The point is, beware of master plans. In fact, beware of any plans. As John Lennon once succinctly put it, “life is what happens while we’re making other plans.”
In short, people who make plans change plans.
And so why not live out the day on the fly? Why make so many tiresome plans while you, of all things, travel?
I guess the above-mentioned speaker really just wants to stay in bed, and in fact, all day, to play computer games on his iPad or some other gadget.
Oh, well, never mind. Let’s move on to examine more media examples of “master plan”:
1. The U.S. Department of Energy is moving quickly with no master plan to shut down a project that would have buried the nation's nuclear waste in Nevada, the department’s inspector general said in a report made public Friday.
Department officials have used focus groups and set a Sept. 30 deadline to end the 28-year-long Yucca Mountain project, according to a memorandum dated Wednesday from DOE Inspector General Gregory Friedman.
Friedman's findings were reported Friday by Stephens Media’s Washington bureau and the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
His report compares closing the $10.5 billion Yucca Mountain project 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas to decommissioning the Superconducting Super Collider in Texas after Congress killed it in 1993.
“We know of no other comparable single project termination in the department’s recent history as consequential as Yucca Mountain,” said the report, titled, “Need for Enhanced Surveillance During the Yucca Mountain Project Shut Down.”
【Master plan?】相关文章:
最新
2020-09-15
2020-08-28
2020-08-21
2020-08-19
2020-08-14
2020-08-12