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431 Sentences With "arbiters"

How to use arbiters in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "arbiters" and check conjugation/comparative form for "arbiters". Mastering all the usages of "arbiters" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Arbiters aren't required to follow the law or facts of preceding cases when making decisions, she said, and because companies are the ones hiring arbiters, there's an incentive to rule in their favor.
They can be the arbiters of their own identities now.
So who are the arbiters, and what are they saying?
In Norse myths, these arbiters of destiny are the Norns.
Hollywood can no longer profess to be the arbiters on morality.
Glossy magazines are no longer the arbiters of style and cool.
His rhetoric may not appeal to the haute foreign policy arbiters.
Disputes are heard by a panel of three arbiters — all members.
Well, them and the arbiters of conventional political wisdom, he added.
Flat earthers are not typically regarded as arbiters of scientific reason.
I don't think they're the arbiters of design in New Canaan.
Without publishers, they argue, there would be no arbiters of science.
I've said it consistently for two years that I thought it was a question of right and wrong and that the American people deserve to be the arbiters and will end up inevitably being the arbiters.
"We do not want to be the arbiters of truth," Zuckerberg said.
Under Brazil's constitution of 1988, judges are supposed to be neutral arbiters.
The three powers increasingly see themselves as the arbiters of Syria's fate.
The women arbiters of vengeance in Greek mythology were called the Furies.
As you said, they don't want to be the arbiters of truth.
It would greatly expand their role as hidden arbiters of online speech.
He adds arbiters/mediators "do this all this time" to settle disputes.
To be the arbiters of certain things, and maybe they have to?
As arbiters of our nation's laws, judges play an indispensable and honorable role.
If these arbiters decide there has been wrongdoing, they can sanction limited retaliation.
And Nobes believes that even very young children can be sophisticated moral arbiters.
"We're not historians or arbiters of history, nor are we judges," he wrote.
Above all, first ladies have been arbiters of culture in Washington and beyond.
He believes that math and money should be the arbiters of his community.
Poland wants both events to go off unsullied by criticism from European arbiters.
We are not the arbiters of what's "pretty" for anyone other than ourselves.
Some, painfully, even took it upon themselves to be the arbiters of wokeness.
Of these four, glycans are the final arbiters of how our cells behave.
After the ruling, questions emerged about the impartiality of one of the arbiters.
Perhaps, but the ultimate arbiters of the sale will be the employee-owners.
Vijaya Gadde: Our historical preference has been not to be the arbiters of truth.
Nearly every other judged competition in the world demands the rankings of several arbiters.
We were told you were our moral betters; the arbiters of right and wrong.
Big toy retailers, the usual arbiters of what sells, were initially caught flat-footed.
Seeing arbiters of culture and beauty deem non-dominant cultures as beautiful is essential.
Which is not to say that ratings are the perfect arbiters of ethical behavior.
But in Trump's case, reporters weren't the lone arbiters of truth during the primaries.
Regulators will not become arbiters of what is and is not acceptable new technology.
A century on, the battle to succeed the Ottomans as regional arbiters remains unresolved.
They will be the holders of data and the arbiters of mass behavioral change.
Last year, I argued that corporations were, increasingly, becoming the arbiters of public morality.
Source communities themselves are the best arbiters of what is or is not misappropriation.
So, you don't want them to be arbiters of truth, the platforms they build?
All the while, community elders — "the mothers" — are in the background as moral arbiters.
Armies established themselves as the ultimate arbiters during crises, with deleterious consequences for democracy.
The only arbiters of the quality of your content and service is the audience.
Without that basic agreement, without common arbiters, there can be no end to dispute.
It's not even clear that judges are reliable arbiters of what they are feeling.
In their own ways, both the artists' salon and funeral home are arbiters of taste.
Mark Zuckerberg has warned that Facebook should not become one of the "arbiters of truth".
And, perhaps most important, are scientists comfortable ceding control of their field to outside arbiters?
Index-makers have become finance's new kingmakers: arbiters of how investors should allocate their money.
It is no longer possible to frame the US as neutral arbiters in that dispute.
That serves their desire to be seen as neutral arbiters of what's fit to post.
Twitter and other companies in Silicon Valley have long resisted being the arbiters of truth.
Magazines and celebrities are no longer the arbiters of knowledge — your friendly neighborhood obsessives are.
"I believe we must be extremely cautious about becoming arbiters of truth ourselves," Zuckerberg wrote.
These traits, they believe, allow them to become impartial arbiters of politics across the spectrum.
When the cultural arbiters lose the will to arbitrate, they lose their value to society.
The truth is, men are not the most reliable arbiters of whether sex was consensual.
Though prisons control entry into the facility, academic institutions must be the arbiters of academic quality.
But the problem is always, who are the arbiters of worthy speech in this imagined order?
But the armed forces, though constitutionally required to be apolitical, are the final arbiters of power.
Meanwhile, non-Jewish commentators have chosen now to become the arbiters of what anti-Semitism entails.
State guidance says that arbiters should consider the 80th percentile of billed charges, or list prices.
So far, the arbiters of the term have been white men of privilege, but so what?
Sexless computers were the perfect arbiters, with algorithms increasingly replacing human decision-making, ironing out biases.
And the other principle, which is that we do not want to be arbiters of truth.
The drawback is that this turns online firms, especially big ones, into arbiters of acceptable speech.
Dean said that, at Google, humans are still the ultimate arbiters of whether content is offensive.
And the Church's use of external, worldly arbiters is meant to assuage suspicions of self-protection.
"I think you look to judges to be the arbiters of right and wrong," he said.
Ideally, Mr. Staniland said, successive elections would establish voters, not unelected bodies, as the final arbiters.
Sure, being arbiters of style and all, they may know clothes, but they know Australia even better.
But Professor Heckman and Mr Moktan argue that the magic five journals are imperfect arbiters of quality.
They are the ultimate arbiters of how long we keep records and when they should be destroyed.
Social-justice warriors inevitably create distinctions — they have appointed themselves the arbiters of which cultures deserve protecting.
Significant arbiters of the world's view on Saudi Arabia may turn out to be non-Saudi women.
Still, the ultimate arbiters for many of these treatments are not the specialists but the neighborhood veterinarians.
The award is given by a revolving selection committee comprising artists and cultural arbiters from different disciplines.
Google, Facebook and Twitter have long insisted they are tech entities and not arbiters of the truth.
"There could be a split among the outside arbiters about whether this is good enough," he said.
Eventually the arbiters of style settled on no quotes, and a hyphen in between the two words.
They see themselves as neutral arbiters, even if they do not always uphold that ideal in practice.
As arbiters of judgement against ourselves for our bad, bad behavior, you can bet we'll be extremely fair.
This is largely why tech companies cannot and must not be the arbiters of designing for anti-addiction.
Thunderbirds sometimes act as arbiters of justice, punishing humans, and they often watch over warriors during great battles.
Meta-analyses are often used as the final word on a given subject, as the arbiters of ambiguity.
But we're definitely better arbiters of objective reality than Donald Trump, Lindsey Graham, Kevin McCarthy and Steve Scalise.
Teens, the arbiters of Internet culture, have found a fun new way to mortify themselves online: the #BananaPeelChallenge.
Topics: Cluetrain meets Blockchain, Twitter and the death of brevity, Who are the arbiters of true and fake.
Governments and central banks will be greatly marginalized in their roles as the arbiters of the world economy.
And they certainly don't trust the democratic establishment to be the arbiters of moral behavior and good government.
" Zuckerberg has argued again and again that Facebook doesn't want the company's moderators serving as "arbiters of truth.
These appetites, in turn, are the engines of history and the arbiters of the success and failure of nations.
Ultimately, algorithms and employees become the arbiters of what is acceptable content in the public forum without transparent guidelines.
It seems unfair that adults are the arbiters of what makes a good kids movie when we're so broken.
Caught between these dueling camps, it's not surprising that Trump has ultimately turned to his children as trusted arbiters.
The Supreme Court thus may be the ultimate arbiters of who is allowed to vote and who is not.
But Canadian lumber producers have been found innocent of any wrongdoing every time they're reviewed by international trade arbiters.
It's unedited, unrefined, and unbelievably popular with everyone, but especially young people (who are, after all, arbiters of cool).
They spearheaded a new era of corporate citizenship, wherein corporate leaders increasingly serve as arbiters of contentious moral debates.
And they've warned that moderators might not be reliable arbiters of the facts, preventing Clinton from winning on substance.
We know what the doctors wanted, and they achieved it; they became the arbiters of women's reproductive health care.
They have long desired to combat misinformation online, but they have also been reluctant to be arbiters of truth.
Courts cannot become fact-checkers and governments cannot be trusted to become arbiters of the truth through police powers.
It is a chaotic subculture that requires arbiters of taste to draw boundaries, which Mr. Phelps did with zeal.
Coaches are still viewed as the arbiters of athletes' academic, financial, and/or professional success, throwing consent into question.
But many of the Italian Masters are remembered today as the arbiters of scholarship in the quest for fighting prowess.
"It's an absurd policy that you're going to allow election judges to be the arbiters of free speech," Cilek said.
One banker reckoned the proposal was a "slippery slope" that would force banks to become unlikely arbiters of moral acceptability.
They were anti-heroes, slang originators never shook, shadowy arbiters of life and death on the 41st side of things.
Reid hasn't hesitated to call out ostensibly neutral arbiters he's felt have erred in their judgment of balls and strikes.
And militaries have come to see themselves as political arbiters of last resort, rather than partisan actors or potential rulers.
They were the moral exemplars, the arbiters of good and evil, of what is acceptable conduct and what is not.
"We do not want to be arbiters of truth ourselves, but instead rely on our community and trusted third parties."
The union representing immigration judges says this is necessary to ensure that judges operate as impartial arbiters of the law.
In a low-trust era, people no longer have as much faith in grand intellectuals to serve as cultural arbiters.
We do not want to be arbiters of truth ourselves, but instead rely on our community and trusted third parties.
There is a possibility that Facebook may not even want to become "arbiters of truth," because doing so could reduce engagement.
Should robots -- could robots -- delve into the nuances of criminal law and one day replace the role of humans as arbiters?
On the other hand, expecting humans employed by social media platforms to be arbiters of morally acceptable content creates several problems.
This refusal exploded norms and dismayed Beltway arbiters who had long accepted McConnell's claim to be a guardian of Washington institutions.
With their expertise and authority, think tank scholars offer themselves as independent arbiters, playing a vital role in Washington's political economy.
The mysterious arbiters of taste behind the feed judge user-submitted pictures of lizards on a scale from one to 10.
The presiding judge will then make recommendations to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, whose justices will be the final arbiters.
There are no longer moral arbiters in Congress like Howard Baker and Sam Ervin to lead a resignation or impeachment process.
The culpability of the vanquished can be determined only by trusted arbiters based on evidence adduced after the end of hostility.
It is no surprise that President Donald Trump has axed these foreign arbiters, given his general distaste for internationally agreed rules.
To make these giant proclamations, as though any of us are the arbiters of someone else's life, to me doesn't make sense.
Ad0 also claimed that no submission goes unchecked by the administrators, who act as arbiters who check that the accusations are authentic.
But the standard-bearing arbiters of cool -- millennials, or people whose souls have yet to be crushed by later life -- do know.
Like it or not, Republicans on Capitol Hill control both houses of Congress and so are the ultimate arbiters of Trump's fate.
"We do not want to be arbiters of truth ourselves, but instead rely on our community and trusted third parties," he said.
Majorities of both parties further agree that state lawmakers, not the federal government, ought to be the primary arbiters of marijuana policy.
But critics fear that governments will be wary of invoking those exceptions, and that arbiters at the WTO will side with companies.
EBay has "policies and practices in there that require the company to be neutral arbiters in the resolution process," Mr. Ferrigno said.
Voters and elected officials should be the arbiters of what is a political dispute, Roberts said in his opinion for the court.
The constitutional guarantee of due process requires, at a minimum, that judges be impartial arbiters of the cases that come before them.
Instead there are hundreds of texts, temples, priests, mystics, and scholars who all claim some legitimacy as arbiters of right and wrong.
"We do not want to be arbiters of truth ourselves, but instead rely on our community and trusted third parties," he wrote.
Bryan's plea for a new trial now goes before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, whose justices will be the final arbiters.
I wondered how Packer's family back in Israel — perhaps the ultimate arbiters of traditional taste — felt about her changes to the recipe.
This refusal exploded norms and dismayed Beltway arbiters who had long accepted Mr. McConnell's claim to be a guardian of Washington institutions.
YouTube stressed in a statement to The Hill that the trusted flaggers are not the final arbiters of what stays on YouTube.
Like almost everything else in American health care these days, insurance companies are among the primary arbiters of the price you pay.
"We don't want to be and are not the arbiters of the truth," Facebook News Feed integrity product manager Tessa Lyons told TechCrunch.
For all of Silicon Valley's pretensions of being arbiters of free speech, these companies are fundamentally incapable of shaping a healthy public discourse.
The faces of grandfathers and preschoolers all point toward the same revolving doors that separate the tent from the arbiters of legal status.
To get the lowdown on keeping those manners in ship shape, Mashable has consulted with Britain's foremost social arbiters and dating etiquette experts.
" Citing her time deployed overseas, Gabbard said she saw "the destructive effect of having governments who act as moral arbiters for their people.
Think Tank Scholars Moonlight as Corporate Consultants They offer themselves as independent arbiters and their authority on matters can help shape government decisions.
"The pendulum is swinging away from companies's early position that they should not be the arbiters of what gets published," Raicu tells VICE.
Next month it will reveal the names of the first set of content arbiters, starting with around 20 and eventually growing to 40.
These fact checkers are being set up as the ultimate arbiters of the news you get on Facebook and other social media sites.
It also exemplifies the tendency of those arbiters to amplify "perfect crimes" that advance their political agenda — and to ignore crimes that don't.
When Avengers: Age of Ultron and Captain America: Civil War did confront the questionable narrative premise of the entire franchise — entrusting a tiny band of outrageously powerful people to be the arbiters of who's good and evil, collateral damage be damned — the eventual result was that tiny band deciding, Yeah, we should still be the arbiters for who's good and evil.
These are seemingly objective undertakings, and Silicon Valley itself thrives on the impression that its software and hardware are inherently disinterested arbiters of information.
For all their talk of seeking neutral arbiters, presidents usually nominate judges they expect to uphold laws they support and overturn ones they oppose.
It's the kind of show that you see the Parent's Council hating, and arbiters of ethics can't stand it because it's bloody and violent.
We're slightly kidding, but really — if there's one thing the Kardashian clan is good at, it's convincing millennials that they're the arbiters of trends.
Designers are not just arbiters of skirt lengths and bell sleeves; the most prominent ones can, through their clothing, encapsulate and influence female selfhood.
"We believe in giving people a voice and that we cannot become arbiters of truth ourselves, so we're approaching this problem carefully," Mosseri wrote.
For democracy to work, winners must not be greedy, losers must accept defeat and both need trusted institutions to act as arbiters and stabilisers.
That's why if Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat and YouTube don't want to be the arbiters of truth in campaign ads, they should stop selling them.
As long as Academy members are considered to be the arbiters of good taste, some of the most compelling counternarratives will always be overlooked.
That means the federal appeals courts or state supreme courts could wind up being the final arbiters in deciding who wins the White House.
We rely on judges to ensure that people's lives are decided by neutral, independent arbiters who impartially evaluate the evidence and apply the law.
This is a long way from Facebook executives' past claims that they should not be the "arbiters of truth," a common refrain among tech giants.
NSC staff are most effective when we are neutral arbiters, helping the relevant Executive Branch agencies develop options for the President and implement his direction.
According to Internet sages and the arbiters of faux holidays, September 29 is Coffee Day (also known as National Coffee Day or International Coffee Day).
The FBI might disagree on legal grounds but there's no reason that they should be the final arbiters of how this vile act is discussed.
When the expert eye seems uncertain, infrared and x-ray imaging, carbon dating and chemical analysis are the go-to arbiters of an artwork's authenticity.
In arbitration, you not only have to pay the hourly rate of an arbiter, you likely have to pay the hourly rate of three arbiters.
Social media companies, who have been widely accused of having an anti-conservative bias, create a slippery slope when they become the arbiters of content.
To Sanders, dependency is freedom, politicians are the arbiters of fairness and justice, and expanding the power of government is the answer to every problem.
But for think tanks, that pressure can threaten their standing as independent arbiters in policy debates in Congress, the White House and the news media.
Pimps are considered arbiters of prostitution, and the current laws target any adult who facilitates prostitution—romantic partners, prostitutes working together for safety reasons, etc.
Curbing the spread of fake news is no easy task, and Facebook says it cannot "become arbiters of truth" in the fight against fake news.
The original "Queer Eye" was like a stealth mission to straight America's vanity cabinets, built on the idea of gay men as arbiters of cool.
"For too long, Facebook and other social media companies have claimed not to be 'arbiters of the truth' that appears on their platforms," he said.
To the union, she said, the changes seem like an attempt to turn judges from neutral arbiters into law enforcement agents enacting Trump administration policies.
Finally, there is an important issue here for the future: If we decide that staffers are the ultimate arbiters of policy, why stop with Trump?
The inability of LSAT takers to follow the test's extremely onerous rules is slightly disconcerting, considering these are the future arbiters of our legal system.
Rating: 26/20113 Looks nothing like Bergkamp Though we have set ourselves up as critical arbiters here, we're quite aware that artistic interpretation is subjective.
Indeed, the far right rejects the very idea of neutral, binding arbiters; there is only Us and Them, only a zero-sum contest for resources.
Asylum officers have a mandate to offer humanitarian protection to those fleeing dangerous situations, while immigration judges aim to be neutral arbiters of cases, experts said.
This was the narrative that he—one of music's most careful arbiters of image—seemed to be crafting for himself going into his fifth studio album.
That ability points to a deep responsibility for Twitter and Facebook, among others, to acknowledge their roles as arbiters of information that can have historical implications.
Here, a client's masculinity was either validated or denigrated by the women he frequented, as courtesans were the arbiters of a man's sophistication, class, and refinement.
Venerable media outlets on the right, like National Review, sought to reprise their role as arbiters of who is fit to carry the banner of conservatism.
A deadlocked Supreme Court would leave in place the lower court ruling and oust the justices from their role as the final arbiters of federal law.
This has made the FDA assume a role that it was never intended to have — being arbiters of benefit-risk, clinical utility and long-term outcomes.
In short, we'd have to figure out how to combat the organic sharing of misinformation by ordinary users without turning platforms into invasive arbiters of speech.
Of course, the pilot also begs the question: should the banks be the arbiters of trust for the gig economy when Australians don't always trust them?
Yet, Black women are 84 percent more likely to be targeted than white women online and are consistent arbiters of culture, despite not being given proper credit.
MICHELLE MALKIN, COMMENTATOR, CRTV: No, I&aposve have had many and many in the heart of DC where all of the self-appointed arbiters of civility rule.
"What's happened is, and for good reason, conservatives and Republicans no longer trust the national news media to be fair arbiters or fair information purveyors," Bolger said.
" Or that the moral arbiters of the nation's entertainment capital consider the actions of Kevin Spacey to "meet the shared values of the City of West Hollywood?
The court, in The Hague, said the panel of arbiters that had made the award, the largest ever in international arbitration, had "lacked jurisdiction" to do so.
As great a weight on the other side — and not necessarily as "neutral arbiters" — are judges, likely former prosecutors with prosecutorial points of view, leanings and outcomes.
Still, like humans, algorithms can be imperfect arbiters of risk, and policymakers should be aware of two important ways in which biased data can corrupt statistical judgments.
Under federal ethics law, judges are supposed to recuse themselves if their impartiality might reasonably be questioned, but the justices are their own arbiters of that standard.
Our president and his party make themselves out to be moral arbiters and are right now using our most essential government functions to play out this charade.
And it also addresses underrepresentation among the ranks of museum staff, fair directors and other arbiters who have significant influence over which works and artists get elevated.
That recession started in the United States in December 1.53 and ended in June 2009, according to the official arbiters at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
"When we encourage corporate advertisers to police content and commentators, we end up making them the guardians and arbiters of journalism, always a bad choice," he wrote.
But we (by which I mean, millennials and under) cannot truly or fairly be the arbiters here; there is too much baggage in this decision about Post.
"It's a really tricky one because who are these objective arbiters of taste?" agrees Hattie Collins, features director at i-D and author of This is Grime.
There are, of course, risks to putting so much impetus on companies to act and turning them into the arbiters of what is and isn't allowed online.
Recent research found that crowd-sourcing assessments of the credibility of news sources — rather than putting these decisions in the hands of potentially biased arbiters — could be effective.
The other is that the tech titans become "ministries of truth", acting as arbiters of what billions of people around the world see—and what they do not.
The WTO's long-running row over zeroing is a technical dispute that turned into a power struggle between the United States and the arbiters of international trade law.
If you believe that Beckmann was one of the 20th century's artistic giants, this seems strangely neglectful, not to say scandalous, on the part of our cultural arbiters.
A pileup of controversies over how Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Microsoft moderate content on their sites is highlighting how thoroughly major tech companies have become arbiters of speech.
Yet far from being viewed as independent arbiters, Western reporters, in particular, can be seen as emissaries weighted with all sorts of baggage: colonialism, capitalism, rich-country-ism.
Before any tariffs are imposed, the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body must formally adopt the arbiters' report in a process expected to take between 10 days and 4 weeks.
Police officers do an excellent job of protecting citizens when called upon, but their track record as arbiters of constitutional law is less than stellar (see civil forfeiture).
If raising and lowering interest rates does not produce a corresponding reduction and increase in inflation, then central banks' role as financial arbiters may need to be revamped.
Yet other countries seem to be basically fine with that: They treat the IMF, World Bank, and WTO as the basic arbiters of how the global economy functions.
This probably should have set a precedent for overly-aggressive arbiters, but, because of the random nature of baseball punishments, it became just another bit of mostly-forgotten trivia.
This would effectively demand that social media services scrutinize every video, post, and picture uploaded, requiring platforms to be arbiters of all user-generated content posted on their services.
According to his ruling, investigations were purposely delayed to justify lesser or no reprimands, disciplinary policies were improperly applied and decisions were put in the hands of biased arbiters.
As far as the association is concerned, patients and their physicians -- those trained to work with the community -- are the best arbiters of what's medically necessary for that person.
The challenge is to combat external propaganda and bot-farmed lies without allowing Facebook, Google, and the like to become even more powerful arbiters of news or public debate.
Announcing the change, MCC's head of cricket, John Stephenson, talked about redressing "the balance between bat and ball" – a phrase frequently rolled out by the game's arbiters and administrators.
Should we not expect or demand that the Biennial curators are rigorous cultural arbiters — especially in a show that bills itself as gauging the current state of American art?
That word, "institution," makes Nussbaum sound like one of those stuffy arbiters who praise television only when they deem it a worthy imitator of other forms, like the novel.
Politics before principle is the rule for the celebrity crowd, which is part of the reason so many of our cultural arbiters are guilty of hypocrisy and moral bankruptcy.
Before any tariffs can be imposed, the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body must formally adopt the arbiters' report in a process expected to take between 10 days and four weeks.
He saw, CEOs once again, the new arbiters of all morality, CEOs once again wrote a lot of letters about DACA, as they did about Virginia and everything else.
Internet companies, which enjoy broad protections under U.S. law for the activities of people using their services, have mostly tried to avoid being arbiters of what is acceptable speech.
The laws represent a significant setback for social media behemoths that have long argued that their platforms should be treated as neutral gathering places rather than arbiters of content.
"Experiencing as a woman, firsthand, the impacts of countries that are acting as moral arbiters for their people—it really caused me to rethink the positions I held," she says.
But as the government intensified its crackdown on the opposition, Mr. Ortega has stopped treating the bishops as neutral arbiters, unleashing attacks by his followers on priests and on churches.
In choosing between bids, arbiters will need to decide their own benchmarks for what a reasonable price looks like, and they will tend to pick prices close to that number.
Josh Constine proposes a different solution: If Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat and YouTube don't want to be the arbiters of truth in campaign ads, then they should stop selling them. 2.
Instead, the aging generals who have been the country's ultimate arbiters for generations, insisted on holding an election that was broadly rejected from the start by much of the population.
"The Voice" especially showed that pop stars, if they took the judging chair, would not just be the arbiters of a competition but also stars of their own weekly sitcom.
Once youth-culture arbiters, many rap acts have settled into more mythicized careers: stories are mined for bio-pics, incumbents debate their predecessors, and undersung heroes are lost to time.
Right, I believe very strongly that people do not want Facebook and that we should not be the arbiters of truth in deciding what is correct for everyone in the society.
" Striking a much more conciliatory tone on Friday, Zuckerberg outlined the measures the company is enacting and echoed previous  comments he made about not wanting to become "arbiters of truth ourselves.
Steve Nash and Amare Stoudemire are often credited as the on-court arbiters of Seven Seconds or Less Suns success, but it was Marion's versatility that really unlocked the entire scheme.
Digital rights groups have long expressed concerns over allowing Facebook and Twitter to be arbiters of free speech, and they fear that an automated system would lead to more widespread censorship.
The big tech companies will only find themselves enmeshed in a growing public crossfire if they become active arbiters of content, purveyors of speech codes, and forerunners of a "Bladerunner" future.
To help befuddled fans, the N.F.L.'s rules arbiters said on Twitter that Matthews had been penalized because he landed "with all or most of the defender's weight" on the passer.
The five take their dispute over ownership of the ticket to professional arbiters, and the resulting debate about what does and does not constitute a slur would curl George Carlin's toes.
Magnetic fields, electric currents, the force of gravity all work unseen, as do our interior arbiters of thoughts, inclinations, passions, psyches, tastes, moods, morals, and — if one believes in them — souls.
Letter To the Editor: Re "Gorsuch Rejects Doubts Over 'Rule of Law Today' " (news article, June 4): Judicial review depends on judges being impartial arbiters of the Constitution and the law.
So the definition of what will not be tolerated starts expanding, allowing politicians and other moral arbiters to say they are cleansing society of those who commit any kind of lapse.
Long faulted for reliability issues, GM has, in recent years, made rapid gains, particularly with its Buick and Chevrolet brands, according to studies by outside arbiters such as J.D. Power and Associates.
The quotas in particular have made judges feel as if they were cogs in a deportation machine, as opposed to neutral arbiters given time to thoughtfully analyze the merits of each case.
GENEVA (Reuters) - World Trade Organization arbiters sided against the United States on Thursday over duties it had applied on Canadian paper in one of the final verdicts of the WTO's appeals body.
Trump has either no understanding or no concern with the idea that the media, at their best, are supposed to be neutral arbiters in the never-ending political struggles in the country.
And I think that China generally sees black people through the realm of pop culture, whose arbiters continue to perpetuate the myth that people of color don't 'play well' in that market.
Since the Supreme Court only takes up a handful of the petitions it receives each term, these lower-court judges are often the final arbiters for thousands of federal cases every year.
When left to make their own decisions, the tech companies often struggle with their roles as the arbiters of speech and leave false information, upset users and confusing decisions in their wake.
After years in which venture capitalists have cast themselves as infallible arbiters of value, it is good to see public investors shouting when an entrepreneur, for all his chutzpah, has no clothes. ■
I am confident we can find ways for our community to tell us what content is most meaningful, but I believe we must be extremely cautious about becoming arbiters of truth ourselves.
The jihadists dispute Saudi Arabia's claim to lead Salafi Islam, the position of its state-appointed clergy as arbiters of religious orthodoxy, and the Al Saud's status as legitimate rulers of the country.
These courts are supposed to be neutral arbiters — a way to correct for the power imbalance that existed prior to NAFTA, when Canada and Mexico had to take their grievances to US courts.
He began by saying he was still "concerned" about nominees or sitting judges "elevating themselves as kind of arbiters or graders of the Supreme Court," but when pressed by Blumenthal, he endorsed Brown.
It offered them an opportunity to explain also why ISPs are compelled in many ways to act as non-discriminatory transmitters of information, not arbiters of that information — in other words, common carriers.
Thaksin&aposs rural and working class "Red Shirt" supporters easily won every election held in the following decade, putting the military and other traditional arbiters of power in Thailand on the back foot.
Indeed, the entire debacle is just another example of how giant tech companies like Apple continue to homogenize the internet and are the ultimate arbiters of what can and cannot be posted online.
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazil's far-right president on Thursday described the country's armed forces, which led the country under a military dictatorship for over two decades, as the ultimate arbiters of democracy.
They also contend that Uber and companies like it regularly move through the private arbitration process and that can lead to more comfortable relationships with the arbiters they pay to resolve legal disputes.
He's not alone, either: It's common for white Americans to position themselves as the neutral arbiters of what is or is not racist and what other Americans are allowed to be angered by.
From his personal point of view, it was entirely reasonable that the market should routinely regulate the price and quantity of available goods according to certain unchanging and "natural" arbiters of public demand.
Chief Justice Roberts has said, for instance, that partisan confirmation hearings feed a false public perception that justices cast their votes "as Democrats and Republicans," rather than as neutral arbiters of the law.
Far from selfless arbiters of right and wrong, CEOs are as responsible as anyone in America for skyrocketing inequality, climate crisis, waves of consumer fraud, and the biggest financial meltdown since the Depression.
Black voters -- the historical arbiters of Democratic contests -- coalesced behind Biden in virtual lockstep in South Carolina and later several more Southern states, even as Sanders continued to win young voters and Latinos.
While government officials and the technology companies' representatives say their discussions have been cordial and productive to date, the companies have made it clear they do not intend to become arbiters of truth.
They strain to keep faith when the arbiters of moral and cultural acceptability, all of them self-appointed, insist both on their right to offend nearly anyone and take offense at nearly anything.
Now, in addition to that implicit conflict of interest, the hacked messages suggested that Mr. Moro had violated Brazilian law, under which judges are supposed to be neutral arbiters, to help Mr. Bolsonaro.
The platforms that control distribution of content on the internet — and are gobbling digital advertising from traditional publications more than ever — are suddenly becoming the arbiters of what are good and bad ads?
"Typically they try to be fair arbiters of a process and I've never seen anything like it and I've been involved in the Republican Party for most of my life," Hogan told Politico.
More importantly, once influencers get a deal, according to Rosenblatt, it's imperative that the brand deals align with their values, and that taste arbiters continue to stay true to themselves and exercise transparency.
As has been discussed at length elsewhere on the internet, the tastes of enthusiastic young girls, for instance, are often derided by mainstream arbiters of culture, which miss the point of music entirely.
Unlike most modern pop arbiters, whose images are controlled to the point of total alienation, and whose sonic output is often part of an overarching marketing plan, Jones feels perpetually raw, spontaneous, and dangerous.
At first social-media platforms failed to adjust to the magnitude and complexity of the problems their growth and power were creating, saying that they did not want to be the "arbiters of truth".
Steele was instrumental in documenting and creating programming languages like Lisp and Scheme, while Stallman laid the foundation for the free software movement, the most significant challenge to the arbiters of technology since Luddism.
And somewhere between all of this, there have been countless other self-appointed arbiters of style — think the What Not To Wear franchise back in the '00s to the more recent rise of bloggers.
He recently received a Grammy nomination for best improvised jazz solo, for the deft, swirling tenor saxophone work on "Arbiters of Evolution," from that album Ms. Schneider was working on, "The Thompson Fields" (ArtistShare).
The big picture: Tech companies prefer not to serve as content arbiters and have long struggled to balance free-speech ideals with efforts to limit undesirable online interactions like hate speech, bullying and misinformation.
Indeed, judging by their presence not just at commercial design arbiters like CB2, IKEA, Target, and West Elm but also at plant stores like Terrain, it would appear fake house plants aren't going anywhere.
Men like Piers Morgan would like to remind us they alone are the arbiters of what is "legitimately" sexy, and Madonna praising Georgiou the way a man might simply doesn't not conform to that.
Where Republicans once stood on principle -- even those principles that were unpopular with the taste arbiters in Hollywood, the media and the intellectual elite -- now we stand, it seems, on Trump and Trump alone.
It was like a bomb inside the kingdom's religious establishment, threatening the social order that granted prominence to the sheikhs and made them the arbiters of right and wrong in all aspects of life.
" He added: "I am confident we can find ways for our community to tell us what content is most meaningful, but I believe we must be extremely cautious about becoming arbiters of truth ourselves.
But they have become the most powerful arbiters of what people read and watch online, and the consequences of that are evident: The far-right thrives in part because its message saturates the internet.
Outside of some parameters like nudity or incitement to violence, executives at the company are wary of becoming the arbiters of what content is or is not allowed on Facebook, fearing accusations of censorship.
The company must come up with $500 million by late November as a first payment to ConocoPhillips after a $2 billion judgment was handed down by international arbiters over the nationalization of Conoco facilities.
But there's a less-simple view, too — one in which many people might be coming to see the self-appointed arbiters of racial politics, and the candidates working to satisfy them, as the establishment.
Along with the composer Teho Teardo, whose music panders to our inner sentimentalists, these collaborators function as instruments of the Devil, or of the unseen arbiters of Mr. Walsh's version of an Orwellian future.
Facebook's executives have long said they do not want to be arbiters of newsworthiness, and a spokesperson declined to say who would be making judgment calls on a political figure's postings of manipulated content.
Information is too copious and flows too freely, and there are too many players in the revelation game — political activists, foreign governments, tricksters, self-publishers — for journalists to function as the arbiters of revelation.
The demonization of news, which has reached a crescendo under President Trump and his frequent accusations of "fake news," means that for many people, Trump and Congressional Republicans are the final arbiters of truth.
And for straight white men to misguidedly believe that they are the arbiters of taste in this matter, or that their opinions of this show have any bearing on its value is laughably entitled.
But that could very literally change at any moment depending on what Trump does next, with federal judges and congressional Republicans being the final arbiters of whether the president's actions finally go too far.
They've operated in a system that handsomely rewards the perception of objectivity, which is perversely both something that men feel they are the arbiters of, and something that only men of certain backgrounds can claim.
"We believe in giving people a voice and that we cannot become arbiters of truth ourselves, so we're approaching this problem carefully," Adam Mosseri, Facebook's vice president of News Feed, said in a blog post.
More than four in five adults favor legalizing cannabis as a therapeutic treatment option, and six in ten voters believe that states, not the federal government, should be the ultimate arbiters of marijuana regulatory policy.
Supreme Court justices are supposed to be the ultimate arbiters of the law, not willing to casually lie under oath in a way that some legal analysts suggest could well meet the standard for perjury.
If "Tomorrow Will Be Different" provides a vision for a future of trans equality, I hope it will be one in which the dignity of transgender individuals is not up to cisgender arbiters for approval.
Amid calls for more aggressive action on climate, banks, which have furnished $1.9 trillion worth of fossil fuel financing since 2019, have been vehement that they're nothing more than neutral arbiters of the global economy.
The brash energy of Warner Brothers pictures, the extravagant unreality of MGM's, the exotic shimmer of Paramount's, the screwball fizz of Columbia's — all were identifiable enough to reveal the moguls as the true creative arbiters.
But their efforts falter in the face of falsehoods pushed by users with massive online audiences, which social media platforms often refuse to remove, arguing they should not serve as the Web's arbiters of truth.
Still, the specifics of what was about to go down mattered far less, it seemed, than the blow that election had dealt to their own self-image as duly credentialed arbiters of the common good.
It's been chosen by arbiters who are of a very small segment of a very small ruling class which has always been white men, at least in modern Western culture, and paraded around the world.
But taking for granted the fact that the President of the United States is engaged in a historic assault on the idea of facts, truth and neutral arbiters isn't something any healthy democracy should do.
BRUSSELS, June 14 (Reuters) - European Union countries have agreed to allow EU-level scrutiny of foreign investment, while stressing they should remain the ultimate arbiters of acquisitions by Chinese and other companies in their territories.
Vanessa's sexual boldness and Virginia's sexual angst are well documented; it seems unnecessary to consider the frequency or fact of orgasms, as though these are the only arbiters of pleasure or satisfaction in a relationship.
That's because the arbiters who handle claims all but work for the companies they are supposed to be judging impartially – after all, why would a company continue to use an arbiter who rules against them?
RIO DE JANEIRO, March 7 (Reuters) - Brazil's far-right president on Thursday described the country's armed forces, which led the country under a military dictatorship for over two decades, as the ultimate arbiters of democracy.
So, for me, this idea of 'good' and 'bad' is more about whether people are exploratory and interested in going beyond music that's hand delivered to them on a plate by mainstream arbiters of culture.
Trump is barreling into these legal actions the same way he always has, publicly attacking not only his adversaries but also independent arbiters, calling defeats victories and staffing up with more and more Trump Lawyers.
Given how firmly supporters of the two major parties tend to hold their beliefs, it is these viewers whom the candidates had the best chance of convincing, and who should be the best arbiters of victory.
Ascia Al Faraj, known online as Ascia AKF, has spent the past four years becoming one of the Middle East's most influential arbiters of style through her fashion blog, The Hybrids, and her social media flair.
These overdue moves illustrate the companies' ability to identify and police false content, and they undercut a notion widely embraced in the social media industry that Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube shouldn't be "arbiters of the truth."
We can argue as to whether the fears of the Trump administration or its various howling Twitter goons are grounded in reality (many have), but the fact is: social media platforms are lousy arbiters of speech.
A majority of the nine arbiters favoured removal, but unanimity was required; suspending him instead, the panel found that, on six charges relating to impropriety, integrity and impartiality, he had violated the canon of judicial ethics.
So platforms and websites will be obligated to police and judge speech — which they already do, of course but the proposal doubles down on turning online content hosters into judges and arbiters of that same content.
These new courts were envisioned not as independent arbiters but as the ''knife handle of the proletarian dictatorship,'' according to Sida Liu, a professor at the University of Toronto who studies law and society in China.
" Richard Allan, Facebook's vice president for public policy in Europe and the leader of the company's lobbying effort against the German legislation, put it more simply: "We don't want to be the arbiters of free speech.
And so obviously the complexity of developing all these tests and deciding who should be the arbiters of them is something that I&aposve not figured out yet, but I think it deserves some real attention.
"Women are the arbiters of popular culture, so we pay a lot of attention to the kind of the opportunities we see in which women are talking about how great a product is," Mr. Liew said.
Yet the primary burden for investigating and punishing misconduct falls to inherently conflicted arbiters: universities like Ohio State that stand to reap millions of dollars from the federal grants won by star researchers like Dr. Croce.
Meanwhile, Republican primary election voters, who are the real arbiters when polarized and/or gerrymandered districts make the general election irrelevant for many politicians, live in a Fox News bubble into which awkward truths never penetrate.
In a 2009 speech titled " Mullahs of the West : Judges as Moral Arbiters," the late Justice Antonin Scalia lamented that many Americans have unfortunately placed their faith in Supreme Court justices to give our nation moral guidance.
"We believe in giving people a voice and that we cannot become arbiters of truth ourselves, so we're approaching this problem carefully," said Adam Mosseri, who leads product management for the News Feed, in a blog post.
The move solidifies them as the dominant players in the country, and the key arbiters for a future resolution of the conflict — which will almost certainly see their ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, remain in power.
The coach also said that the arbiters of the competition told the young competitor that she had to get slacks for the next round of competitions, even though any stores in the area would have been closed.
I don't think the DICE or Treyarch are the arbiters of what the first-person perspective should be doing anymore, and in the waning era of the immersive sim game, expectations can be set from any angle.
Their job as official arbiters of cool was to pluck the chosen few singles destined for rotation out of the ever-mounting slush pile, the exposure of which to an eager listening public translated directly into sales.
Moreover, the president has the right to be wrong, and the Department of Defense has the obligation to carry out lawful orders rather than set themselves up as uniquely virtuous arbiters of the good of the country.
They were costly to produce but highly profitable, as a whole, and editors like Diana Vreeland, Tina Brown, Anna Wintour and Graydon Carter became cultural arbiters who traveled in the same circles as the people they chronicled.
China appears to be seeking to push us out of the region economically and setting themselves up as the main arbiters of Eurasia through efforts like the "One Belt, One Road" initiative and a growing naval push.
But without fail, celebrities and arbiters of style alike hold the power to bring them back with a single cameo, whether it be on the red carpet, during Fashion Week, or on a trip to the grocery store.
These addendums to the deal would empower the UK to seek recourse from independent arbiters if it felt the EU wasn't negotiating in good faith as they tried to define their future relationship and protect the Irish border.
But in today's world of violent price swings and cash-starved markets, those with near infinite buying power — central banks, sovereign wealth funds and the largest money manager in the land — have become the new arbiters of flow.
When those who think of Black people as subhumans are the arbiters of policy, it's no great surprise to see them endorse policies that are at best indifferent and at worst inimical to the interests of Black people.
"Social media companies should be doing more, but are we comfortable with [Facebook chief executive] Mark Zuckerberg or [Twitter's] Jack Dorsey as the arbiters of truth?" said Glenn Kelman, the chief executive of the real estate service Redfin.
The magazines were costly to produce but highly profitable, as a whole, and editors like Diana Vreeland, Tina Brown, Anna Wintour and Graydon Carter became cultural arbiters who traveled in the same circles as the people they chronicled.
While many Knesset members and their aides said they supported the need for a dress code, they questioned the guards' role as the arbiters of appropriate skirt length, comparing them to the modesty police in conservative religious societies.
Over the last year, these companies have grown into particularly powerful arbiters of speech -- with Twitter suspending accounts, YouTube closing channels, and Facebook shutting down inauthentic accounts and crafting content moderation rules to curb hate speech and misinformation.
The pretense for the conservative revolution was that mainstream institutions had failed in their role as neutral arbiters — that they had been taken over by the left, become agents of the left in referee's clothing, as it were.
Autumn Knight's performance "L-A Consortium" (the dash is not silent) is set in the wake of an unnamed but presumably revolutionary event that has resulted in black people becoming the controlling arbiters of all cultural institutions in Texas.
It is reason enough to look more closely at a position advanced by scholars and style arbiters alike: that the clothes we wear, or might like to wear, owe a very real debt to the world's most ancient profession.
Most journalistic institutions no longer have the credibility with the public to serve as independent deliverers of information or arbiters of truth—conservatives haven't trusted the media for decades and newly skeptical progressives are still angry about 2016 coverage.
Further, I saw them as objects that—if unconsciously—express the fears and imaginings of death as at a time where scientific professionals were replacing religious leaders as our arbiters between life and death, maintainers of health, and alleviators of suffering.
"We believe in giving people a voice and that we cannot become arbiters of truth ourselves, so we're approaching this problem carefully," Adam Mosseri, vice president of product management for News Feed, wrote in the blog post announcing these changes.
The Middle East Institute and the Brookings Institution, both influential arbiters of Middle East developments, announced that they would press pause on accepting more Saudi money; they acknowledged accepting Saudi money in the past, though they did not disclose the amounts.
"We are not the arbiters of truth," said Nick Pickles, Twitter's head of public policy for the United Kingdom, during testimony before British lawmakers in Washington in March, something that the company also said in a blog post last year.
Further up in the blog post, Mosseri made it very clear that Facebook "cannot become arbiters of truth [them]selves," which falls pretty squarely in line with Mark Zuckerberg's repeated (and disingenuous) statements that the social platform isn't a media company.
These addendums to the withdrawal agreement would all empower the UK to seek recourse from independent arbiters if it felt the EU wasn't negotiating in good faith as they tried to figure out their future relationship and protect the Irish border.
Facebook announced on Thursday that it was beginning a partnership with organizations including the Associated Press, ABC News, and Snopes to flag "fake news," an action aimed at elevating the status and power of those organizations as arbiters of truth.
But in keeping those specifics secret, Twitter and other social media companies make oversight impossible and make themselves the sole arbiters of what kinds of speech are authentic and legitimate, says Danny O'Brien, director of strategy at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
It died as a consequence of factors beyond the control of individuals: the ideological polarization of partisan politics, and a constitutional structure that gives the Senate total control over who gets lifetime positions as the ultimate arbiters of law in America.
Some influencers feel strongly about ordering responsiblyIt's easy to sneer at influencers, but many of the best ones have become trusted arbiters of taste, replacing restaurant critics and travel guides, with their captions providing as much interest as their shots.
Unlike federal judge positions, which are nominated by the President but must be confirmed by the Senate, immigration judges are hired directly by the attorney general and are structured not as independent arbiters, but as employees of the Justice Department.
With a president who has shown norms to be insufficient a check on executive power, it is high time that lawmakers make a final stand for their role as arbiters of the exports that enable warfare and conflict across the globe.
And while you may be thinking that Donald Trump upends this theory, in fact, our arbiters of right-wing morality (such as it is) are constantly excusing his louche behavior and trying to make him into a figure of rectitude.
"Ultimately, it is the private equity firm's own investors who will be the arbiters of whether the increased valuation multiples are a good or bad thing for the industry," said Scott Phillips, chairman of financial sponsor coverage at Societe Generale Group.
As Randy Barnett, for example, recently explained, "judicial engagement" is the idea that judges are servants of the people, and their job is to be independent arbiters of justice when questions are raised about whether legislatures have exceeded their powers.
The "college kids" were soon social arbiters, befriending rising stars of the New York art world like Richard Prince and Jean-Michel Basquiat, as well as luminaries of the emerging punk rock scene, including Deborah Harry and Chris Stein of Blondie.
At 32, Shohreh Bayat is one of the few top female chess arbiters in the world with the Category A classification, a distinction given to international chess referees who have shown an excellent command of the rules of the sport.
It's legitimate to ask how long Netflix will be able to keep up this cross-border conversation — whether, as it keeps growing, it will have to make legal or moral compromises with local censors or other would-be cultural arbiters.
Right, there are cases in which it's malevolent and they need to do better, yeah, they need to be constant arbiters while maintaining free speech and allowing people to express themselves, even if they don't personally agree with what's being expressed.
In such a paradigm, where corporations and "branding" mediate our own sense of self and contribute to the affirmation of our values, is it really such a surprise that they have also become, more than ever, self-proclaimed arbiters of the public good?
They don't want to be the "arbiters of truth"; they don't want to determine what constitutes nudity or profanity and what does not; and they don't want to determine whether certain novel forms of extreme content deserve to be taken offline or not.
White House Military Office does legally need to be close to the president, since they are the arbiters of information such as the nuclear codes, but the president no longer spends much time at his NYC headquarters, so $130,63 seems a bit steep.
"The court put all government entities on notice - they cannot dictate the terms of personal expression, nor can they designate the arbiters of free speech at their whim," said attorney David Breemer of the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation, which represented the law's challengers.
In punk, this came in the form of dozens of sub-genres that spawned tens of thousands of bands, and millions of infuriating lectures and disagreements from the gatekeepers of artistic purity who've anointed themselves as the Eternal Arbiters Of Genre Authenticity.
"God of Vengeance" then moves to Broadway, and under the glare of the attention it receives, comes under fire from both the arbiters of Jewish culture in the city and the authorities, who arrest the cast and producer on charges of obscenity.
This ritual was then passed on to the arbiters of all things hippie, The Grateful Dead, by one of the Waldos who had the good fortune (in a hippie's mind at least) to be able to hang around the band while they practiced.
Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren, along with a new generation of high-profile progressives like Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, have emerged this winter as the clearest and most vocal arbiters of Democratic aspirations, if not the immediate congressional agenda.
The proliferation of music streaming platforms, the rise of SoundCloud culture as a way of promoting talent, and highly self-organized fanbases acting as taste arbiters and music promoters — all of these factors can work in the favor of international and unknown artists.
To the Editor: Two thousand years ago, a young Jew led a progressive religious movement in opposition to the Pharisees and the Sadducees, two religiously conservative sects who were recognized as the foremost arbiters of Scripture when Jesus appeared on the scene.
Facebook plans to foot the bill for the judges, but there is no way of getting around the fact that the project has the feeling of a payoff: Can judges who are paid, even indirectly, by Facebook be neutral arbiters of company policy?
The other side of this lies with the folks who have to write up the community guidelines around what constitutes racism and hate speech, an area into which companies like Google and Facebook have increasingly been drawn as reluctant arbiters of speech.
Immigration judges have also been instructed to speed up their processes, which advocates say could lead to more deportations and has immigration judges worried that they will not have the time to be neutral arbiters and will instead become enforcers of Trump's strict immigration policies.
Although Facebook and Google have acknowledged the importance of flagging false or misleading news articles to users, they are each wary of being seen as "arbiters of truth," as Facebook vice president of partnerships Dan Rose said at the Code Media conference this week.
Some companies gave broad, formulaic responses about how they work to comply with local laws, but insist, like French hosting company OVH, which works with nine sites, that "cloud infrastructure providers cannot be arbiters of morality," as the company wrote in an email to Gizmodo.
Total political correctness has returned as a priority, only now the hanky-clutching arbiters of what is kosher to pronounce in public inhabit the right and earnestly turn up whenever they believe someone has gone too far in criticizing or belittling their anti-PC president.
With the addition of the road course at Charlotte this fall for the first elimination race in the Playoff, Busch expects the arbiters of the sport — whoever they may be — to demand that he take the checkered flag on the "new and different" track.
Whatever the outcome, analysts said the military would want to present their move as something other than a full-blown coup to avoid criticism from an Africa keen to leave behind the Cold War continental stereotype of generals being the final arbiters of political power.
Compounding the problem is that the best-known arbiters of college quality, like U.S. News & World Report, reward schools for prestige and selectivity, not for serving the needs of adults and all the other students who actually make up most of America's college classrooms.
They are not the arbiters of what is or isn't feasible for the US in 10 years, because that question involves 1,000 other questions about demographics, economics, politics, technology, social change, justice, and equity, and climate scientists are not experts on any of those things.
A year ago, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahuBenjamin (Bibi) NetanyahuMORE flew in, arguably stealing the thunder of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates who may have thought they were the arbiters of when Israel would be publicly acceptable to invite for a visit.
After dropping out in November, former presidential candidate Julian Castro ran a public campaign criticizing the Democratic Party's decision to continue to make heavily white states like Iowa and New Hampshire the de facto arbiters of a party that is growing ever more diverse.
May, 60, revealed in the article about being the only child of a clergyman, or her sleepless nights over Britain's decision to leave the European Union, self-appointed arbiters of taste and propriety began wagging fingers about the no-nonsense prime minister's expensive attire.
If an IDR process is adopted, it must direct the arbiters not to consider billed charges when determining reasonable value, create a presumption that reasonable value lies between 100 and 200 percent of the Medicare reimbursement amount, and require publication of the IDR results.
They're kind of arbiters of taste, and only having a male, or having a predominantly male sensibility helps reinforce the idea that things that are 'male' are more interesting, more serious, than things are that 'female,' said Cristina Escobar, director of communications at The Representation Project.
Coming in response to heightened scrutiny for its role in promoting fake news during the 2016 election, these changes mark not only a shift in focus for Facebook, but also a retreat from its ambitions to become one of the primary arbiters of America's information ecosystem.
In these fraught conditions, U.S. policy on Iran must be based on the apparently paradoxical propositions that change in Iran is needed and inevitable, that U.S. can't bring about that change and that only the Iranian people can be the masters and arbiters of that change.
Whether forced or unwitting, journalists never were intended in the Founding Fathers' minds to be state's witnesses on a regular basis, in part because of the chilling effect such collusion can have on a news outlet's ability to be viewed as impartial, independent arbiters of truth.
It is also unhappy at Britain's refusal to accept EU judges as the ultimate arbiters of disputes — an issue that could get an early airing as London seeks a quick fix to prevent its withdrawal from the Euratom pact disrupting its nuclear industry and medical imaging.
We learned from Strzok that all Americans are pretty much like him in terms of having deeply held political beliefs, so it's not really possible or necessary to find more disconnected arbiters to lead the FBI's sensitive investigations like the historic probes into 2016 presidential candidates.
The arbiters of manners at the Emily Post Institute have said that texting and presumably most other phone usage at the dinner table is rude (duh), and a study from September showed that phone usage during dining actually makes everyone at the table unhappy—including the person using it.
Brody tried to refashion himself as a blander sort of leading man by playing action-hero for Peter Jackson's King Kong, and while the film was a hit, a forgettable performance contributed to him falling out of favor with the arbiters of cinematic taste who once celebrated him.
Raymond and his wife, Noemi, introduced Nakashima, Harry Bertoia, and Isamu Noguchi to Hans and Florence Knoll, pioneers of modern office furniture and interior design and founders of the company that bears their name, where the artists became arbiters of 219th-century design, inspiring a generation of woodworkers.
But if the Bush presidency was a liberal's nightmare, Donald Trump's has quickly emerged as the even more horrifying sequel, and the Mueller investigation of possible collusion between Trump's campaign and Russia could end up in front of that gaggle of black-robed ultimate arbiters sooner than you think.
On the one hand, the right-wing arbiters of authenticity create a near-absolute culturalization of class by insisting that you can be blue-collar simply by, say, stating an opposition to "bureaucracy," or disliking "political correctness" and "social justice politics," or by advocating wall-building or Brexit.
This is an opportunity for the incoming Trump administration to demonstrate to the American people that their nominees will be effective arbiters and protectors of equal rights under the law, civil rights, national security, environmental protections, health care security, educational opportunities, workers' rights, fair diplomacy and international relations.
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Popular video-sharing app TikTok issued a broad ban on Wednesday against "misleading information" that could cause harm to its community or the public, setting itself apart from rivals like Facebook which say that they do not want to be arbiters of truth.
While we usually rely on the typical arbiters of high-end style, like Chanel or Dior, to dictate to us what the future of our wardrobes will look like, young upstart brands like Vetements are increasingly causing a major disruption in the industry with their street savvy designs and kitschy sensibility.
Equal parts auditor, investigator and cop, Mr. Horowitz has navigated his role as one of the most powerful arbiters of conflict in Washington — the investigators' investigator — with a diplomat's instinct for recognizing fault lines, a prosecutor's focus on justice and a Washington insider's knack for amassing allies on Capitol Hill.
There is no doubt that some of these questions will soon be raised in the Washington state courts, where these issues — alleged destabilization from logging and siting a community in a hazardous area — are central to some of the pending litigation; however, juries are often not ideal arbiters of scientific issues.
The French news media said he had been distraught over a slight demotion in the Gault & Millau guide, one of the world's most influential arbiters of culinary excellence, and was worried that he could lose a star in the next edition of the Michelin guide, widely considered the most powerful of them.
" While acknowledging that lawyers, not judges, should be the ultimate arbiters of who stands up to speak on behalf of a client, Judge Weinstein's revised rule sheet now says that "junior members of legal teams" are "invited to argue motions they have helped prepare and to question witnesses with whom they have worked.
What makes Disco Elysium such a useful example here, though, is that its very ability to be positioned as an indie game, and to win an indie game award from one of the arbiters of what is mainstream in the industry, shows how much the very idea of indie is wholly constructed.
"Balance sheet numbers look better, but they fool you," said Anat R. Admati, an economist at the Stanford Graduate School of Business The ratings agencies that played a central role in the last crisis — affirming as wholesome the poisonous mortgages scattered around the earth — retain status as the official arbiters of risk.
With 61 percent of American adults now advocating that "the use of marijuana should be made legal," and 67 percent of voters believing states, not the federal government, ought to be the ultimate arbiters of marijuana regulatory policy, it's no longer acceptable for the federal government to continue to be an impediment to progress.
If social networks are unwilling to be the arbiters of truth (despite 45 percent of American adults' getting news from Facebook), they should at the very least provide grants to reporters who cover the local issues that most immediately affect people's lives and donate advertising to small outlets that cannot compete with national media giants.
" Kreiss, the U.N.C. professor, and Shannon McGregor, a professor of communications at the University of Utah, described the importance of taking full advantage of the services offered by Google and Facebook in their June 22016 paper "The 'Arbiters of What Our Voters See': Facebook and Google's Struggle with Policy, Process, and Enforcement around Political Advertising.
In sending Tagovailoa onto the field against Mississippi State one week after clear evidence that he was not fully recovered from the surgical aftermath of a high ankle sprain, Coach Nick Saban played for high-risk stakes with the arbiters of the sport and — much worse, for Tagovailoa's sake — with the purveyors of fate.
Occasionally De Palma will start a tangent about how he sees directors, fundamentally, as voyeurs, or how he thinks movie critics are driven more by the tastes of their time and aren't great arbiters of actual quality, only for Baumbach and Paltrow to force the movie back into dissecting every single one of his films.
To do this, Zuckerberg says Facebook is dialing back its emphasis on "businesses, brands, and media" in its news feed and returning to promoting shared posts by users — essentially appointing its own individual users, rather than third parties, arbiters of the kind of content that succeeds on Facebook, and returning the platform to the "social" part of social media.
Orrin HatchOrrin Grant HatchTrump to award racing legend Roger Penske with Presidential Medal of Freedom Trump awards Presidential Medal of Freedom to economist, former Reagan adviser Arthur Laffer Second ex-Senate staffer charged in aiding doxxing of GOP senators MORE (R-Utah), represents a vital step in restoring the courts to their proper role as arbiters of statutory interpretation.
One ace that Trump has up his sleeve is that this campaign has exposed the mainstream media, to a greater extent than ever before, as blatantly (even comically) partisan in their coverage of the candidates, and their reputation as impartial arbiters of fact and truthfulness is at an all-time low if we are to believe what the pollsters tell us.
The arbiters with the most at stake in predicting how big a factor the NRG Effect will have seem to believe in it: Las Vegas bookmakers have set the over-unders about four points lower per game than they would be if the games were being contested in a typical arena, according to R. J. Bell, the founder of Pregame.
This is not anything shocking, since the electorate that chose Trump — I know it's not even close to a majority, but they won by the rules all the same, Russian interference notwithstanding — hates a whole truckload of stuff, from professional politicians to globalists to cultural arbiters to, well, the list just goes on and on into the really-pissed-off horizon.
Priebus and Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanEmbattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway Latina leaders: 'It's a women's world more than anything' MORE, both Wisconsin Republicans and close friends, are trying to portray themselves as neutral arbiters in the primary race; Priebus runs the party, while Ryan will serve as ceremonial chairman of the summer gathering.
In amongst several barbs about Muller's failure to score against the San Marinese – not to mention some bizarre stereotypes about German people and their apparent penchant for wearing socks with sandals – he has made the fair point that, despite their generous pool of talent, Germany do not own football, and nor are they the arbiters of who should and should not be participating in international games.
WE'RE JUST SAYING THE HIGH INCOME EARNERS WILL NOT RECEIVE THE KIND OF TAX RATE REDUCTION AND TAX CUT THE MIDDLE-CLASS WILL RECEIVE BECAUSE THIS IS ABOUT PEOPLE LIVING PAYCHECK TO PAYCHECK, WITH RESPECT TO AMT, IT'S A CRAZY RIDICULOUS TAX AND ITS VERY COMPLICATED WE DON'T NEED IT EVEN THE ARBITERS ON THIS DEBATE, EVEN THE IRS ADVOCATE SAYS THIS IS CRAZY, YOU SHOULD GET RID OF THIS.
Libraries, classifiers of Knowledge, explicit arbiters of what is, ontologically speaking, and what is not, have long reinforced elite efforts to instill a higher national character in the lower hordes, whose tastes and proclivities never did match their own, who never did give up their vulgar taste for fiction, which, of course, under the system devised by Melvil Dewey, is not, as a genre, internally classified at all.
Largely, that's because in this country, the arbiters of US trademark law have decided that "Parmesan" is a generic term, explains Larry Olmsted in his new book, " Real Food/Fake Food: Why You Don't Know What You're Eating and What You Can Do about It." We call Parmesan generic, despite the fact that the name of the Italian cheese that translates to Parmesan, Parmigiano-Reggiano, is a protected name that can only be used for cheese that's prepared in an incredibly specific way and comes from the region around the Italian city of Parma.

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