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" ... A lack of humor is one of the classical music business' more pressing problems, just after cowardice in all its many manifestations. This is an exemplary case in that it combines both – and yet there is hope. Hope that Hope admits a mistake and apologizes to Arno Lücker, and hope that the Konzerthaus realizes its even greater, downright toxic mistake of trying to attain a temporary benefit at the cost of something far more valuable and stands, belatedly, by their guy. It’s not clear if that might not already have happened: The U.K. blogger Norman Lebrecht suggested, in a post in which he habitually got half his facts wrong, that he received the following statement from Daniel Hope: ... "
" ... Already facing challenges in how tax reform is paid for, the Senate GOP endorsement of these taxes means that tax reformers will have a revenue baseline target $230 billion bigger than they did before. That means they will either have to leave these tax increases in place (as they have warned they might have to do), or pay for their removal by sacrificing other areas of tax reform. Will the death tax not be fully repealed? Will full business expensing have to give way to 50 percent bonus depreciation? Will rates not be able to come down as much on businesses or families? Who knows? But the cowardice of the Senate GOP today will have a real impact on tax reform tomorrow. ... "
" ... Deciding to live from a space of gratitude doesn’t require burying your head in the sand and pretending everything’s swell when it’s not. That’s willful neglect at best, cowardice at worst. Nor does it require that everything be perfect in your world. No, definitely not that. ... "
" ... It is passing strange then that so many young Frenchmen and Frenchwomen have joined the protests. They, after all, have suffered most from these inequitable and abusive laws. Perhaps it is a theatrical impulse that draws these poor people out to support those who have gained so much at their expense. Perhaps it is a cynical hope that somehow they will someday join the ranks of the established workers and also enjoy protections and benefits at the expense of other Frenchmen and Frenchwomen. Perhaps it is the romance of revolutionary action against established power that has long held a place in French imaginations. To be sure, it is easy to see why the French people would want to attack the political establishment. It has, after all, promulgated this abusive labor regime and even when seeing the error of its ways, has shown cowardice in the face of opposition. But if the political establishment deserves disdain in this, surely so too does another establishment, that of privilege workers, who have so benefited at the nation’s expense. ... "
" ... Singha severely offended the Filipinos by saying it was “an act of cowardice to desert posts especially when a delicate ceasefire was in place." His argument was the Filipinos had to stay where they were during talks to obtain freedom for the Fijians, who remain in rebel hands. ... "