A Quote by Ashleigh Brilliant

Love is a strange commodity, because you can't import it if you don't also export it. — © Ashleigh Brilliant
Love is a strange commodity, because you can't import it if you don't also export it.
Democracy is not a commodity for import and export.
If the U.S. doesn't have an export credit agency, which is what the Export-Import Bank is, then we can't compete with other countries that do. Every other country in the world that competes in aerospace has an export credit agency.
Public-policy-wise, if you want to be consistent, crude oil is a bulk commodity, and you should be able to export it. I would rather the crude go to U.S. refineries to get refined and then export the refined product because we get double, triple the money.
Creativity is an import-export business.
If we can't export the scenery, we'll import the tourists.
America wins when we trade and export and import.
The boomerang is Australia's chief export (and then import).
There should be a policy to have a mechanism in place to decide when and how to import or export.
The Export-Import Bank is one of the most important tools America has to create jobs.
Transparency at the Export Import Bank has long been a concern and must be addressed.
Let us come together and think of ways India does not have to import but we export to the world.
I have been advocating for a long time that the Export Import Bank shouldn't be for one or two companies, and that's what it's for, basically.
Looting is a natural response to the unnatural and inhuman society of commodity abundance. It instantly undermines the commodity as such, and it also exposes what the commodity ultimately implies: the army, the police and the other specialized detachments of the state's monopoly of armed violence.
Haiti is extremely stratified socially with a number of large families controlling most of the economy, and import-export.
The U.S. tends to export high-tech goods because we have strong comparative advantage there, and we tend to import labor-intensive and less skill-intensive goods that other countries can do more cheaply.
Oil and coal? Of course, it's a fungible commodity and they don't flag, you know, the molecules, where it's going and where it's not [...]. So, I believe that what Congress is going to do, also, is not to allow the export bans to such a degree that it's Americans that get stuck to holding the bag without the energy source that is produced here, pumped here.
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