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is a desirable thing, that it might be a good idea to
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2
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attract nuclear industry, nuclear research industry in the
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State, but a bit of property in the hands of a research
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development corporation, the precise same machine in the
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hands of such a corporation would bear tax, which in the
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hands of a nuclear research development corporation would
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not bear tax, and to me this seems a classification that
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is uniform but inequitable and unjust in terms of its
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effect.
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MR. BOND: I was also in on that, Mrs. Hoffman.
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So, you've struck me —
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MRS. HOFFMAN: Mr. Bond, if I had only known, I
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would have chosen things that happened fifty years ago.
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MR. BOND: You're talking about the nuclear
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plant in Queenstown.
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MRS. HOFFMAN: Pardon?
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MR. BOND: I'm sorry. Go ahead.
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MRS. HOFFMAN: I'm batting a thousand -- I
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mean one hundred. My respect for Mr. Bond is enhanced by
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his advocacy of successful onslaughts on the public
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treasury.
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