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Once you pay off the Danes for not raiding the country they might come back next year and demand more Danegeld for not raiding it again.
FORBES: Once Google Pays The Danegeld Will The Danes Ever Stop Asking For Money?
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Even if the offers do come in, they might not be enough to save MGM from bankruptcy.
FORBES: No Love For MGM
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It has told countries that promised to hand dirty power plants all the permits they needed for years to come that they could not do so, because such pledges might undermine any chance of introducing a tougher regime after 2012.
ECONOMIST: Europe's emissions-trading scheme
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Finally, Mr Upton argues, there could have been three big miscalculations by the banks - the size of the average payout, the number of claims that they could reject as unfounded, and the numbers who might not have realised they were mis-sold PPI but may eventually come forward.
BBC: PPI: How did the bill ever get so big?
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Had these calls come only from a handful of smaller European countries, they might not have mattered much.
ECONOMIST: The continent��s jubilant left breaks free
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It's almost like they come not so much needing to get to know her like they might a lesser known candidate, but they want to see how she faces tough questions, as you just heard.
NPR: Sen. Clinton Takes a New Hampshire Tour
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Derby had come close to winning at Newcastle on Sunday and had it not been for Gerrard they might have won for the first time under manager Paul Jewell.
BBC: CHOOSE A SPORT
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They must get right with the law before they can get in line and earn their citizenship -- not just because it is fair, not just because it will make clear to those who might wish to come to America they must do so inside the bounds of the law, but because this is how we demonstrate that being -- what being an American means.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama on Comprehensive Immigration Reform
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They feared not only a larger welfare state, but a revitalized Democratic coalition that might go on winning elections for years to come.
NPR: Much at Stake in Defining Social Security 'Crisis'