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"corollary" Definitions
  1. corollary (of/to something) a situation, an argument or a fact that is the natural and direct result of another one

381 Sentences With "corollary"

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

Ethical elimination is a theme (a corollary to ethical consumption).
This is the corollary to finding a great wine shop.
" His corollary: "In mass shootings, there are no unwounded victims.
Is there any corollary to what happened with the terminal?
" Perhaps a corollary should be "easy cases make good law.
The corollary is that Trump is ripe to be played.
Here is also a somewhat technical corollary to that question.
Empire is the necessary and inevitable corollary of Putin's autocracy.
There are corollary benefits to this limited loan forgiveness, as well.
That is because the corollary of dollar dominance is dollar dependence.
But one corollary was that British farmers did well from membership.
The corollary is, of course, that slower growth raises the risk.
Corollary: Four in five men have seen what's on the internet.
The unstated corollary is that one's journey shouldn't be unnecessarily prolonged.
President Franklin Roosevelt did not hesitate to invoke the Roosevelt Corollary.
Power, and its corollary, corruption in all forms, thrive on powerlessness.
Trophies, PlayStation's corollary to Xbox Achievements, take the concept even further.
The corollary is that it's something we can do something about.
They are the corollary to special religious exemptions that religious schools enjoy.
A corollary: Your good work doesn't count if nobody knows about it.
"The closest corollary on the market is the Classic Mini," says Bernal.
But there's a heartening corollary on the men's side of the roster.
The public vacuity of modern politics is inseparable from its media corollary.
It's worse for Sane, because we have a direct corollary in Asuka.
Now, let us move to a corollary: How to run a presidency?
Left unsaid is the corollary: without reform, Turkey will merely scrape by.
Violates endorsements ban too, which has an obvious corollary for discouraging patronage.
There's a corollary to that statement: the movement is always in unison.
Elitism wasn't an unfortunate corollary to this project but its animating ethic.
In other words, most African fighting arts were a direct corollary to combat.
Young Professional Assholes, as a corollary to the film's commentary on corporate greed.
Sanders is likely referring to the 1904 Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.
The corollary is the view that men behaving as gentlemen is an anachronism.
Also 2635.101(b)(8) bars preferential treatment, with obvious corollary for singling out.
A corollary rule: Ignore the social-media screamers among the Trump haters, too.
A corollary to the rule is that a nation in shock is docile.
A corollary of this is: I never do anything I don't want to do.
The corollary was the exact opposite: That hot weather made them listless and passive.
When Wendy sings, the Pan corollary becomes clear: The boys need to grow up.
A corollary of stronger links between global cities is a kind of "waterbed" effect.
And as a corollary, there was the nasty fact that the film wasn't sexy.
It is here that VOICE = SURVIVAL justifies its new equation, but with a corollary.
The corollary to that view is that there are no swing voters any more.
By some corollary, it seems that sports-radio hosts can get lured in, too.
It's impenetrable — frightening and stomach-turning, but without an obvious corollary in human experience.
Facebook avoided bringing up the Hays Code, the closest corollary to what they propose.
But an overlooked foundational corollary is that the employee also owes the employer nothing.
One corollary: Anything you do in the name of protecting your people is justified.
A disturbing corollary to the trend toward dissociation might be the trend toward suicide.
And the corollary to that: It takes a while for things to get going.
He likes his trampolines and the corollary challenges of — and meaning in — remaining upright.
The corollary is that the probability of meeting the two-degree target is currently low.
But what Mr Ammann calls this "very big business opportunity" comes with an inconvenient corollary.
"This is corollary of my view that you don't buy all at once," Cramer said.
An important corollary to the effort she describes is the problem of preventing postblast fires.
As a corollary, how much do we trust the winners not to slaughter the losers?
Quinlan mentioned the tobacco industry as a corollary to their efforts in protecting underage kids.
I would point to free-to-play games as an excellent corollary to this point.
As a corollary to that, asking if a menu item is "good" is also baffling.
The corollary to that theory: Don't try to control the man in the Oval Office.
I'll say I thought Vice was the closest corollary — I mean, beehives on the roof?
As a corollary, an obvious note that too many ignore: Listen more than you talk.
And its heartbreaking corollary: Is what I'm calling good sex not even all that good?
Flourishing civil society An important corollary to a free press is a robust civil society.
The sometimes explicit corollary was that white people were the natural rulers of the globe.
That corollary is pure cynicism, and they go out of their way to avoid it.
The corollary of this is if you're building ML, always develop and try simpler methods first.
Mr Bezos claims, as a corollary to thinking only of customers, never to think of rivals.
The corollary is that, if they want to encourage good behaviour, they have to get involved.
The corollary has been a lower share of GDP for labour, one factor behind voter discontent.
A corollary for the insurance exit might be that the return rarely exceeds the capital invested.
The corollary of all this is that failing places will be given more latitude to fail.
That leads to an important corollary: expose the bacteria to fewer drugs and resistance should abate.
A corollary to the Great Man Theory is what could be called the "Big Firm Hypothesis".
In fact, every feeling we experience—lust, anger, depression, exasperation—has a corollary in brain chemistry.
Kim heard similar concerns about Corollary 3.12 from another mathematician, Teruhisa Koshikawa, currently at Kyoto University.
The corollary is that if they want to encourage good behaviour, they have to get involved.
The corollary to this, however, is that Americans without access to the internet are left behind.
As a corollary, border adjustments also do not distort the pattern of domestic sales and purchases.
The corollary was that the GOP and NRA's objections to these kinds of measures are profoundly absurd.
As a particularly interesting corollary: What does it take to make a planet as special as Earth?
The corollary is that the push for super smart AI like Watson, and AlphaGo, might be misguided.
A sort of corollary to this argument is that internet providers will voluntarily adhere to suggested practices.
A corollary to this feature: Things will be believed about you that are not at all true.
I certainly agree with the first part, but I don't know that I would draw that corollary.
The corollary of this is that the absolute risk will be higher than a database study suggests.
In fiction, there's a corollary: to the nonbelieving reader, a character's religious fervor can be a hindrance.
As a corollary, 220006 percent said Trump's immigration policies would make them less likely to vote Republican.
Supercomputing and the corollary of high-performance computing have become the means mechanisms for those vital tasks.
This now brings to mind a corollary distinction between unintentional/inadvertent nuclear war and accidental nuclear war.
Presidential press manipulation, especially when it involves denying access to information, violates a corollary of free media.
The flag for Western Sahara, a disputed territory in Northwest Africa, has a corollary on the emoji keyboard.
As a corollary, one generally must try very hard to guarantee earning less than the risk-free rate.
Like you need to go back over 50 years in history to find a corollary to this mistake.
Hydration hysteria has birthed various corollary myths: That plain water is the only drink that will hydrate you.
The corollary is that any argument about economic policy can never be just an argument about economic policy.
The corollary is that rising budget deficits are allowed to lift the economy out of stagnation and recession.
The natural corollary to that is that lower school spending means less pay and more poverty as adults.
Hence, also the corollary that if Iran cannot export oil, then other Gulf countries cannot do so, either.
A corollary to that question is: Can or should they be restored and, if so, to what extent?
A former computer scientist, Lu explains the CRISPR technology as a pretty direct corollary to writing code for software.
So if you look at one corollary, it would be: Reagan wanted to raise the drinking age to 21.
But a lesser-known corollary is that sometimes, the deals you don't make also produce the best sound bites.
The corollary is that lending to industry (excluding infrastructure), which the PSBs dominate, has all but stalled (see chart).
But a corollary of Forster's observation about endings is that the windup isn't the primary attraction of good fiction.
In a column for SCOTUSblog last year, von Spakovsky called partisan gerrymandering the "political corollary" of the Goldilocks dilemma.
But there's a corollary issue: Too-Big TV. Even as viewers' time becomes more precious, individual episodes are bloating.
This is hard stuff, and acknowledging it comes with a corollary: We, as a society, are not particularly special.
As a corollary to its religious liberty, Pennsylvania soon became a successful political experiment in religious pluralism and toleration.
The corollary is that Laura, given her groundhog week, will go to any extreme to keep her daughter safe.
As a corollary to the artist-subject-viewer trifecta, Sepuya includes the camera's gaze as a fourth interested party.
There's a corollary to this apparent urge for energy-efficient, organized, predictive systems to appear in a fluctuating nonequilibrium environment.
It&aposs kind of the corollary to foreign policy where you practice diplomacy backed up by the threat of force.
A corollary to that would be to call purchasing a stock like Chesapeake "investing" may be a bridge too far.
The corollary to that, of course, is that Amino will have a much larger, broader pool of content to police.
It could not be more apparent that if the Roosevelt Corollary is applied, the Maduro cabal qualifies for American intervention.
By the 1920s, in fact, the State Department disavowed the Roosevelt Corollary because it stoked such rancor in Latin America.
The venerable line that "If all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail" has a corollary.
Corollary 3.12 is where Mochizuki presents his proof of this new inequality, which, if true, would prove the abc conjecture.
But that freedom comes with a regulating corollary: the right of others to compete for the policies of their choice.
The implied corollary to this concern is a question about the value of continuing to provide assistance to the country.
Republicans need to remember the corollary to any mandate: if you do not deliver, voters will find others who will.
There's a corollary: Stalemate strategies that don't show rapid progress will soon eat away at public and domestic political support.
But how about a corollary to the right: A reasonable expectation of receding relevance, at least for non-criminal acts?
Foreigners are also unlikely to have suffered much direct harm from the fall in bond prices (the corollary of rising yields).
The logical corollary is that any senior staff members who have been in their job for an extended period are incompetent.
But the corollary to any claim of criminal immunity is that the alternative the Constitution provides—impeachment—must not be undermined.
But a corollary is that, in the interim, while society hasn't developed immune responses, we should be especially cautious about abuses.
One corollary of really following his nonmusical interests: Forest Hills might wind up being his final show in the United States.
But in the case of Mochizuki's Corollary 3.12, mathematicians agree that it is at the core of the proof of abc.
One corollary to the political-money obsession is the complaint that Federal Election Commission enforcement for alleged wrongdoers is too feeble.
But a corollary of that is that great success brings great privilege, which can also be a gateway to disturbing behavior.
Trump didn't follow it up with the usual corollary: If I were a (first) man, you wouldn't care about my clothes.
The corollary — one formula for growth — is then to engineer motorcycles with smaller engines like the Bobber and the Scout 60.
Within the space of a chapter, Adam's alertness to fraud will come to seem a corollary of his own prodigious fraudulence.
A corollary is that a voucher system invests all registered voters with a stake, since they now have money to allocate.
The society has even come up with a corollary for accompanying parents: "They can write something to their younger selves," she said.
The corollary is that the electricity system is being re-regulated as investment goes chiefly to areas that benefit from public support.
A corollary: Do not create technologies that might increase suffering and oppression, unless you're very sure the technology will be properly regulated.
The corollary is that people think they are using this as a path to autonomy and independence just like on the farms.
Rather, the weakness in the currency is merely a corollary of the huge amounts of cheap cash in the Hong Kong economy.
The most interesting interpretation of the doctrine, however, came from President Theodore Roosevelt, who added what became known as the Roosevelt Corollary.
The 2016 presidential campaign has served as a bizarre and awful corollary to a stretch that can seem frighteningly off the rails.
The extreme corollary and most costly risk of this way of thinking, however, is that only good people can produce good art.
So I'd add a corollary: Federal aid should favor colleges that have regularly offered and multisection courses taught by full-time faculty.
Its corollary in the old software world that I initially wrote about would be the middleware layer in a client-server architecture.
For opponents of abortion, the Hyde Amendment is an obvious corollary: If abortion is wrong, then so is government funding for it.
As a corollary issue to the breach, it is one thing to wake up and realize that your Yahoo account was compromised.
And by corollary logic, such social groupings are also found to be statistically underrepresented in desirable things—wealth, income, educational attainment, etc.
A more unexpected corollary of Spinoza's pantheism is that it eliminates the possibility of free will, or of contingency of any kind.
The corollary that no toddler should be in prisons, even with their parents, for indefinite periods of time, is the next closest thing.
The corollary to this naiveté is the often shockingly low level of insight as to how a priest's behavior impacts the love object.
A lesser-known corollary to this phenomenon is the "panic cycle" that occurs when innovative new technologies strike irrational fear into people's hearts.
But the corollary was that the bank had to raise interest rates to attract foreign capital whenever its gold reserves started to fall.
It's a big idea for e-commerce, and one that doesn't really have a corollary in the U.S. yet (Facebook Messenger is trying).
As I said, I had written this book called Cheap, and the corollary was the notion of cheap goods meaning cheap labor, right?
The corollary for startups is: do something cool for key customers of a corporate, and you'll get on their radar in no time!
A sincere apology relies on a logical corollary: forgiveness by those to whom the apology is issued and a pardoning of the wrong.
The corollary is that it is also possible to craft the bracket to create a win by almost any team in the field.
The suppression of minority votes is the homegrown corollary of this strategy—an attempt to place a white thumb on the demographic scale.
As for his oddly-proposed cyber-defense agreement with Putin, America's most bitter cyber-enemy, it can only be termed an incomprehensible corollary.
I don't know how this all works out, but I would, just as a corollary, point my finger at the real estate market.
The corollary is that over time, solar panels continuously need to get much, much cheaper if we want them to scale up significantly.
The corollary to a budget, greens have argued, is that it simply doesn't make sense to open up fresh fossil-fuel reserves for exploitation.
The closest corollary were the first televised debates between Kennedy and Nixon that cemented physical appearance as a primary driver towards the Oval Office.
A corollary of this truth is that the best way to project power is not to do wrong secretly but to do good openly.
The corollary of that is that I'm unconvinced that the inconvenience of that cable is bigger than the inconveniences inherent in going wireless-only.
That proposition is explained by its corollary: Rising inflation is the only problem the U.S. Federal Reserve cannot solve by increasing its money supply.
You don't have to pretend that you're an all encompassing serious person, especially when there is already a health care corollary in the race.
The corollary is equally important: keep high-calorie, less nourishing foods relatively inaccessible and out of sight if not out of the house entirely.
If a romance novel must have a happy ending, a corollary is that half of any new batch of romances must feature a duke.
The corollary standard for a presidential candidate could be: how you behave repeatedly in public, before the one big night when everyone is watching.
For some observers, the Burkini affair may have suggested an unspoken corollary: Perhaps the French are helping to bring this terrorist hatred on themselves.
But Ms. Ayotte is unlikely to get any corollary benefit from Mr. Trump, who Republicans complain has a limited get-out-the-vote operation.
The second is the corollary character question about whether her refusal to cough up more details and numbers will damage Warren's robust approval ratings.
The corollary is that they get to hold and maintain their own sphere of influence in Eurasia, whatever the Ukrainians, or the Georgians, may feel.
"A corollary to the idea that flexibility can actually heighten productivity, is that parenthood actually makes us better in our professional roles," Mihalich-Levin said.
Bayley, for her part, has been woefully mishandled, transforming from a female corollary to John Cena into a hapless goof swallowed by 50-50 booking.
"The Senator from Wisconsin cannot frighten me by exclaiming, 'My country, right or wrong,'" Schurz said on the Senate floor before adding his own corollary.
Very quickly, too, such destabilizing area developments could intersect, in both seen and unseen ways, and with both sub-state militarization, and corollary terrorist aggressions.
Beyond the pitch, soccer is power, with owners seemingly using their teams as much for the corollary benefits as for any love of the game.
A corollary to Beckett's pompous Pozzo, he offers food and "salutations" and says "gosh golly gee" but soon reveals an angrier and even sinister aspect.
In this narrative he is an African-American corollary to Harvey Weinstein, who has been accused of assault or harassment by more than 30 women.
It also has a nifty corollary: tagskryt, or "train-boasting", from those who advertise their flygskam by taking ground transport and letting the world know.
M.B.Z. did not say whether he thought about the corollary of his choice: that for ordinary Emiratis, the Brotherhood's appeal must have been even stronger.
As a corollary, you can usually count on the murdered (that is, the grievously harmed) for sentences that are laconic and cool to the touch.
The findings come with an inevitable corollary: essentially, that you are better off seeking advice from random strangers in a bar than from wine experts.
They told me that the Colleen Dinner, the corresponding, women-only corollary to the men's dinner, simply got disorganized and hadn't happened for a few years.
The corollary of the enrichment of the Premier League is that the gulf to the Championship is even bigger than it has been in the past.
The corollary of this narrative is that Trump cares nothing about Republican Party unity and instead thumbs his nose at the party at any given opportunity.
There's a corollary there where a couple years ago the most engaged story, 2016 I think it was, per Chartbeat, was a very long ISIS piece.
It is the corollary of a generous immigration system—proof that rules can be upheld and that a country can open its doors without losing control.
Call it the Rotten Embargos score: a corollary roughly calibrated to the time between the lifting of a review embargo and the first available public showtimes.
A corollary to Cruz's doctrinal belief in the utility of dictatorships in achieving U.S foreign policy goals is his rejection of the value of promoting democracy.
A corollary to that claim that is sometimes made is that it is somehow acceptable to perpetrate acts of violence against those with whom one disagrees.
It seems safe to assume there's no mistake in this corollary — the artist's ongoing series of interventions into institutional collections is entirely about context and intentionality.
"Free trade — and its liberal corollary, the free movement of peoples — have lost their mass appeal, and nowhere more so than in Wallonia," Mr. Conway said.
And the corollary is this: A substantial euro area budget tightening will leave the ECB to carry the burden of economic stabilization for the foreseeable future.
To help rethink the climate challenge, my colleagues and I developed an environmental corollary to Moore's Law, which says that computing power doubles every 20403 months.
It epitomises the variety behind the strip-mall, fast-food sameness of small-town America, but also the loss that can be a bittersweet corollary of progress.
A corollary of this character choice: If you are traveling to a show that is not local, a bulky, elaborate costume will have to be shipped ahead.
And as a second, corollary question: Do you worry about the political impact of telling all of these people, "Hey, you're going to have to switch plans"?
This would mean, as a corollary, that consumers would gain significant control over where and how they interacted with any given business or publication on the web.
As a corollary, think of the Republican Party as a congregation of unruly Dissenters who when given the right opportunity will still stick it to the man.
"The corollary is that they are still very worried about capital outflows and so will make sure to avoid any steps that might increase them," he said.
An obvious corollary to these statements would be for Republicans to hold Trump, once he took office, to an unusually high bar of conduct for a president.
President Trump's maxim that "economic security is national security" comes with an important corollary: A strong manufacturing base is critical to both economic prosperity and national defense.
Personal Health The rule of thumb in medicine — first, do no harm — has as its corollary that the expected benefits of treatment should outweigh its potential risks.
Mythmaking by Duterte has its corollary in the journalists and the crowds that gather eagerly at the scenes of the killings, where rumor flies faster than facts.
The best corollary may be Freaks and Geeks, the high school dramedy that famously made time to give an empathetic backstory to even its most despicable characters.
" This disposed once and for all of the defense "I was no more than a cog in the machine," and of its corollary, "I was only obeying orders.
We think there's growth in front, you know, moderate growth because when you look at it, the biggest corollary with full size pickup sales is the housing industry.
Moreover, Scalia's promise of certainty has a dangerous corollary: When there is disagreement about an outcome, the justices he disagrees with are reaching unprincipled or objectively wrong results.
There's a corollary there when we talk about identity politics — the assumption that the white male is at the center, and everyone outside is a special interest group.
One last question: it seems to me a corollary of what you are saying about Syria and Turkey that, in the long run, Turkey doesn't belong in NATO.
Usually we have to employ a kind of textualism—combing lyrics and gestures for a corollary in reality—to assign to our stars moral, cultural, and political values.
One recent NIH-funded study out of the University of Rochester Medical Center even suggests that sleep deficiency might be a corollary of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's.
If anything, I did grapple with not really the flip side of that but with the corollary of that issue, which is what's going to be more popular.
But the second thing that will happen—the corollary of that—is that people who already don't qualify for the credit right now will see their premiums soar.
Today, we can add a grim corollary to that definition: Insanity is staring at a decade of massacres across multiple continents while refusing to recognize the underlying cause.
There's a well established corollary in any midterm election: The lower a president's job approval, the more seats his party will lose in the House and the Senate.
Anger at the dilution of national identity that is an unavoidable corollary of the mass movement of people has simmered in the background of Britain's political conversation for years.
The corollary of the current proposals—based merely on self-identification—trivialises the real changes we make to our lives; others could then question the sincerity of our intent.
While as a doctor I may have grown wiser about end-of-life care, the inevitable corollary of that is that some of me had to become more cynical.
But the corollary of his argument was obvious: Finding more and more white voters to mobilize would ultimately require the party to make more overt appeals to white identity.
The unsettling corollary of that is the gap between what is seen and believed -- filtered through today's age of media divided into ideological silos -- has, seemingly, only grown wider.
"It is in the nature of an elected representative to favor certain policies, and, by necessary corollary, to favor the voters and contributors who support those policies," he wrote.
That was a corollary to the dilatory pursuit of war crimes prosecutions by a West German justice system that was riddled with lawyers and judges who were former Nazis.
The political corollary of that gamble is this: In the event of a crisis, Democrats will not be able to point the finger at Republicans and Wall Street greed.
I found myself thinking of this book as a kind of corollary to Larissa MacFarquhar's "Strangers Drowning," which shows how selflessness can turn destructive when empathy goes into overdrive.
The statutory corollary to President Trump's disquieting version of religious tolerance is his two executive orders on immigration, the first from late January and the second from last week.
The corollary for Republicans is that the party, already behind in the popular vote, cannot afford to suffer continued losses among college-educated white voters, especially college-educated women.
This 2009 body of work hangs adjacent to a corollary installation of 35 wooden plaques that describe the flags of these nations and what their symbols and colors represent.
While racial or ethnic identity is not a fair or guaranteed corollary to voter preference or policy priorities, the on-stage visuals surface an underlying tension for both parties.
Could microglia be the culprit at the center of it all, the macrophage corollary in the brain, responding to "eat me" signals and pruning the brain's circuitry during development?
As a corollary, the failure of government efforts to affect or slow down negative developments has left an opening for conservatives to argue that government interventions make things worse.
The natural corollary of this idea is clear: If the root of the problem is an unfair social system, then there needs to be a revolution to change it.
Musk added this corollary two minutes later, trying very, very hard to find anything Tillerson has said that could be construed as a rational response to a massive global problem.
And therefore this image may also function as an artistic corollary to these interventions, even if the artist has created a conceptual framework that allows for a certain critical distance.
The corollary is that I don't believe the platform will ever see a multi-million-dollar fundraiser; it simply won't experience the levels of success that Kickstarter's elite have seen.
But there is an inevitable corollary to this solitary quest, a lesson that my tree-climbing habit taught me over and over again: It's harder to go down than up.
"The power of Congress to censure is an obvious corollary of the legislatures inherent power as a deliberative body to speak its mind," Pelosi said at the time. Former-Rep.
In their report, Scholze and Stix argue that a line of reasoning near the end of the proof of "Corollary 3.12" in Mochizuki's third of four papers is fundamentally flawed.
As a corollary, my brother and I are planning a summer campaign of Horus Heresy (Forgeworld's sister game, set in the ur-event of 40K's history, the titular Horus Heresy).
A natural corollary to this point is that because the challenge is so dynamic, committing technological, organizational and financial resources to a specific tactic is counterproductive — and bound to fail.
What he does not discuss, but which is no less important, is the corollary to this: the adverse effects of President Trump's speech on the mental health of many Americans.
My second question is really a subset, corollary or anagram of the first: How can Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz and Martha McSally stand to look at themselves in the mirror?
In our polarized times, I've adopted a simple standard, a civil liberties corollary to the golden rule: Fight for the rights of others that you would like to exercise yourself.
That seemed like a clear corollary to the ways that other predators like Leon Wieseltier, Mark Halperin, and Matt Lauer shaped both women's careers and larger narratives in political journalism.
A last-minute corollary to the ID law, added in an apparent attempt to improve its chances of surviving a pending federal lawsuit, exempts voters with "reasonable impediments" to ID access.
However, the corollary of prioritising political stability over economic reforms, at least for now, is that complaints about government inertia, low wages, high prices, shortages and deteriorating services have become routine.
The anxiety of the soon to be released is a corollary of the air of jocularity one sometimes detects between guards and inmates—the collegial recounting of old conflicts and wounds.
But what has stayed with me is a corollary, maybe the goat factor: how many playoff culprits over the years have been former Cubs, including perhaps the most notorious, Bill Buckner.
One thing this multiple-time reality star understands is the corollary to "tapes or it didn't happen": If you produce tapes — any tapes — people will assume other things happened as well.
The first was George Washington's "Great Rule," which shunned military alliances for 150 years (the Monroe Doctrine, which warned Europe to stay out of the Western Hemisphere, was an important corollary).
But therein lies the case for caution: the corollary of Tories bickering when the going is good is that (much more so than Labour) they generally pull together if up against it.
An unpredictable corollary to this despair: Black parents, Mr. Younge writes, are so demoralized that they dwell on personal responsibility rather than on economic and racial inequality (the usual white-liberal reflex).
This market, he urged accordingly, must never be manipulated from above, by governments, especially by way of deceptively foolish policies that might all too readily impose indeterminate tariffs and corollary trade wars.
Gradually, various number theorists became aware that this corollary was a sticking point, but it wasn't clear whether the argument had a hole or Mochizuki simply needed to explain his reasoning better.
The corollary to white innocence is white passivity, the feeling that what one's ancestors did was so messed up that it couldn't possibly make a difference where one eats a barbecue sandwich.
The corollary to this is that climate science, for skeptics, becomes feminized—or viewed as "oppositional to assumed entitlements of masculine primacy," Hultman and fellow researcher Paul Pulé wrote in another paper.
You've got to be looking at usage, at adoption, value renewals, expansion, and of course, the corollary, churn, to give you good health indicators about how you're doing with product-market fit.
While the originals usually mask this impulse behind pop formalism, Hatfield's shambolic approach accentuates it, as Newton-John's chirpiness finds a natural corollary in the bleeding guitar fuzz and Hatfield's vocal quaver.
A tantalizing corollary is that criminal psychopaths are much worse at recognizing the facial expression of disgust than any other emotion and also worse at it than other violent but non-psychopathic offenders.
"As a corollary, re-monetization impact will also be more subdued given a firmer-than-expected base from the fourth quarter as well as lingering de-monetization in early first quarter," Mizuho said.
A corollary to that might be the divorce party, a famous route that Travis Barker's ex-wife Shanna Moakler took in 2008, throwing a Vegas bash to commemorate her split from her ex.
Rising bond prices (the corollary of falling rates) have provided further padding as banks' portfolios gain in value: that effect alone has brought the savings banks €19.4 billion over the past five years.
Clodagh, the interior designer whose eponymous firm designed the space, pointed out that the demand for beautiful and comfortable work spaces is a corollary of being able — and expected — to work anytime, anywhere.
Martha's effectiveness as a mole at the F.B.I. was based on trust, as Stan told Agent Gaad, and Gaad's position as her longtime boss was a minor, poignant corollary to Martha's own dire situation.
"But as a corollary, we have one of the most unreliable revenue systems in the country," he said, referring to the state's greater reliance on capital gains taxes and less on property tax revenue.
Such a risk would be much greater if Kim's own aggression extended beyond hard military assets, either intentionally, or as the unwitting "collateral damage" brought to "soft" civilian populations and to certain corollary infrastructures.
The idea that the polls were skewed was corollary to the refrain that the mass media is liberal—biased by design against conservatives, built to help liberals maintain dominance over the culture at large.
An interesting and pleasant corollary to that rule is that most people know that I never repeat what I hear about others — so I hear a lot of juicy bits fit for a novel!
Its corollary is that it attracts managers more accustomed to working with what they have, or what they are given, rather than demanding money be spent to solve problems that have proved beyond them.
In a corollary to both of these tests, the ravens also showed the ability to select a token which they could later use to barter for a reward, which they did with 78 percent proficiency.
And then the corollary to that is, do you think the outline of a plan that the administration has put forth on tax reform is a sensible, responsible way to deal with the tax system?
A corollary to Linus's Law was that free software could develop more rapidly since anyone could come up with their own improvements for the software and send them to the core developers on the project.
Yet a corollary is that as long as the BoJ maintains its current policies—and it seems minded to do so for a while—it will continue to be a prop to global asset prices.
This fetishistic narrative still holds weight today, and the trend of casting multiracial models can be seen as its capitalist corollary: a sexier, post-identity world is possible, only now it's accessible via the brand.
There is also, I'd say from anecdotal experience alone, a direct corollary between the size of a corporation—and the degree of its need to be competitive—and the likelihood you'll get an automated system.
While the contours of the investigative authority of Congress are not spelled out in the Constitution, the Supreme Court has established the right of Congress to investigate as a necessary corollary to its other functions.
This has a corollary: whether a student is an adult, or an in-betweener needing special protection and privileges (such as the right to spend a lot of time in the library and getting drunk).
I believe this alleged failure to prove a negative was the corollary of a limited word count and imagination; I never imagined so many people would need to be convinced that Trump is not Hitler.
They argue instead that the city's restriction violates an "implied" constitutional right — a right to "acquire and maintain proficiency" in firearms use that is an unspoken corollary to the Second Amendment right to bear arms.
Those analysts who would remain too completely focused upon a deliberate nuclear war scenario could vastly underestimate the cumulative nuclear threat to the United States from North Korea, and, as corollary, its impacted area allies.
It follows, as a kind of corollary, that when parents have plentiful resources they will devote those resources more to their sons, whereas when resources are scarce, parents will devote them more to their daughters.
He then tried to shoot down the accusation that he sold a "pipe dream" by pointing to growing support for single-payer health care and raising the minimum wage as corollary victories from his campaign.
But the implied corollary to the "zero tolerance" policy was that the Trump administration would no longer make decisions about whom to prosecute based on whether someone was seeking asylum — or whether they were a parent.
Other, corollary explanations include the fact I no longer use the site to communicate with friends, and that I'm more wary than I was when younger of leaving a semi-permanent record of my life online.
Surprises can delight As a corollary to the ELIZA effect, when we give a computer an input that we believe it cannot comprehend, we find responses that handle our input with panache both surprising and delightful.
It helped kick out Mexico's French puppet emperor in 1867, and in 1904 President Theodore Roosevelt expanded the remit of the doctrine with a corollary stating that America could exercise "international police power" in the hemisphere.
And just like their fictional analog, which faces stiff competition from tech giant Hooli, WaveOne's six-person team fears its toughest test could be competing against what some argue is Hooli's real-life corollary: Alphabet's Google.
The corollary here is to go through your computer and phone and get rid of things you've been meaning to read sometime for way too long: bookmarks, endless tabs, ebooks, and things you saved to Pocket.
Where a metaphor for painting is distillation, for sculpture it is generation; by corollary, where painting acts mostly on the brain, like an intoxicant, sculpture acts mostly on the body, like a lover or a toddler.
As virtual reality takes its trip through the hype cycle of technology adoption, I keep returning to the early days of film as a corollary for the medium's progress and a good benchmark for its evolution.
Mr. Vyleta borrowed this specific idea from "Dombey and Son," whose narrator wondered if the filth of London had a corollary in its "moral pestilence," and what would happen if that, too, could somehow become visible.
At a White House ceremony commemorating the 15-year anniversary of Plan Colombia and unrolling President Obama's new $450 million "Peace Colombia" corollary, Santos called the United States a "true friend" to the South American nation.
Meanwhile, the orchestra's fictional corollary — the New York Symphony — is staying firmly in the hands of the sprightly Rodrigo De Souza (Gael García Bernal) as the fourth season of "Mozart in the Jungle" arrives on Friday.
For Greg Barton, curator of this new exhibition at the Center for Architecture, scaffolding is more than a nuisance; it's a necessary corollary to architecture, and it can serve as a system of building in itself.
"There is a long research literature on the importance of self-control, or the ability to defer gratification — a close corollary of our conceptualization of the character strength of prudence," Reeves and his two colleagues write.
Think of this assumption as a corollary of the fact that too many blockbuster movies nowadays run well over two hours, when they'd probably be better served at around an hour and 45 minutes or so.
But the corollary to this argument was that Russia might not otherwise diversify its exports and be anything more than a commodity supplier unless its industry was allowed to compete in the world and learn from that.
Not only is it the natural corollary to last year's tax cuts, it is the only way those tax cuts will be sustainable — and the only way we can begin to address our $20 trillion federal debt.
If the 20th century saw decolonization and the fall of empires, the 21st century is seeing the internal corollary of that process: a relentless challenge in Western societies to the white mind-set, white assumptions, white amnesia.
Consider it the IRL corollary to Poe's Law: Yiannopoulos maintains that it's not his fault if people take him at his (deliberately provocative, hateful, and often violent) word, and it's completely within their rights to say, well, anything.
Generous analysts might note a corollary to Nixon's so-called "Madman theory," in which the 1969-1974 US President wanted his North Vietnamese adversaries to think he was unpredictable, "a little crazy" even, and to fear his wrath.
A corollary advanced by one school of archaeologists and anthropologists holds that our Stone Age ancestors were not inherently violent, and, apart from the odd murder, did not wage organized war until they started to coalesce into societies.
"There is a simple corollary: knowledge of the current phase of the business cycle and its age can help but must not be used in isolation," Victor Zarnowitz, a leading U.S. expert on business cycles, wrote in 1992.
It does not in any way threaten the situation of any other Power having equally-pacific designs, and it is in complete harmony with the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, of which it augments the force and is a corollary.
If Jordan Peele's "Get Out" is this year's defining American movie on race, "I Love You, Daddy" may prove its corollary on sexual politics, a bountiful and oh-so-topical Trump-era piñata waiting to be whacked open.
The gargantuan gated community acting as data-collection mine has already begun accumulating the emotions, faces, and personal info of passerby to predict and inspire future consumption, an invisibilized corollary to the big brother biopolitics of The Village.
"Any further discovery should focus on whether she used a private server to evade [the Freedom of Information Act] and, as a corollary to that, what she understood about State's records management obligations," Lamberth wrote in his order.
We're now in the early stages of La Niña, an oceanic and atmospheric corollary to El Niño that draws heat back into the ocean rather than pulling it out, and could result in a slight dip in global temperatures.
For an American audience, the closest corollary to what ADDI is up to is likely Affirm, the point-of-sale lender that's raised a ton of cash and come in for some (valid) criticism for its basic business model.
But the corollary is that these children grow up -- and as a result of the poor or inconsistent education standards in their younger years, many Americans don't have the grounding to be successful in higher education without remedial classes.
It also laid bare a corollary to the state-society bargain: that many in China believed that their government would gradually become more liberal and open, not swerve back toward authoritarianism or even to strongman rule, according to analysts.
The other day I was admiring some photos of those spiky, obstreperous wild-style graffiti murals, and thinking that those are an excellent visual corollary to the experience of a hardcore concert (and that contained aggression you're referring to).
The corollary in a disease outbreak is not just what words people hear, but how they filter them — whether they absorb medical facts or the myths, falsehoods and conspiracy theories that can deepen the crisis and cause actual harm.
Sheet-Pan Shrimp Scampi Melissa Clark wrote a great story this week about what kinds of shrimp you should buy and eat (and, the corollary, which ones you shouldn't), and she wrote this mouthwatering recipe to go with it.
Everyone also knows his or her place, so...the unsavory corollary is that women are relegated to the sidelines and the only acceptable place of self-expression for men of color is within the well-regulated universe of the playing field.
One of the many important lessons of "To Pixar and Beyond" is a kind of corollary to Goldman's famous aphorism noted above: knowing what you don't know in creative businesses is a necessary but insufficient condition to not screwing them up.
If collective guilt is, as I have argued, a disguised form of codified collective ancestral guilt, then this type of codified guilt and its inverse corollary — collective entitlement to an apology — is based on the crudest form of racism: biological collectivism.
What's interesting to me about Bezos that is a corollary to what you just said, Kara, is that he's always had a kind of — again, from the outside looking at him, I'm never met him — a kind of emotional forbearance.
He agrees with the populist concept that people have equal character and judgment, but he said the corollary to that concept — that no one should tell you what to do — has morphed into an encumbering fear of the federal government.
The rule of thumb in medicine — first, do no harm — has as its corollary that the expected benefits of treatment should outweigh its potential risks, which is the basis for approval of prescription drugs by the Food and Drug Administration.
" Although he questioned the show's heavy use of voice-over narration, Poniewozik praised the "astounding" work of the four actresses in the leading roles, and pointed out that the show is a refreshing corollary to HBO's many dramas about "turbulent men.
Take the millenarian prophets of AI omnicide (and its charitable corollary, "effective altruism"), which convinces the rich and silly that donating money toward the prevention of a hypothetical and unlikely future AI apocalypse is more valuable than helping actual living people.
In the end, More's real accomplishment was less the far-fetched society he imagined than his recognition of the seamless unity that links economics, crime, health and even architecture — and its corollary that reforms addressing social problems in isolation were doomed to fail.
President Theodore Roosevelt made it formal in 1904, announcing a "corollary" to the doctrine whereby the United States would exercise an "international police power" as a last resort when "chronic wrongdoing" or governmental "impotence" threatened to bring hostile navies to America's door.
Can it really make any sense for candidate Trump to advocate a foreign policy victory over ISIS at all costs, even if that "victory" should include both American complicity in egregious international crimes, and a corollary undermining of our "greatest ally" in Jerusalem?
For the past several years, a certain cultural panic around the drinking habits of affluent, educated women has taken hold, with no obvious corollary for men from a similar demographic position, even though the men seem to be causing all the trouble.
Other researchers studying why children don't seem to get that sick from Covid-19 have pointed out the corollary: Kids tend to have "pristine" lungs that have not already been damaged by a lifetime of inflammation caused by allergies, pollutants, and diseases.
You take a company with a product structure comparable to the problem-plagued Twitter's, which has long been investors' public market corollary to Snap, and you imagine building products like drones and other things that a company like GoPro is working on.
As a side note, there's a ~pretty~ strong corollary between Red States and automate-able states—many have been subject to a legacy of mechanization and outsourcing—which continues to support the theory that automation helps fuel resentment and class anger and, well, Trump.
It's a remarkable turnaround for the artist and her agenda that underscores a recent and ongoing transformation: the open, cosmopolitan world that progressives assumed would be the natural corollary of globalization has been stopped in its tracks by such lamentable phenomena as Trump and Brexit.
Using corollary data from Asian countries that were hit earlier by the virus, the bank is projecting that there will be a 50% decline in broker commissions and spending on home improvement as well as a 25% decline in homebuilding and business structures throughout April.
A corollary complaint is that often subtitled translations will discard more of the actual spoken dialogue you hear in the original language, due to time constraints — humans need to be able to read all the words on the screen before the dialogue moves on.
Trump's intimated quid pro quo, besides being criminally stupid and self-interested, seemed to add a corollary to the Nixon Doctrine: The nature of a U.S. partner's conflict or its larger importance doesn't matter as much as the partner's willingness to kiss the ring.
Mr. Kornblum said he believed Ms. Le Pen would be less of a change agent than many in France fear she will be — a corollary, perhaps, of Mr. Trump, who has not been able to carry out the most extreme elements of his campaign platform.
Since such services have no corollary in private insurance, officials can't pretend that those kicked out of Medicaid services will get them covered elsewhere — and with in-home care costing tens of thousands of dollars on average, paying out of pocket isn't an option.
If the timing of Shane Bauer's groundbreaking investigative piece on serving as a guard at a private prison for Mother Jones or the finale of OITNB's most recent season had any corollary to the recent shutdown of the private prison industry, then yes, the implications are profound.
Around eight patients can pass through daily and, by weaving together threads of disparate data, Venter hopes to make headway in understanding the fundamentals of ageing and, as a corollary, why many key diseases, including cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's, are strongly associated with old age.
Their naiveté points to a corollary familiar to media critics of all persuasions: that the journalistic wisemen who yearn quadrennially for a third-party disrupter have thrived in a profession that considers indifference to the substantive underpinnings of partisan politics to be a virtue, not a vice.
Sometimes we take the stories, but we're following our best artistic intentions, and we don't do it with regard to who we're pissing off, and the corollary to that is sometimes people think we're doing something to cater to certain fans, but we're not doing that either.
But Christianity is part of the story, not just in moral concerns about abortion, homosexuality and the church's place in public life, but in economic attitudes too: for many evangelicals, self-reliance is the corollary of personal salvation, wealth a divine blessing and overweening government anathema.
For more than two decades, Bassett, whose performance as Turner is perhaps the most brilliant and haunting of her career, has dominated the collective imagination with respect to Turner, and, in many ways, has made Tina Turner's art a mere corollary to Anna Mae Bullock's life.
The corollary to the "Ferguson Effect" is the "Viral Video Effect," posited as an explanation for rising crime and less proactive policing – essentially, the fear of having your every movement or encounter videotaped and uploaded for slow-motion, stop-action dissection of your real-time judgments.
As a corollary, the actor here must be another state, since similar actions by an individual would likely be called cyber terrorism in the same way that a non-state actor who attacks a nation's physical assets is termed a terrorist, regardless of the weapon used.
JM: If anything, the rise of the bureaucracy is a necessary and rule-of-law-protecting corollary to the rise of the powerful modern President, who has truly awesome sway over economic, social, diplomatic, and military affairs not only in the US but also around the world.
The corollary of saying Rice's only possible motives were nefarious—that what she and others did was shady on its face—is that campaigns should operate with impunity, free to woo foreign intelligence organizations as if they were no less central to the partisan fray than political action committees.
The correction of this misconception is in some ways just a corollary of the correction of the first misconception, but it's worth spelling out: Evolution can have a purpose even if it is a wholly mechanical, material process — that is, even if its sole engine is natural selection.
Lunch (because it's intertwined with our working lives and hence our finances and ambitions) has inspired some corollary notions: We are where we eat, who we eat with, who we avoid, how many martinis are involved, if any, and whether we're the ones who lie on the expense report.
For Donald J. Trump, a corollary is that he, like all newcomers to office, can keep company with the mugs of his choosing, decorating the Oval Office with presidential portraits — typically the official ones in the collections on view at the White House and the National Portrait Gallery.
A corollary, often unstated but understood by those doing the patrols, was that any group of Afghans willing to face the Marines head to head would gradually be thinned, while every seven months the Americans, bloodied and made jumpy by firefights and bombs, would be replaced with fresh troops.
By incorporating Nike, the goddess of victory, Pegasus, the winged stallion, and (as suggested by the heads) Janus, the god of transitions, into this show, Chase seems to be setting up a corollary in Greek myth to the murderous violence against black men like Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and Eric Garner.
If the US is less engaged in the global economy, if we trade less, the necessary corollary to that is that there are smaller capital growths between the US and the rest of the world, and we've diminished the rest of the world's access to dollar-denominated assets as a consequence.
But like so much that is out of sync with her view of the world, Greer is happy to dismiss the transgender community, who are especially vulnerable to sexual assault, and likewise the idea that a person's attitude to rape isn't a corollary of their attitude to sex and gender.
At the same time, he established a corollary program known as DAPA, or Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, which allowed as many as five million unauthorized immigrants who were the parents of citizens or of lawful permanent residents to obtain work permits and avoid deportation.
A corollary to Erikson's observation might be that of David Elkind, another developmental psychologist, who in 1967 wrote about the "imaginary audience" phenomenon in adolescents — the idea that teenagers somehow see themselves as stars of their own productions, believing themselves to be watched by an eager, if sometimes judgmental, public.
As a corollary, politicians found fertile ground with the cowboy motif while everyone insisted it was a dead letter; Ronald Reagan, son of suburban Illinois, wearing a cowboy hat and affecting a slight drawl wasn't an accident, not any more than George W. Bush's pretending to be a just-folks ranch hand was.
One corollary of Cooder's reticence in performance has been his tendency, in the past dozen-plus years, to make ventriloquistic concept albums in the guise of fictional, historical, or extraterrestrial characters, starting, in 2005, with " Chavez Ravine ," a record of songs about the Mexican-American community that was displaced by Dodger Stadium.
But the corollary is that if you have made a mistake that deprives you of the ability to govern, you must not put your nation through the prolonged trauma that will deepen the wound and delay healing of the America that Richard Nixon loved so deeply and had otherwise served so well.
But the corollary to this way of reading — of taking books down in gulps rather than sips — is that you will discover much more quickly when a book isn't for you, and you can then set it aside without the nagging suspicion that you might have sabotaged it by your method of ingestion.
India appears to be following a similar path, said Prem Panicker, a prominent journalist who used to be Yahoo India's managing editor "There is a worldwide leaning toward hard-right governing style and hard-right leaders, and the corollary to that is that there's increasing stresses on the press," Panicker told CNN.
The corollary to Edmund Burke's famous words that the only prerequisite for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing is that the prerequisite for irrationalism to prevail is for generally rational people to cave in to it, and to tailor their messages to the worst of the visceral rage out there.
An interesting corollary to that conversation was Niantic releasing its Harry Potter title this week, a game that takes liberal gameplay cues from Pokémon GO but attaches it to new IP. The big question is whether Niantic can strike gold twice; here's an Extra Crunch interview my colleague Greg did with the startup's CEO.
He's following a well-trodden path, from U.S. interventions in the Haitian Revolution to the Monroe Doctrine and the Roosevelt Corollary, the Spanish-American War, the Bay of Pigs, the Chilean coup, the invasion of Grenada, and Jack's own fictional South American adventurism in Clear and Present Danger and its Harrison Ford–headlined film adaptation.
For iOS 12, Apple is rumored to be foregoing a bevy of feature updates in favor of "stability," but that word strikes me as a misguided attempt to draw a corollary with the Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard update, which cleaned up the guts of the operating system with very few new user-facing features.
Should we be most concerned with President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE's dismantling of America's foreign policy and national security establishment, or by his corollary legal impairments?
The translated Broken gimmick—he's Woken Matt Hardy now—hasn't hit the heights it did in TNA, mostly due to commentary treating it as a joke (for a corollary, imagine Michael Cole snickering whenever The Undertaker shows up and see how good a career the icon would have) and his pairing with heat vampire, Bray Wyatt.
Today's small community of Iranian Zoroastrians (around 14,000 as of 2011) welcomes converts, but Parsis do not — a pity, because there's much that appeals about the religion right now, especially its tenets of tolerance and its early recognition of women as equal to men in moral agency, with a modern corollary of championing women's education and pursuit of career.
Another major corollary is that directors whose films get nominated tend to be at either end of an extreme spectrum: They've been either well-established, critically respected filmmakers at the time they were nominated for Best Picture, or else incendiary newcomers with buzz and a box office take too big to ignore — like The Sixth Sense's M. Night Shyamalan, and now, Jordan Peele.
As Moira Weigel recounts in Labor of Love: The Invention of Dating (a kind of corollary to Hard to Do), the stock market crash of 1890 precipitated a great flood of women from rural or agrarian backgrounds leaving home to find work as garment workers, laundresses, salesgirls, and secretaries in the city, accelerating a wider population shift from rural to urban areas.
There's a reason for this: Hamilton's mass popularity has bred a backlash, mostly centered on how hard it is to get a ticket and the corollary belief that since not every fan of the show has seen it, the rest must be pretending (a belief that only makes sense if you believe that it's less than authentic to like a show based on its soundtrack).
"It was we conservatives who, upon Obama's election, stated that our No. 1 priority was not advancing a conservative policy agenda but making Obama a one-term president -- the corollary to this binary thinking being that his failure would be our success and the fortunes of the citizenry would presumably be sorted out in the meantime," Flake wrote, in a reference to a McConnell-designed strategy.
You see the touch of Varda's camera in the sublime "Jacquot de Nantes" when she closely pans over the mottled, wrinkled face of her dying husband (Demy died soon afterward in 1990), a tender cinematic caress that finds a corollary in the blunt image of her own mottled, wrinkled hand in "The Gleaners and I." In each, she faces mortality directly as a concrete fact.
Even as the central question of Iraq remains unanswered — whether the country's Sunni minority and Shiite majority can ever peacefully coexist in a unified state — the experiences of General Razaij, Mr. Hammadi and others add a troubling corollary: It is not clear that Iraq's divided Sunnis will ever be able to find peace among themselves after a conflict that in many ways is playing out as a war within families.
Surely, one of the most significant events in the lives of my children, born and yet to be born, came when my wife announced that she wished to return to work at the end of her maternity leave, with the unspoken corollary that I should man up and accept the responsibility for quitting my own job in the defense industry to stay at home and care for our first child, a daughter.
DW: The corollary that no toddler should be in prisons, even with their parents, for infinite periods of time, is the next-closest thing, and I think ... Again, we are assembling this airplane as we're flying it, but we are going to try to keep the momentum very tightly focused on those two points, because even with all this goodwill, even with all this money, fixing this is going to take a long time.
The corollary to this ability to pass has been the insistence by anti-LGBTQ forces that being queer is a "choice," and that we already have the same freedoms as everyone else—all we have to do is decide to operate as straight or cisgender, and we'll realize, Wizard of Oz-like, that we can serve in uniform (if we repress or control our "confusion"), marry (someone of the opposite sex), or use a public restroom (that matches our sex at birth).
"We are extremely concerned by this active, cumulative deception on the part of the North Korean regime and the corollary impact on our bilateral denuclearization talks," the committee members wrote to Chairman Ed RoyceEdward (Ed) Randall RoyceMystery surrounds elusive sanctions on Russia Hillicon Valley: Lawmakers struggle to understand Facebook's Libra project | EU hits Amazon with antitrust probe | New cybersecurity concerns over census | Robocall, election security bills head to House floor | Privacy questions over FaceApp House panel advances bill to protect elections from foreign interference MORE (R-Calif.).

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