The best way to predict the future is to invent it.
If you look at suburban education in New Jersey and New York, it's pretty strong, intact, doing a pretty good job. You cap taxes for those communities, can we reasonably predict it's going to be as strong 20 years from now?
You can't predict what someone else is going to do and when someone else is going to leave
Don't predict disappointment while hope is an option
It's easier to invent the future than to predict it.
You can predict all you want, but everybody knows what predictions get you.
I predict the absolute fullness of man's operation on planet Earth by the year 2000 A. D.
If a man can predict his own death and resurrection, and pull it off, I just go with whatever that man says
I am walking today because of chiropractic care I received years ago. I predict a great future for the science of chiropractic.
Identify the dominant philosophy of a society and you can predict its future.
In the decade ahead I can predict that we will provide over twice the productivity improvement that we provided in the '90s.
. . . one doesn't really profit from experience; one merely learns to predict the next mistake.
There is an excellent way to make predictions without the slightest risk of error: predict the past.
I am not a prophet; I cannot predict what will happen.
The hardest thing about being a communist is trying to predict the past.
I can never predict what's going to happen.
I have a very positive outlook on things. It's hard to predict how actual books are going to do but I'm not freaked out about ebooks taking over. I think there are probably more active readers now because of computers and iPhones.
What I have figured out is that I can predict the future. I just can't predict when.
Not only can no one predict the future, we don't understand the present - and there isn't even any certainty about the past.
The moot court process in our office when we get ready, we - everybody, including the SG, does two moot courts for each argument. And they are phenomenal, and they predict 90 percent of the questions that I get asked, at least 90 percent.