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Quotes About Ramifications

But it's not just the cattle producers, it's all the attendant industries like transport and shipping and feed producers and the like. There will be enormous ramifications across the beef industry generally as a result of the Government's decision to ban all exports to all of the abattoirs in Indonesia.
~ Julie Bishop
No ramifications whatsoever. You're not going to ramificate; you don't know what it means. You don't know which of the words I use are real words and which I'm making up
~ Sophie Hannah
Isolated incidents have lateral, lasting implications.
~ Katherine Ryan
and are paying a heavy price for losing.
~ Brandon Mull
THE WHOLE ARGUMENT of this book may be summed up in the statement that in studying the effects of any given economic proposal we must trace not merely the immediate results but the results in the long run, not merely the primary consequences but the secondary consequences, and not merely the effects on some special group but the effects on everyone.
~ Henry Hazlitt
es forzoso que examinemos no sólo los resultados inmediatos que su adopción producirá, sino también los resultados a largo plazo; no sólo las consecuencias primarias, sino también las secuelas secundarias, y no sólo sus efectos sobre un sector determinado de intereses, sino sobre toda la colectividad.
~ Henry Hazlitt
The ramifications that you set for yourself can inspire you to do things that you would have never thought of because, once you're trapped, your job is to persevere.
~ Adrian Younge
Ideas have consequences, and totally erroneous ideas are likely to have destructive consequences.
~ Steve Allen
I spent so many years just saying what I felt without thinking about the ramifications, without understanding that I have this opinion but not everyone might share that opinion and now they don't like me because of it.
~ Katherine Heigl
According to the new pastoral, sex must not be named imprudently, but its aspects, its correlations, and its effects must be pursued down to their slenderest ramifications: a shadow in a daydream, an image too slowly dispelled, a badly exorcised complicity between the body's mechanics and the mind's complacency: everything had to be told.
~ Michel Foucault
Trouble sires three children.
~ Terry Goodkind
We can never do merely one thing.
~ Garrett Hardin
Whether it's threats to Medicare, cuts in education spending, or Internet privacy, the ramifications got young people out to vote and should be enough to keep them involved in our political system.
~ Patrick Murphy
Fuck one thing and it fucks everything else. The
~ Steven Erikson
Unintended consequences.
~ Steven Gould
I think that social media has really empowered bullies because you get to do it from the comfort of your own home, completely anonymously, with no ramifications.
~ Maysoon Zayid
You don't know whether he's thought through how this is going to affect the Middle East.
~ Chris Matthews
Nada es más fácil que tener buenas intenciones. Pero cuando no se entiende cómo funciona una economía, las buenas intenciones pueden llevar a consecuencias desastrosas
~ Thomas Sowell
lthough the basic principles of economics are not very complicated, the very ease with which they can be learned also makes them easy to dismissed as simplistic by those who do not want to accept analyses which contradict their cherished beliefs. Evasions of the obvious are often far more complicated than the facts. Nor is it automatically true that complex effects must have complex causes. The ramifications of something very simple can become enormously complex.
~ Thomas Sowell
She did what she did, then left the rest of us to deal with it.
~ Cameron Dokey
Because of what you have done things will happen later which can't possibly be foreseen.
~ Iris Murdoch
But whatever the ramifications, whatever turns the path takes, the beginning is always there, in a particular moment, a particular point of access.
~ Barry Unsworth
It is not possible to spend on one thing and then not have consequences on something else.
~ Johann Lamont
But this argument is found to be defective when examined in its effects and consequences.
~ Napoleon Hill