The best-selling author is blowing the doors off business as usual with hard truths and ideas that work. |
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Sceptics fear the crackdown will be short-lived and once the meeting is over it will be business as usual. |
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I'm also pretty zonked and wishing I could just lie down and sleep, but that's business as usual for me. |
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A quick glance at last week's papers reveals that it's monkey business as usual on Wall Street. |
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She says it will be business as usual once all the regulation safety checks have been done. |
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All exchanges and financial institutions had back-up power systems that allowed them to conduct business as usual. |
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Does this suggest that the press is kind of inching back towards business as usual? |
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Is the energy giant guilty of wrongdoing, or was it strictly business as usual? |
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On this level, France would have preferred no regime change and a lifting of sanctions to get back to business as usual. |
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He said after a meeting on Wednesday night that it would be business as usual despite the ongoing situation. |
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Yet for our ministers, cloistered from economic reality, it's business as usual. |
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Regardless of the outcome, it is difficult to envisage the resumption of business as usual afterwards. |
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But, if the governing class goes about business as usual, that's not a stiff upper lip but a death wish. |
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But it is not quite business as usual, despite the best efforts to pretend that it is. |
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So the official line was that it will be business as usual despite the warning. |
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If the auditor-general hadn't forced their hand, it would be business as usual in the Liberal camp. |
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According to management, the club is undergoing renovations but is open for business as usual. |
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At Manchester Airport it was business as usual despite a four-day walkout by security staff. |
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We can give in to inertia, even just the inertia of routine and business as usual. |
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The fact is that Montserrat now faces circumstances that cannot be treated like business as usual. |
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People probably think we have closed down, so we have graffitied the boards saying business as usual. |
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At one point, she would be berating her colleagues and the next minute she would be laughing and smiling with them like it was business as usual. |
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More important, we must not let them take advantage of the economic turmoil in order to return to business as usual. |
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This did not indicate the sickliness of Ghana's political class, but rather signalled business as usual after a swift handover. |
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In part, economic integration and its benefits have become business as usual and thus undervalued. |
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If I ingest a sufficient quantity of ground glass, the result will be a horrendous evil, because the physiology of my digestion will proceed with business as usual. |
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Specially trained SMB technical support helps solve problems fast to get you back to business as usual. |
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Disentangling the effect of the NZ ETS from business as usual forestry will be particularly important in ex-post analysis. |
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A perfect balance of streamlined style and classic proportions, in elegant haberdashery finishes that are anything but business as usual. |
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Senator Ted Cruz is the biggest threat to business as usual in Washington in the last 25 years – and that is a great thing for America. |
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Watson faints when his old friend reveals himself, but after that it's business as usual. |
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The rapid and dustless installation, allowed the casino to continue business as usual during the installation. |
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It saddens me that the situation has not changed and it saddens me that so many people in this House voted for business as usual. |
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When the current crisis ended, policy must not return to business as usual, or the next crisis would hit even harder. |
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Then the consultant can withdraw, leaving management to get on with business as usual. |
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The class action plaintiffs allege that the agencies ignored this order and have continued on with business as usual. |
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So if your boss is poisoning the workplace with favoritism, you shouldn't chalk it up to business as usual. |
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From the point of view of those not observing the holy day, it should be business as usual here at the Frum blog. |
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But it was business as usual for the workmates at Mitre House on Monday as they resisted the temptation to throw caution to the wind and leave their jobs. |
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In some places, it was business as usual, but many parts of the city were still influenced by the holiday atmosphere, and people were reluctant to work. |
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As the first horse race of the season draws close in Iowa, the whole machinery of political business as usual has clattered to life to chase after Howard Dean. |
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But behind the outwardly chummy relations between the two countries, it has been business as usual for Russian agents, who have continued to spy on their former Cold War foes. |
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As noted above, it is unusual for the UK financial sector to be so merciful and short-termist: business as usual will no doubt be resumed before too long. |
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In many ways it's like the calm before the storm-people are continuing with business as usual with little real change unless personal circumstances such as unemployment dictate it. |
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Equally, CDS's employees have an incredible depth of expertise, and in an unprecedented and highly challenging market environment, they demonstrated they were able to go above and beyond business as usual. |
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In Athens, it was business as usual in Syntagma Square, the scene of overnight revelry that lasted into the small hours. |
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Without isolation, they would carry on business as usual, mingling with other creatures high and low, so that their motives, goals, and actual deeds would be hard to single out, analyze, criticize, and neutralize. |
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The Special Representative, however, has stated on a number of occasions that business as usual isn't good enough for anybody, including business itself. |
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Driving rock guitar riffs, gruff grumbly vocals, speaker-busting bass and an avalanche of drums mean that it's business as usual. |
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Only then can they happily resume their perfidious business as usual. |
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A project developer may not claim credits on the basis of the carbon sequestered in its wood products, but must present proof that its project generates sequestration in addition to a business as usual scenario. |
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And we're going to go through the same cycles of periodic violence, and the occasional riots in the streets, and everybody will feign concern until it goes away, and then we go about our business as usual. |
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Then, by dint of another fundamental property of superconductors, they abruptly become resistive again, only to go back to business as usual when the surge dissipates. |
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In the space of a few days at the end of March, hospitals went from business as usual to a near-complete lockdown, while staff scrambled to understand and cure a highly communicable and life-threatening illness. |
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In short: business as usual, and every reason for Russians to disbelieve anything the West tells them about the need to run their country properly. |
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However, it will not be business as usual. |
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In rebuilding our economy let's consider it the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to break through for a better world for everyone. We cannot accept a return to business as usual. |
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If the wish to live on is to prevail over myopic pushing on with business as usual, we have enough scientific know-how in the world to deal with our problems. |
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Would you continue to conduct business as usual? |
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Removing such limits provides an open invitation to business as usual. |
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It's business as usual at more than 120 Youth Hostels says the YHA and its four million world wide members can continue to enjoy top quality city and town breaks. |
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Business as usual is what has driven the greater sage grouse to its precarious brink. |
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