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If time is money, it seems moral to save time, above all one's own, and such parsimony is excused by consideration for others. One is straight-forward.
Time is money, as they say, and it was never more apropos than on a television show, where a minute is worth about $200!
Productivity - the amount of output delivered per hour of work in the economy - is often viewed as the engine of progress in modern capitalist economies. Output is everything. Time is money. The quest for increased productivity occupies reams of academic literature and haunts the waking hours of C.E.O.s and finance ministers.
Time is money. Wasted time means wasted money means trouble.
Time is money.
Time is money says the proverb, but turn it around and you get a precious truth. Money is time.
Time is money, especially when you are talking to a lawyer or buying a commercial.
We shall never get people whose time is money to take much interest in atoms.
The faux now of Twitter updates and things pinging at you - all the pulses from digitality that we try to keep up with because we sense that there's something going on that we need to tap into - are artifacts, or symptoms of living in this atemporal reality. And it's not any worse than living in the 'time is money' reality that we're leaving.