That's a remarkable difference--going from prioritizing among big problems to lining up newly available targets of opportunity and potential, but as the application of business analytics makes it possible to see patterns in data that we couldn't see before and answer questions we couldn't even ask before, why wouldn't we shift our thinking from solving old problems to unlocking new possibilities?
We wouldn't be -- we wouldn't be sitting here, the 14th of December, when you'd much rather be Christmas shopping, discussing the Senate being in on the weekends if the President wasn't involved.
"Without a coalition we wouldn't have a majority, we wouldn't get things done, " he said.
If they didn't then we wouldn't be where we are in the table.
If we know one is safe, why wouldn't we remove the possibility of danger from our children's hands and mouths?
Sure, over-engineered does come to mind, but we can't say we wouldn't be giddy to get our mitts under one at some point.
Indeed, wouldn't we all like to have the proverbial golfer's "mulligan" to paper over our mistakes?
Wouldn't we all like to know how Paul Tudor Jones frequently beats the market?
Why wouldn't we take this opportunity to do what we've talked about for 70 years?
Wouldn't we teach a scientist that lighting gunpowder is dangerous?
Why wouldn't we want to put that on an electronic medical record that will reduce error rates, reduce our long-term cost of health care, and create jobs right now?
So why wouldn't we want to build state-of-the-art schools with science labs that are teaching our kids the skills they need for the 21st century, that will enhance our economy and, by the way, right now will create jobs?
Consider: If women had been in charge of creating the organizational structures for the last few hundred years, wouldn't we all have figured out how to care for the kids and elders without losing the value of half the population's intelligence in the workplace?
While we're wondering why safeguards like receipts aren't mandatory, we wouldn't immediately fret if our livelihood depended on the Windows Store -- at least, not if we were careful.
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In the long-term there will be all the facilities which we wouldn't have if we didn't have the Olympics.
"We cannot look at other boats for reference, but we wouldn't leave unless we're completely confident we'll make it, " she told CNN.
"We have a fantastic lifestyle here with maids, drivers and nannies and things we wouldn't have if we lived in Utah, " says Kinsella.
"If we hadn't met Andrew, we wouldn't have known very much about PTSD because the Army, even the Behavioral Health Center, is not telling us a whole lot, " Natasha Talley says.
To repeat what I said in an earlier blog, if the ECB had said this a year ago, we probably wouldn't be where we are today.
If there wasn a picket line that we wouldn't cross, would we go?
"We wouldn't do this if we thought it was just another also-ran, " Brightsolid chief executive Chris van der Kuyl told the BBC.
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We wouldn't jump overboard but we have a good connection to the authorities and we try to cover all the daylight hours, every day of the year.
"If you go back in history, and look at the beginning of Iraq, and what they've been through with Saddam Hussein, we wouldn't be the people we are today if we lived the way they have lived, " Robbins says.
If they didn't, we wouldn't watch.
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I'm sure we'll play the US Open together and I don't see why (we wouldn't play Wimbledon next year too).
"If we hadn't allowed that to happen, we wouldn't even be talking about this right now, " says label manager Jasper Goggins.
For, as Espen points out, if we didn't treat snow as an emergency, we wouldn't get our snow days.
If countries had done what they were supposed to do, we wouldn't be in the mess we are.
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