The report admitted that it did not have all the answers, though no plan could.
Of course, the report admitted, the situation could change at any moment.
But the report admitted it could find no evidence about who was behind the killing.
Boskin's report admits that much of the commission's 1.1 percent overestimation number is a guess.
A report by the planning association admitted this in 1961.
However, the same report admits that demonstrators had consistently provoked the police.
It is remarkable that this report should admit several failures by the European Union on social issues.
The report admits that European farmers face global competition, while having to respect environmental, food safety, quality and welfare objectives.
At the same time the report also admits that central questions such as cost, dismantling and storage have still not been resolved.
The report openly admits that this is the most ambitious assessment scheme ever attempted in the world.