Did I say absolutely nothing? Sorry, I must've missed it. Next time you should quote me word for word with emphasis in bold.Wow, giving awards, congratulatory messages, universally recognized as actions to celebrate achievements and excellence becomes meaning absolutely nothing ? You may want to try changing the meaning in the dictionary while you're at it.
You can be skeptical and cautious all you want, I'll ask for the reasons. If all you got is 'nothing is guaranteed', I'll call it what it is, being pedantic.
They say & market CJ1000 as comparable to LEAP to equip C919 in the future. Did I say now ? If you're skeptical, I'm interested if you know the performance parameters to cast doubts on their words.
I don't need to change any definitions to make a point about how platitudes about excellence during an awards ceremony doesn't mean much. You can try to bury and dismiss that awards ceremonies have trumpeted "excellence" for products that later encountered difficulties before, but it won't change that that's happened.
I'm skeptical because we don't have performance parameters. Usually that's how skepticism works, when there's an absence of facts, not a presumption of them. An awards ceremony is good evidence of present events, but not of future ones. The better question is what reason do you have to extrapolate unbridled optimism from an awards ceremony? (the answer is you don't, because, as was the point of my original post, we already know that awards ceremonies don't guarantee the "excellence" that they decorate with).
Anyways. The fact is we've already had examples that directly refute your gushing assertion that the only reason they would declare awards of excellence is if they felt absolutely sure fire that their program will be honky dory from now to forever. I think I've had my say on this one. Good day
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