A Quote by Michael T. Flynn

We should quit using phrases like 'turning points' and 'tipping points.' There's been multiple turning points, multiple tipping points. — © Michael T. Flynn
We should quit using phrases like 'turning points' and 'tipping points.' There's been multiple turning points, multiple tipping points.
Joe and I have always been drawn to ensemble storytelling. We like the idea of telling stories from multiple characters' points of view and thinking about the story from multiple characters' points of view.
In real life turning points are sneaky. They pass by unlabeled and unheeded. Opportunities are missed, catastrophes unwittingly celebrated. Turning points are only uncovered later, by historians who seek to bring order to a lifetime of tangled moments.
When systems come to be far from points of equilibrium, they reach bifurcation points, wherein multiple, as opposed to unique, solutions, to instability become possible.
The urgency derives from the nearness of climate tipping points.
The champions are the team with the most points...if United have more points, it means they have more points, that's all. Nothing else.
We are on the precipice of climate system tipping points beyond which there is no redemption.
What makes something tragic is that it could've been averted at multiple points.
The reference-points pictures should be shot and taken off one's system. But don't follow that always, create you own points
We don't know exactly where all the tipping points are in the physical world for inescapable damage, but we're clearly reaching close to some of them.
The public, as a whole, buys at the wrong time and sells at the wrong time. The average operator, when he sees two or three points profit, takes it; but, if a stock goes against him two or three points, he holds on waiting for the price to recover, with oftentimes, the result of seeing a loss of two or three points run into a loss of ten points.
We use nearly 5 thousand different data points about you to craft and target a message. The data points are not just a representative model of you. The data points are about you, specifically.
The Thieves of Eddis don't have breaking points. We have flash points instead, like gunpowder.
Two points doesn't seem like a lot, but there's only 2 points that separate the best from the worst sometimes.
What fascinates me are the turning points where history could have been different.
Your high points and your low points. High points don't last that long, it's a high and it happens. It's great at the moment but you really can't live on it.
In Judaism or Christianity and so forth, you invent rules that don't exist anywhere except in your imagination. You spend your life trying to gain points and to avoid all kinds of things that detract from your points. And if by the time you die you gather enough points, then you pass on to the next level, in Heaven.
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