As entrepreneurs we should ask ourselves: What am I missing to achieve business success?
Before we cut medical research, we should ask hedge fund managers to stop paying taxes at a lower rate than their secretaries.
WHITEHOUSE: Weekly Address: A Bipartisan Approach to Strengthening the Economy | The White House
Maybe we should ask the next Secretary of Wizardry and Mathemagics, Nate Silver.
Every day, we should ask ourselves three questions as a nation: How do we attract more jobs to our shores?
Instead of thinking, in the federal budget, what we should cut, we should ask the opposite question, what should we keep?
The question we should ask ourselves is, what can we do to reduce misery and improve living standards in other countries?
But before we shed any tears for the endangered seniors and their tireless corporate benefactors, we should ask: 2.5% relative to what?
Instead of asking Sapolsky what's wrong with you, why are you getting less adventurous, maybe we should ask what's right with you?
Maybe we should ask the actor what he thinks the point was.
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Before we throw them under the bus, we should ask ourselves, who are those guys, and what did they do to become the 1%?
Before we take money away from our schools, or scholarships away from our students, we should ask millionaires to give up their tax break.
Before we ask seniors to pay more for Medicare, we should ask the wealthiest taxpayers to give up tax breaks we simply cannot afford under these circumstances.
WHITEHOUSE: Weekly Address: A Bipartisan Approach to Strengthening the Economy | The White House
And what do single women want? (We should ask them.) A first guess is security in all its forms: banking, financial services, insurance, not to mention padlocks.
And then we should ask ourselves: should we overhaul an entire system of public education when 77% of American parents are happy with the one we have now?
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What we have said is, in order to pay for the jobs plan and to close our deficit we should ask the very wealthiest Americans, top 2 percent, to pay a little bit more.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama on the American Jobs Act in Emporia, Virginia | The White House
If we are still inclined to give the press the big measure of respect it says it deserves, we should ask ourselves a question once posed by William Hazlitt in another context: Were we fools then, or are we dishonest now?
Instead of the middle class paying more, we should ask the wealthiest Americans to pay a little more, a modest amount, so that we can reduce our deficit and still make investments in things like education that help our economy grow.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama on Extending Middle-Class Tax Breaks
We should also ask just how the Internet can be a force for framing popular viewpoints that have as big an impact politically as the views of special interest groups with an inside track in Washington.
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We should also look at our own businesses and ask ourselves whether we should be doing a Ron Johnson on our company, rather than continuing with business as usual as the world changes rapidly around us.
Or should we ask some of the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share?
Should we not ask: Would have Steve Jobs accomplished so much if he was the Mr. Nice Guy everyone wanted him to be?
Or should we ask that everybody pay their fair share?
WHITEHOUSE: Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Phoenix Awards Dinner | The White House
When it comes to paying down the deficit and investing in our future, should we ask middle-class Americans to pay even more at a time when their budgets are already stretched to the breaking point?
Can we spend better should be the question we ask, before we see if we need to spend more.
So the question we felt the Board should ask was: What is the manager-of-managers doing to earn his fee?
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Saxberg makes some great points on the cautions and potential of this research, as well as the questions we should be continuing to ask.
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