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"Without the appropriate use of contraceptives," he argued, "we will have many, many more unwanted pregnancies".
Marca's Roberto Palomar argued: "We will never know if Luis found the team or if the team found him; I suspect it's the latter".
So if we want to continue to see accelerated growth in all of the areas where innovation has slowed, he argued, we will have to look to technology.
When it comes to unpaid labor that many don't even consider "work," like childcare and housework, she argued, "We will know what unwaged labor does for society by how much people miss it when it's gone".
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But he argues we will stall out.
Historians will argue, we will debate.
Blanchflower argues we will all be worse off if we let unemployment soar, thinking it is someone else's problem.
Within a decade, he argues, we will be capable of producing "robustly rejuvenated" mice, which will prepare public opinion for something more ambitious.
But if we really are wired to make certain kinds of mistakes, as Thaler and Sunstein and Ariely all argue, we will, it seems safe to predict, keep finding new ways to make them.
Pressley and Capuano share similar progressive stances, but Pressley argues, "We will vote the same way, but I will lead differently".
However, most of the time they just…told me to get away twice saying – "If you start to argue we will call the police".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com