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216 Sentences With "bad name"

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

Luddites get a bad name but Luddites weren't ... KS: They deserve a bad name.
Feminism, unfortunately, has gotten a bad name over the years.
These are the trolls who give trolls a bad name.
There is a reason that "Balkanisation" has a bad name.
Do you think he's given pee play a bad name?
Mr. Trump is almost certainly giving authoritarianism a bad name.
How else do you know when something is a bad name?
"Gives them a bad name," the woman says, shaking her head.
Cookbooks Cheffy cookbooks have gotten a bad name in recent years.
"A lot of marketers get a real bad name," he said.
These days, "synth pop" has a bit of a bad name.
These things have given flan a bad name in some circles.
She said his stunts give biohackers like her a bad name.
Revivals sometimes get a bad name for banking on audience complacency.
"It's another incident that gives foreigners a bad name," Alonzo said.
The pair has given practicing the dark arts a bad name.
And Stephen Colbert is concerned they're giving all Steves a bad name.
Well, trolling already has a bad name, but it's these people's fault.
Almost everything online has a bad name, when you think about it.
" "We had a great time playing 'You Give Love a Bad Name.
"I think the horse race gets a bad name," Mr. Baquet said.
During the nuclear era, civil defense kind of got a bad name.
"Those deals give the rest of us a bad name," she said.
They are causing a bad name for us and it doesn't help.
Quick fixes get a bad name, and sometimes improvement does take patience.
A couple of high-profile disputes have given religious freedom a bad name.
It embarrasses their own country as well, it gives Australians a bad name.
And I don't know how that could have gotten such a bad name.
I am not looking to disparage Matt or give him a bad name.
So-and-So Jeter would be an especially bad name for a girl.
"Alan Grayson gives progressives a bad name and he's an embarrassment," he said.
I think large-scale commercial hosts like these give Airbnb a bad name.
Republicans are giving federalism in a bad name in the social-policy arena.
"We had a great time playing 'You Give Love a Bad Name,' " he said.
"In Nepal circus has a very bad name," one performer says in the film.
Tate is a hothead; Julia, neurotic; Connie and Alan give helicopters a bad name.
NP: So Facebook very famously owned a VPN called Onavo, which is a bad name.
"Bad applications of IT such as this situation give technology a bad name," Dreyfus says.
It is a blatant serial IP violator who gives other Chinese companies a bad name.
But when it comes to health and medicine, he gives liberals a really bad name.
"I got criticized by some satanic organization for giving Lucifer a bad name," Boehner quipped.
This sort of advertising is what gives the rest of our industry a bad name.
The group says a small number of lousy landlords give the rest a bad name.
Neoconservative excesses during the George W. Bush years gave the "freedom agenda" a bad name.
It's upsetting to get messages from Christians telling me I give Christians a bad name.
"Dodd-Frank is a very negative force, which has developed a very bad name," he said.
Some people said such stunts and unsupported claims gave the DIY science community a bad name.
But to the average person, the iPhone XS Max just sounds like a pretty bad name.
WARREN BUFFETT: Well, conglomerates have had a bad name and for good reason over the years.
"Corey Lewandowksi is a shady grifter who gives snake oil salesmen a bad name," Hudson said.
"Corey Lewandowski is a shady grifter who gives snake oil salesmen a bad name," Hudson said.
It might give actual pigs a bad name, but "Like some pigs" for SEXIST is clever.
And a rich guy, residing in the White House has given New York billionaires a bad name.
They paint these actors as transactional, impersonal asset-grabbers who are giving all DAFs a bad name.
Goop is cashing in on pseudoscience and, in the process, giving natural health practices a bad name.
After which someone will suggest that Donald Trump has given all post-70 presidents a bad name.
I hate to say it, but Cairo has such a bad name, nobody wants people from Cairo.
Those kinds of controllers gave third-party gamepads a bad name—one that persists to this day.
"Maybe he gives Lucifer a bad name by comparing him to Ted Cruz," King said on CNN.
If you have a bad name everyone&aposs afraid you and I think that eventually wears on you.
But the settlers are the epitome of particularism, of localism, and they give a bad name to Zionism.
Yeah, I'm glad you didn't pick Surface Space, it's a bad name and Microsoft would have sued you.
I've never called her a bad name, I actually said, 'I love you and I always respected you.
It's a commonsense way to prevent a few bad actors from giving this new technology a bad name.
These shows give American teen dramas a bad name on account of their innate implausibility and overdone narratives.
"It's a very bad name in my native tongue," she said, one meant to shame a whole family.
"It's [people] like this that bring a bad name to Islam by making guidelines like this," another said.
If you think you've been called a bad name, try to work your way out from under that.
"NAFTA" was a bad name because it didn't make clear how America was the prime mover in it.
Though the goal is laudable, inexperience can compound the chaos that is already giving government a bad name.
Please remedy your account's security right away, lest this person's uninformed and sexist rantings give you a bad name.
Correspondingly, where claims are not paid, or met in full, insurance can soon get a bad name, often unjustifiably.
But this type of short-term tradeoff frequently leads to corruption, waste and abuse, giving aid a bad name.
Either way, What if the Joke is on You wouldn't have been a bad name for that comeback album.
The problem for Democrats is that the GOP has given investigation a bad name since the 1994 Republican Revolution.
Gluten-free products became ubiquitous, giving people with celiac disease more options but the ingredient an undeserved bad name.
"If there's a fact-checking operation in this White House, it's giving a bad name to the industry," he said.
"It has a bad name to it, but it's probably one of the most famous houses in Massachusetts," Kahn said.
Corporations, for instance, are giving transparency a bad name by mining public records for information they can use in lawsuits.
Nixon's use of executive privilege during Watergate gave it a bad name, and subsequent presidents have invoked it only reluctantly.
John Boehner on calling Ted Cruz 'Lucifer': 'I got criticized by some satantic organization for giving Lucifer a bad name.
They even gave a "fiscal responsibility" award to Paul Ryan, whose budget proposals gave smoke and mirrors a bad name.
"He was lashing out against such elements who are trying to give the B.J.P. a bad name," Mr. Mangla said.
Memorable Line: ''It's not that marriage itself is bad; it's the people we marry who give it a bad name.
There is a tax incentive, but it's charitable giving, and you don't want charitable giving to get a bad name.
Mike Milken gave buyouts a bad name in the 1980s, and Warren is betting that private equity is similarly unloved today.
But mortgage-backed securities gave the sector a bad name during the financial crisis and investors backed off for a while.
I like to joke with my students that China's biggest problem with Russia is that Putin gives authoritarianism a bad name.
Sandra said that she had called Chuck a bigot to his face, and he had called her an equally bad name.
However, the ones doing these, quite frankly, stupid things, really are the exception which give the whole industry a bad name.
I was about to throw out indignations, but realized it wasn't actually that bad an idea (it was just a bad name).
Many of them overcharge customers and give the business a bad name, said Mr. Zuman, who drives a pedicab in Midtown Manhattan.
Such metaphysical questions are what, from the very beginning, gave philosophy a bad name, because to practical-minded people they appear useless.
Lotteries have gotten a bad name, but I have to remind people, the United States government was founded on a lottery system.
Now, AMC has its own subscription service that's pretty reasonable, and MoviePass runs the risk of giving the whole model a bad name.
" A lot of [gay men said about "Leave Britney Alone"], "Oh, that's the kind of gay person that gives us a bad name.
DeVos has helped to give the charter movement a bad name, bankrolling some of the worst "Wild West"-style versions of these schools.
Risking the ire of his Hindu-nationalist base, the prime minister blasted "fake" gau rakshaks for giving a good cause a bad name.
Bitcoin got a bad name as a wildly fluctuating currency for drug dealers and tax cheats, in part because its participants remained anonymous.
Her husband and daughter were on board, as was the family friend who declared "You Give Love a Bad Name," Jon Bon Jovi.
" Mr. Suber was quick to add, however, that he didn't condone Ms. Elbaykan's guerrilla tactics: "Unlawful access gives open access a bad name.
He added that pardons got a bad name because of former President Clinton's pardon of Marc Rich, whom Giuliani prosecuted for tax evasion.
But unfortunately people are going to take drones and do things with them in a reckless manner and give drones a bad name.
"Nafta became a bad name because it led to a bad result," Representative Sander M. Levin, Democrat of Michigan, said in an interview.
" Out front, facing the water, a band played cover songs belting out the lyrics to Bon Jovi's "You Give Love a Bad Name.
But it was W.T.O. proponents, those who branded the organization and similar deals as "trade agreements," who have given trade a bad name.
" Out front, facing the water, a band played cover songs – belting out the lyrics to Bon Jovi's "You Give Love a Bad Name.
I will say that the weird thing about Silicon Valley, it's the first place I've ever been where meritocracy has a bad name.
PC laptops have always gotten a bad name since they have historically prioritized function over style thanks to cheap materials and awful looking displays.
Stormfront posters complained that the ragtag collection of groups brandishing homemade shields and screaming openly about Jews gave other neo-Nazis a bad name.
"But they have often gotten a bad name because of manufacturing's role in making claims that are too good to be true," she said.
"Got shot at today for calling an old farmer a bad name," reads an entry written by a 17-year-old Kennedy on Oct.
Really, really bad name, but there's a reason the app is more of iOS's most popular in the space: it gets the job done.
The racism that we are dealing with is not someone calling someone else a bad name, but a racism that is structural and systemic.
PC laptops have always gotten a bad name since they have historically prioritised function over style thanks to cheap materials and awful looking displays.
The other accuser wannabes are not worth mentioning, except to say that calling what they said "allegations" is to give allegations a bad name.
Miami Twice (it really is a bad name) also carries contemporary clothes targeting the city's many subcultures from rockabilly to tropigoth (look it up).
Securitization got a bad name during the financial crisis of 2008, so the bottle is a reminder of the fleeting nature of success. 5.
Now, however, I've found the Sony WH-10003XM3, a pair of wireless/wired cans that truly give everything else I've tried a bad name.
"It creates a bad name for our industry and it takes away sales for companies that are doing the right thing," SureCall's Matthews says.
That somehow the new ones are giving the old ones a bad name, and they might be the straw that breaks the camel's back.
"At one point, he asked me the name of my improv group and then said it was a bad name," she said of their chemistry.
"At the end of the day, a great product can fix a bad name, but a great name can't fix a bad product," Feldmeth said.
"This is the sort of narrow view that rightly gives economics a bad name," said Angus Deaton, a Nobel-prizewinning economist, of the efficiency question.
Mo the Marauder, who runs his Wall Street firm with the kind of anything-for-a-buck abandon that gives money men a bad name.
In 2014, business-minded Republicans began a series of primary challenges against black-sheep Republicans who they believed were giving the party a bad name.
I asked Nicolas about the makeup of the yellow vests, expecting him to insist that fringe hangers-on had given the group a bad name.
This is all very frustrating and regrettable, mostly because this deplorable scientific behavior is giving CRISPR and the entire prospect of gene-editing a bad name.
After James Cameron's Avatar legitimized 24D filmmaking, audiences were assaulted with a torrent of poorly converted 483D films that still give the format a bad name.
STUART LAING Cambridge, Cambridgeshire You imply that the continued use of pagers in Britain's National Health Service is backwards ("Giving Luddites a bad name", November 11th).
It's the added ingredients that have given processed foods a bad name, because while not all processed foods are junk foods, all junk foods are processed.
Stock buybacks have gotten a bad name in many precincts over the past few years, decried as unproductive "financial engineering" that detracts from corporate investment in growth.
It's a bad name for a game, not that I could immediately suggest a better one—and the art doesn't do much to aid its cause, either.
"I didn't want to make nursery food," Mr. Henderson said in an interview last month, about the stodgy classics that long gave British food a bad name.
That you shouldn't delve into getting actual data to change things or that you were trying to socially engineer ... I think social engineering gets a bad name.
Unfortunately, for the majority of those people, one section of the program's fan base is doing its best to give the rest of them a bad name, i.e.
" He added, "We kind of get a bad rap and a bad name for it because everyone thinks it's cool to say, 'Oh, it's just locker room talk.
Did the Great Depression unfairly give tariffs a bad name or did the field of economics just advance beyond tariffs as part of the economic policy tool kit?
Members of the New York State legislature are allowed to maintain outside businesses, although this was certainly the type of back-scratching that gives politicians a bad name.
GUILFOYLE: Well, you&aposre giving chardonnay a bad name, which I think issue... (CROSSTALK) JUAN WILLIAMS, "THE FIVE" CO-HOST: Are you kidding, he said chardonnay in the woods.
In a recent article, Portland State professor Bruce Gilley writes that he is seeking to rescue Western colonialism from the "bad name" it has received over the past century.
Still, she seemed to be a part of that web of private law firms, private fees, private investments and private connections that gives politics-as-usual a bad name.
"Dubious opinion polls conducted by some media houses to sway the elections for political parties ... has definitely created a bad name for the polling industry in India," Rai said.
Remember, the animosity between the two was legendary -- they trashed each other for years in public and in private and called each other every bad name in the book.
While the Senate is playing green deal or no green deal, the House is caught up in an arcane struggle that gives the term "inside baseball" a bad name.
But this was complete hypocrisy — something that was obvious to anyone who looked at the actual content of G.O.P. budget proposals, which gave smoke and mirrors a bad name.
In addition, this behavior gives football and frats a bad name, not to mention depriving the football team of a great athlete and depriving that athlete of the game.
"For the last 30 years or so, excuses have got a bad name, and personal responsibility has taken on a cult-like status as a societal panacea," he said.
Yet particularly since the 2009 expenses scandal, when a handful of (frankly rather minor) scoundrels gave the decent majority a bad name, this has curdled into something darker, something nastier.
In many developing markets (like India), Android phones had been in a "race to the bottom," with tons of cheapo handsets of questionable quality, giving the platform a bad name.
Originally billed as DogecoinDark in 2014, the currency has had some ups and downs but has always displayed the "move fast and break things" mentality that gives cryptocurrencies a bad name.
The inability of countries in the euro area — which does not include Britain — to stop the slow-motion implosion of Greece and other deeply indebted countries gives integration a bad name.
One hangover from the financial crisis is that bailouts got a bad name, because banks that helped cause the crisis were rescued as part of the effort to limit the damage.
Either way, some hype work was necessary, and although a sponsored music festival was beyond our budget, perhaps it was time to splurge on some "causewashing" to brighten our bad name.
Happily, he has no such qualms when it comes to dealing with the Stiller brothers, sullen "gangster wannabes, small-time pot dealers and oxy slingers" who give "redneck" a bad name.
NtechLab's Minin, though, says fears about the technology are "overheated" and that companies like Clearview AI "that really do not care for privacy rights" are giving other firms a bad name.
"Those people who are carrying out violent attacks or are involved in militants activities ... are giving the mujahadeen and jihad a bad name," he said in an interview with CNN in 2012.
"Criminals have turned cow protection into a business, and have given this noble task a bad name," Modi said in a 2016 speech after a video of a mob attack went viral.
The sausage-making with respect to the Affordable Care Act, or ObamaCare, gave a bad name to our legislative procedures, but no worse than what we recently witnessed on the Republican side.
Gerrymandering has a bad name because the party in control of a state typically divides the state into House districts that give it more than its fair share of seats in Congress.
It was infectious, nonetheless, garnering millions of views and spawning regional remakes like MTV UK's Geordie Shore and even a DIY Toronto version bearing the fitting but objectively bad name of Lake Shore.
The spectacular failure of Silicon Valley unicorn Theranos — and Elizabeth Holmes' fall from grace — has given the blood- testing business a bad name, but investors and start-ups in the sector are undeterred.
On activists' bad name: "Activist has become somewhat of a dirty word ... [funds will] behave like highly engaged shareholders as opposed to what the cartoonish meaning of the word activist means," Peltz said.
Trump, by becoming the face of anti-Obamacare and the face of climate denial, gives both of those causes, those anti-causes, a very bad name and thereby boosts the more progressive alternative.
"Don't give your people a bad name," he seethes after Rose fails to show up on a live feed to corroborate his son's whereabouts the night Wallace's future daughter-in-law was murdered.
The old owners countersued for defamation, claiming that though they had received a letter, it wasn't threatening, and the media attention they received from the whole Watcher scandal gave them a bad name.
"He used to say that the easiest way to kill a rose was to give it a bad name," Michael Marriott, the senior rosarian at David Austin Roses, said in a telephone interview.
"Being called a bad name on Twitter is not the kind of harassment the Supreme Court was talking about" in allowing exemptions for people who face a real threat of harassment, he said.
Monopolies, companies utterly dominate the sale of a good or service, have a bad name in the United States, and the country rightly maintains laws against the anti-competitive things that many do.
This bit of calculated crappiness, in particular, helps Crotty avoid the slick seamlessness that sucks the life out of so many pseudo-minimalist paintings, and gives reductivist pictorial strategies everywhere a bad name.
Among those whose field was the study of the human mind, a widely held view was that Mr. Leary had gone off the deep end, giving their science a bad name in the process.
But one writer makes the case for why it might be more than just a cooking wine, and says the low-quality bottles available at the supermarket might be giving it a bad name.
"I think many men assume the 'Women's March' is supposed to be women-only, which is why it was a bad name for the main anti-Trump march," New York magazine's Jonathan Chait wrote.
At least since Aristotle, the true-to-life ordering of events has "suffered from a bad name as an inferior method of arrangement, if artistic or viable at all," writes the Israeli critic Meir Sternberg.
Microsoft was then forced to unbundle Kinect from Xbox One, and produced an unsightly accessory to attach the Kinect to the Xbox One S. After early promise, Kinect picked up a bad name for itself.
And then there's corn — its starchy reputation and processed by-products have given it a bad name, but it's actually more nutritious than many would believe, and its insoluble fiber even fosters good gut bacteria.
I want badly to blame Alabama for giving our region a bad name, but there's little reason to believe that had Moore been a candidate from my native South Carolina, things would have been different.
But "Refresh is such a bad name," she said last week, sitting at a round marble table in a pink conference room with Ms. Kassan; their partnership began at the suggestion of Ms. Kassan's husband.
In 2014, groups of dama were photographed dancing en masse outside the Louvre in Paris and shimmying in Moscow's Red Square -- much to the consternation of some, who thought they were giving China a bad name.
Injuries to riders and the fact that the scooters are dockless, leaving customers to just litter the sidewalks with e-scooters when they're done using them, have already given this relatively young industry a bad name.
So if there's any correlation between the name and reality, we can, at most, speculate that the women who've wound up giving all Karens a bad name are a group of white senior citizens behaving badly.
The phrase "as the father of daughters" has gotten something of a bad name in recent years, with some arguing that men shouldn't need the incentive of their own children to treat other women with respect.
The critic Peter Marks, in The Washington Post, described the show as "deliriously happy-making," taking pains to note that it is not the sort of "calcified frivolity" that so often gives commedia a bad name.
I've lived my life for the world to see and judge and absolutely, I'm hot mess on a stick, I blew it a few times...but I refuse to believe I give Christians a bad name.
Even some short-sellers backed GE—and chastised Mr Markopolos for giving them a bad name by writing his report for an investor in exchange for a cut of any profits made if GE's share price declined.
Of course, the timing will coincide with Harry and Meghan Markle officially transitioning out of their senior roles in the Royal Family ... which many folks consider a shot through the heart that gives them a bad name.
He says his employer is "pandering" and "jumping on the left's agenda" with the new policy, but also that people like Andreychenko who go out seeking attention give the rest of the gun community a bad name.
MIAMI — They were some of the most feared people in South Florida, men who became cinematic fodder and, long before Donald J. Trump uttered the term "bad hombres," ones who really did give some immigrants a bad name.
As a result, there is much more competition between democracy and authoritarianism than there was last century, according to Diamond, who said the rise of far-right populist parties in Europe were also giving democracy a bad name.
The interesting thing there is [that] the ideological prism on foreign policy has been kind of shattered, I would say, since 2000 — or 2003, when a Republican administration got into democracy promotion and then gave intervention a bad name.
Long frustrated that industry outsiders like Shkreli have given their sector a bad name, the big-time pharmaceutical firms have been doing what they can to avoid bad headlines and risk bringing Trump's ferocious anger back down on them.
The Cosplay Is Not Consent movement is wonderful because it's about 'this is my body and I can dress however I want," and then you get the, "You're terrible for dressing like that, you're giving a bad name to women cosplayers.
We got a turn in a prototype equipped with the SkyActiv-X engine in January, the company's bet that it can make gasoline engines that are as efficient as diesels without the emissions problems that have given them a bad name.
At least if I lived outside the US. As we'll get into later, "Oppo Reno 10x Zoom" is a bad name for reasons beyond its simple unwieldiness, so I'm just going to call this phone the Reno from here on out.
It's funny that because of a few bad apples that have given Juggalos a bad name, the public has chosen to focus on those bad apples—not the food drives, the Scrub Care unit giving free food and water to people.
Many make a point of sharing their concerts for free, bristling at the term "bootleg" because of its associations with the profit-driven releases of yore that they believe leech off an artist's work and give their community a bad name.
In a plaintive appeal that gives chutzpah a bad name, the United Nations (I'm not making this up) has issued an appeal for $220006 million in humanitarian aid for North Korea, as aid agencies say 2202 percent of the population is undernourished.
Mr. Gorbachev gives grudging respect to Mr. Yeltsin for intervening to stop the right-wing coup that sought to overthrow his presidency in 1991, but low marks for the rest of his chaotic tenure, which gave democracy a bad name in Russia.
He also tells me newspapers like the Sun gave this mosque a bad name because of its historical association with Abu Hamza—former leader of the mosque who preached fundamentalism and militant Islamism—but absolutely everything about the mosque has changed since then.
" By the middle of January, with the event shaping up to be the anti-Trump demonstration, the New York magazine writer Jonathan Chait worried that "Women's March" was too niche an organizing principle — it was a "bad name," he tweeted, a divisive "brand.
She finally got her own corgi at 18 and called it Susan, which is a bad name for a dog, but when you're growing up in Buckingham and can realistically only name your own children after former monarchs or apostles, Susan is practically Discobaby69.
"The sense of entitlement is just too strong in the blogging community and the nastiness, hissy fits and general hate displayed after one of your members was not granted her request for a freebie is giving your whole industry a bad name," Stenson wrote.
The upside is that there is a chance for real change to be enacted, and that can be a model to the rest of the world's faithful on how to police themselves and cast out the wrongdoers who give their religion a bad name.
As the Democrats sort out the problems — from bad mobile connectivity to an app that gives beta testing a bad name, to obvious human error caused by the confusion of using a new system — such ineptitude is not a good look for the party.
These fighters may have found a way to sublimate their instinctual bloody tendencies and make them profitable and even something to be admired, but all it takes is one of them giving into the violence inherent in them to give all of combat sports a bad name.
Our proposal — a more detailed version of which can be found in this academic paper — leans on a version of collective responsibility, a notion that has something of a bad name in modern law, although it is a legal device that dates back to ancient times.
" The baseball lifer Leo Durocher gave nice guys a bad name in the 1940s when, as the scrappy manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, he said of his counterpart in the New York Giants dugout, Mel Ott, "A nicer guy never drew breath than that man there.
When news broke of Keith Smith's story being an outright fabrication, members of the police department, the state's attorney's office, and the mayor's office took time to chastise Smith for bringing a bad name to a city that has endured so much in recent memory, as well they might have.
Amid this jockeying, the details of the agreement will be crucial if the global airline industry is to avoid previous mistakes, particularly in Europe, where the world's largest carbon market has arguably failed to limit the region's carbon dioxide emissions, giving these so-called offsetting programs an increasingly bad name.
As we learned back in the Creepy Clown Summer of 2015, there's a whole horde of harlequins out there—some hellbent on terrifying America, some who get drunk and traipse through the woods, and others who are just looking to make a living, bummed out that all those killer clowns gave them a bad name.
"We need to find these culprits who bring a bad name to peacekeeping, who actually create problems within the country in which they find themselves, and most importantly who destroy young, innocent lives and we need to punish them in such a manner that nobody else in the future will ever think of doing that," he said.
Yet while the annual gathering is generally characterized by fans enthusiastically interacting with celebrities, a darker side of fandom has been in the headlines of late, reflecting the sort of distasteful minority that can give fans a bad name -- and might eventually prompt some talent to think twice about how much exposure they want to that culture.
While it might sound like the Japanese company is making a backward move in an increasingly electrified automotive landscape, Mazda may have cracked what numerous automakers have spent years trying to figure out: allowing the use of the technology that has made diesel engines fuel efficient, without all of the dirty emissions that have given diesels a bad name as of late.
While democracy promotion got a bad name in the aftermath of the 2003 war in Iraq, which the Bush administration sold in part as a democracy-building initiative, Washington nevertheless should support efforts within Iran to build the institutions and nourish the values of a well-functioning democracy — which would raise the chances that Iran would be ready to replace the regime with a democracy.
"If you look at the other services sectors -- healthcare, education, financial services -- financial services did get a bad name after the margin financing crash in the first half of the year, but if you look at insurance and bank net margins, I really don't think you need to look too hard, but you need to look for areas within China that are growing outside of the old China," Azis said.
The consensus among analysts Seth Greenberg and Jay Williams was that we were bearing witness to some truly horrendous college basketball; the overarching opinion was that a game that had shaped up as one of the most fascinating of the early conference season—and at least on paper, perhaps the most tantalizing of the year, at least in terms of potential future earning power--had devolved into the kind of sputtering and rhythmless dud that's given college basketball a bad name over the past several years.

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