A timeline is a a graphical representation of a linear sequence of significant events which has occurred during the accomplishment of some activity. A timetable provides a corresponding, forward-looking series of pre-arranged events, organized as a tabular list, and is used to plan and track such activities for performing and reporting on future work. Each of the events associated with these timelines and timetables may be comprised of either top-level milestones or more detailed inchstones.
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Faith and hope are as much a part of political reality as they are in change programs within businesses. As I reflect on the daily political landscape that pretends to offer us information to make sense of the 'most important issue' in the upcoming election (the economy), I offer the following
two articles for your consideration. I
think these two articles are important to digest together. Both have the feel of the kind of unbiased analysis,
reflective discourse, and unvarnished truth that must
accompany any true reform in our national debate on such topics (a reform that is desparately needed).
There is no longer much public debate about whether global warming is occurring or not. Articles like 'Mass extinction study casts cloud on future' paint a bleak picture of what lies ahead for the earth's population. But wait, if the future is cloudy, wouldn't things be cooling down?
My flippant remark is intended to reinforce that it is sometimes a bit hard to sort out sensationalism from hard science in policy-making for significant issues in society; too often, there is a 'rush to judgement' regarding major changes, when history indicates that such haste is rarely necessary, and when it is, the related decisions have as much chance to cause more problems as they do to fix the original situation. Often, the situation is simply more complicated than it appears; true science would expect that hypotheses would be developed, predictions made, experiments performed, results widely reviewed, options analyzed, and consensus established over a long period of time. But when a 'crisis' occurs, too often, this wise course is abandoned. read more »