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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 01/06/2016 10:56 AM, Greg Hellings
wrote:<br>
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cite="mid:CAHxvOVKQyPEBS9LSmsH4iqwA7dnw0no8fXOyOx-5DvJSs9337Q@mail.gmail.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">but no one has told me what those issues are</pre>
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<font face="FreeSerif">It comes down to this:<br>
We need to look for the way to say Yes, and stop coughing up any
and all possible, weak, ham-handed excuses to say No.<br>
<br>
A long time ago -- late '08 -- I flamed at length here about
Getting Stuff Done. The fact that NASB has languished for
significantly longer than a decade and <u><i><b>STILL</b></i></u>
hasn't found its way out the door is an existential statement
about Crosswire in this regard. Crosswire as a whole has an
indecent problem with the idea of Getting Stuff Done, where "done"
means "out the door."<br>
<br>
If you consider this from the perspective of an outside observer,
it looks like someone literally doesn't want NASB ever to be
released. Consider: In the last 12 years, one of my sons
graduated high school, took a couple years off, went to college,
finished college, got married, began a career, and had his first
child, who will be a year old very soon. In that same time period
Crosswire couldn't get the NASB module (set) finished.<br>
<br>
Any reason to say No is completely obliterated by saying "12
years." It's time to say Yes.<br>
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