Wednesday, May 28, 2008

It Doesn't Matter How Many Cheers

Be fair, attentive, and customers
will return.


I copied and pasted the following
desperado's page.

Democratic Showdown On Saturday
Could Get Ugly

The meeting of the Democratic Party
rules committee in Washington on
Saturday, which is set to decide what
to do about the delegations from
Michigan and Florida, could get ugly
in light of a memo released yesterday
by party lawyers.

The memo was sent late Tuesday to
the 30 members of the party's Rules
and Bylaws Committee, which plans
to meet Saturday at a Washington
hotel. The committee is considering
ways to include the two important
general election battlegrounds at
the nominating convention in August,
and the staff analysis says seating
half the delegates is "as far as it
legally can go."

"I know to pay my taxes, keep accurate
books, fair practices in advertising,
etc." You explained to me.

I'm referring to the paragraphs from
desperado's page. Why try to force
a law, piece of equipment, when it's
time to go home or retire it?

A piece of equipment could have
been a winner for you. Still, there's
no sense in trying to operate it when
it costs more to fix than its producing.

Likewise, the same applies to humans.
If you're in a race, job, that's not giving
the best results, retire, move on. Let
someone else occupy the position,
place. It doesn't matter how many
people are cheering you on.

The longer you postpone the inevitable,
the bigger your disappointment will be.
In the long run, you'll be respected for
having operated sensibly.

This lesson is for anyone, everyone,
all walks of life, business life.

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