has been rather too preoccupied with reshuffles and in-fighting, instead of helping the hungry crowds in Mogadishu's camps and neglected hospitals.
Some would argue that business schools should teach their M.
Some would argue that this investment frenzy is not irrational.
Gamification is in fact already gaining a foothold in education, and some would argue that it has always played a prominent role in one form or another, even in the pre-computer era.
Decades to build indeed, but as it has reached the mountaintop, some would argue that the NFL believes it is now too big to fail despite allowing its brand standards of perfection to fall by the wayside.
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Considering that the U.S. spends more on defense than the next 10 nations combined, some would argue that dressing the Olympians like members of the armed forces during the biggest television event of the year is an arrogant or impolitic choice.
One of them, as Stephanie Flanders has pointed out, may be that the UK has a political system that is more adept at making tough decisions in a crisis and then implementing them - and some would argue that's been proved to be true even when our first-past-the-post system delivers a coalition government.
So when we think about Hip Hop, I think that there would be some that would credibly argue that Hip Hop has really influenced and is the most influential component of popular culture today.
Some would also argue that, without the Bush tax cuts, things might have been decidedly worse during the final decade of the last century.
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Mr. ABBAS MILANI (Co-Director, Iran Democracy Project): Some people would argue that they are very consciously, in a very calculated Machiavellian way, fomenting a crisis in order to use that crisis as an opportunity to seize completely the reins of power.
Some would even argue that Guardiola was less an innovator than a custodian in charge of making sure his club didn't waste its ample talent, though that might be taking it too far. (He couldn't be reached for comment to answer the question.) Certainly, Guardiola put his mark on the club.
But Mr. King also had a further message for politicians that some would argue he should have spelt out much more clearly before now: that the only sure-fire way to boost the long-term growth of an economy lies in structural overhauls designed to boost competitiveness and the supply potential of the economy.
Some would argue the problem was that the packagers of credit snookered the credit rating agencies leading up to the credit crisis.
Some Asians argue that it would be better if things were plain bad rather than uncertain.
Some analysts argue that it would make sense to alter the labelling.
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Some argue that China would do a better job at curbing inflation, a little over 5% currently, if it let its currency, the yuan, appreciate faster.
Some argue that it would be no failure at all: such huge transformations, they say, should be pondered with all possible care by a newly elected president and Congress.
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