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491 Sentences With "flies in the face of"

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

But that logic flies in the face of financial reality.
This outrageous decision flies in the face of public opinion.
It just flies in the face of any kind of logic.
That flies in the face of the Trump administration's own estimates.
Even water-resistance flies in the face of a repair job.
That flies in the face of increasing political anger about inequality.
Betsy DeVos's latest scheme flies in the face of expert advice.
That flies in the face of what the plank pose represents.
Wasting food, energy or materials flies in the face of sustainability.
It's a genuine abomination that flies in the face of human dignity.
It flies in the face of what these characters are going through.
Using hunger as a weapon flies in the face of international law.
The Razer Phone flies in the face of every new smartphone trend.
That just so flies in the face of our American cultural beliefs.
Unfortunately, this plan flies in the face of what most Americans believe.
Her rejection of being a man flies in the face of Confucian culture.
That recommendation, too, flies in the face of GOP efforts on healthcare reform.
Trump's infatuation with Putin flies in the face of recent hostile Russian acts.
That claim flies in the face of a downward trend in crime nationwide.
Everything about the Cybertruck flies in the face of received pickup-truck wisdom.
Obviously, not extending the titles to her daughters flies in the face of that.
This Deutsche Bank call flies in the face of those hopes for a comeback.
Chandra's enduring faith, though, flies in the face of more questions about Naz's character.
The inclusion of lobbyists flies in the face of his "Drain the Swamp" refrain.
It flies in the face of expert consensus on the health effects of PM2.5.
This hateful and wrongheaded policy flies in the face of reality, science and democracy.
"This really flies in the face of the norms of this committee," said Sen.
That account flies in the face of repeated denials from Trump and his lawyers.
"Today's decision is disappointing and flies in the face of basic human decency," he said.
It flies in the face of every experience with the animal kingdom you've ever had.
The very suggestion flies in the face of the principle of responsibility for one's actions.
It flies in the face of fundamental medical ethics and standard of care — full stop.
In contrast, he added, Mr. Sessions's directive flies in the face of state-level successes.
The Trump administration's willful blindness to climate change flies in the face of the evidence.
If any dish flies in the face of innate conservatism, it's got to be this thing.
Yet compulsory military service flies in the face of the same freedom our military supposedly defends.
That logic flies in the face of Pelosi's staunch opposition to the increase in border funding.
That's a fact that kind of flies in the face of a lot of people's intuitions.
I love Serena's scream because it flies in the face of a sport obsessed with decorum.
But it flies in the face of Democrats' frustration at extreme gerrymandering by the other side.
It flies in the face of two adages: that girls aren't funny, and lesbians aren't funny.
The notion of sucking at something flies in the face of the overhyped notion of perfectionism.
That idea flies in the face of the longstanding expectation that everything a president says matters.
That flies in the face of earlier research suggesting that depression and alcoholism are often genetically connected.
But this flies in the face of how many disability advocates and researchers think about the issue.
Bennett's people say it flies in the face of Argento's claim she was not a willing participant.
Giving players preferential treatment, such as access to secluded spaces, flies in the face of that philosophy.
That flies in the face of White House claims that the tax cuts would pay for themselves.
The government's position on these DACA renewals flies in the face of common sense, reason and compassion.
That flies in the face of Mr. Trump's tariffs, which are intended to reduce the trade deficit.
Your book flies in the face of the notion that people who meditate take themselves too seriously.
A policies structure that flies in the face of the way your institution functions is bound to fail.
It also flies in the face of repeated assertions by the President that climate change is a hoax.
"This ruling flies in the face of substantial contrary precedent," including the Johnson decision, he tells The Verge.
However that viewpoint flies in the face of the majority opinion of the security industry on backdoors — i.e.
A public register flies in the face of privacy rights and the principles relating to personal data protection.
But that often flies in the face of published research, which frequently suggests that the opposite is true.
I have a project that flies in the face of that in so many ways—it's about feeling.
This data flies in the face of the stereotype of millennials as self-centered, short-sighted, and entitled.
His advocacy for closed borders and protectionist economic policies flies in the face of GOP free trade orthodoxy.
That flies in the face of the ongoing drumbeat about how people are avoiding ads left and right.
He wasn't in favor of a war in Bashran anyway, so this flies in the face of that.
This line of reasoning flies in the face of the FCC's thoroughly-reasoned Open Internet order and rules.
What the justices did flies in the face of where workers want to go and need to go.
"Today's decision is disappointing and flies in the face of basic human decency," he said in a statement.
Irish officials insisted that the fine — the European Commission's largest — "flies in the face" of international tax consensus.
Operating as a nonprofit "flies in the face of the logic of the capitalist economy," Mr. Chatterji said.
She continues: The notion of sucking at something flies in the face of the overhyped notion of perfectionism.
Ward's advice, however, flies in the face of Trump's well-known penchant for huge new projects and plans. Skyscrapers.
Another problem: RCS is not encrypted, which flies in the face of most messaging apps on the market today.
"To say we are overreaching flies in the face of facts, history and, most importantly, common sense," Day said.
The court's judgment flies in the face of extensive evidence that the election was actually won by Mr Fayulu.
Directed by Lone Scherfig, known for 2009's An Education, Their Finest flies in the face of these statistics.
It flies in the face of friendly European countries who made pleas to the US last week in Europe.
It was disgraceful, destructive, and flies in the face of the actual interests of the United States of America.
"Sexual harassment is not only illegal, it flies in the face of our values and ethics," the statement said.
The idea that drivers don't control their own data flies in the face of what consumers want and expect.
"This plan flies in the face of what most Americans believe," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer tweeted on Friday.
But the ill-advisement of having brought them back flies in the face of evolution and the natural continuum.
There's no real script for this kind of meeting, which flies in the face of our polarized society's established logic.
The suggestion is interesting, however, because it flies in the face of the sentiment of both Ford and General Motors.
This flies in the face of the American idea that no one is above the law, and I reject it.
For these reasons, insisting on a narrative of colorblind citizenship flies in the face of the history of French socialization.
"That flies in the face of NIMBY," he said, referring to the 'not in my backyard' political resistance to construction.
The Coinbase news flies in the face of bitcoin being "tulip-mania," said Novogratz, a former Goldman Sachs macro trader.
First, and most importantly, the notion of a hate crime flies in the face of fundamental principles of criminal law.
That flies in the face of some of the early rumors and the larger trend toward USB-C-only charging.
The bill flies in the face of decades of Supreme Court decisions, like a dare to the American legal system.
The theory flies in the face of autopsy findings, which concluded JonBenet died from "asphyxia strangulation" associated with head trauma.
"That's the highest quality at the lowest cost, and that flies in the face of the fee-for-service model."
All this information flies in the face of Clearview's previous claims that it only worked with domestic law enforcement agencies.
Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has promised to raise taxes as president, which flies in the face of conventional political wisdom.
This untenable position that national Democrats are taking on immigration and border security flies in the face of public opinion.
And when you look at the numbers, I mean, it just flies in the face of their illogical comments and statements.
BRZEZINSKI: I&aposm not really sure, but that&aposs -- it just sort of flies in the face of all of this.
But a protagonist like Owen flies in the face of that tradition — he cares about Blue, but the awe isn't there.
The increased leeway for disease-promoting foods in school lunches flies in the face of nutrition, prevention and disease-reversal literature.
To some, doing things like "regular" sports and even more established esports flies in the face of a decades-old culture.
Which not only puts an innocent life at risk, but it flies in the face of the biblical concept of justice.
"It flies in the face of the data, reams and reams of data, showing that the problem is massive," he said.
Another point of friction is Turkey's purchase of a Russian missile system, which flies in the face of cooperation within NATO.
Such an absolute executive authority runs contrary to the views of true conservatives and flies in the face of the Constitution.
Mr. Sanders's confidence of victory in Iowa flies in the face of the increasingly prevailing view of Democratic leaders nationally that Mrs.
The policy flies in the face of the most powerful woman in the world and de factor leader of the European Union.
This also flies in the face of President Trump's claims that China is purposely devaluing its currency to sell more exports abroad.
It also flies in the face of other major research showing that aspirin can prevent cancer, particularly in the colon and gut.
" The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws's executive director said the decision "flies in the face of sensible public policy.
Even more concerning, available documents suggest that the plan flies in the face of Canada's existing privacy guidelines for facial recognition technology.
But if there's one particular aspect of the ThinkPad X21 Carbon that flies in the face of premium designs, it's that thickness.
"To hold that sexual orientation does not fall under 'sex' in Title VII flies in the face of common sense," Barbur wrote.
"It flies in the face of the overwhelming spirit of generosity and kindness shown for a long time by Cardiffians," Stevens tweeted.
Critics argue this flies in the face of Lady Liberty, which serves as a beacon of hope to immigrants arriving from abroad.
In part, this is for scientific reasons–since this work flies in the face of everything we know about how perception works.
He has a zero-sum view of trade that flies in the face of everything we've learned over the past two centuries.
The policy flies in the face of the principle that no man is above the law in this country, including the president.
Reinstating NSEERS "flies in the face of the Constitution and is a threat to the civil liberties of all Americans," said Rep.
"Her sentence flies in the face of our nation's standards for the sentencing of children," a spokesperson for MomsRising said in a statement.
Two hours of battery life on Here One means the device's capability flies in the face of some of its intended use cases.
The historians of Yad Vashem argue that this flies in the face of documentation and historical research which "yield a totally different picture".
The feature flies in the face of Instagram's inherent curation, potentially allowing users to share up to 10 photos in a single post.
Jacklin's choice flies in the face of a persistent myth propagated about the poor, both in the developing world and in rich countries.
This flies in the face of the mission of most ride-hailing startups, which is to end the era of private car ownership.
Austria's lurch to the right flies in the face of a hopeful, short-lived apparent backlash against the far right's advances in Europe.
"It flies in the face of the public's demand and the Council's demand for more information about police discipline, not less," he said.
But ignoring those emissions contravenes longstanding agency practice under administrations of both parties and flies in the face of established science and economics.
"The decision is disappointing and flies in the face of basic human decency," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said at the time.
Yet, Trump's nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch, who supported a ruling that corporations are people, flies in the face of such an idea.
Read more: Celebrity chef David Chang implores Stephen Ross to reconsider Trump fundraiser: 'It flies in the face of everything we believe in'
The artist, who gave only his alias, defies tattooing as an artform and flies in the face of the subculture's decades of tradition.
Women also report more frequent sadism fantasies, which flies in the face of the stereotype that giving pain is a predominantly male interest.
So we have a lot of data that flies in the face of anybody who wants to say that this does not work.
Her love of ephemerality — her works have appeared on cocktail napkins — flies in the face of traditional museums' commitment to preserving treasured objects.
This flies in the face of fairness and changes the rules for individuals who do not have the ability to increase their income.
To describe Clinton this way flies in the face of her popular reputation, with polls showing that the public trusts her less than Trump.
Wheeler's plan flies in the face of that mission, and it's why we as an organization oppose these rollbacks in the strongest possible terms.
Facebook's claim of being a publisher flies in the face of its repeated claim that it is not a publisher nor a media company.
In the meantime, Beijing's intervention in local affairs is becoming increasingly brazen, which flies in the face of the "one country, two systems" policy.
Trump's latest move also flies in the face of the work that advocates have done to obtain federal civil rights protections for LGBTQ people.
Withdrawing half our forces flies in the face of pursuing a conditions-based approach and would reduce the credibility of any new strategy announcements.
The Founders wanted Congress, not the executive branch, to make the laws, he believes, and Chevron deference flies in the face of that principle.
Ethics boards at many American hospitals probably would resist, since giving such patients fake procedures "flies in the face of guidelines," Dr. Boden said.
This flies in the face of most policy discussions after a mass shooting, which are typically associated with semiautomatic weapons like the AR-15.
It flies in the face of not only basic transparency and fairness, but also the due process rights upon which our republic was founded.
Boosting gas taxes by seven cents or five cents a gallon to pay for "big idea" projects flies in the face of that wisdom.
"The Kenyan government's argument that the media covering the swearing-in was abetting an illegality flies in the face of reason," he told CNN.
This flies in the face of the theory that, with the election of Donald Trump, US markets would suddenly become closed to global trade.
The back-to-smoke trend flies in the face of the e-cig industry's most insistent PR pitch: Vaping helps people quit smoking cigarettes.
And although this flies in the face of the accepted medical literature, it's a criticism that's widespread enough — even among doctors — to hinder access.
That really flies in the face of Trump saying we need to keep everybody on their insurance and that nobody is gonna lose theirs.
"Filibustering to death the Gorsuch nomination -- or any presidential nomination, for that matter -- flies in the face of 230 years of Senate tradition," Alexander said.
But as indispensable as that advance was, to depict Stalin in such a heroic light flies in the face of history, not to mention decency.
His most provocative claim, that Secretary Clinton is more likely to lead us into war, flies in the face of comments made by Trump himself.
While the program is in some ways a benefit to AT&T's subscribers, the policy flies in the face of basic tenets of net neutrality.
The mistake flies in the face of investors who argue the stock market is efficient and becoming smarter because of the prevalence of computer trading.
This argument flies in the face of all the economics I have been taught, which rests on the foundation that people (economic agents) are rational.
The decision to increase the cost of its Prime subscription by $20—and by $40 over four years—flies in the face of those principles.
Cruz offers a more thoughtful response, but it flies in the face of his other precepts that include a smaller government and less government spending.
That move flies in the face of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's staunch support for allowing politicians to spread misinformation without fact-checks via Facebook ads.
"The reason why I love Jamiroquai's music is because it completely flies in the face of everything that it is to be British," he says.
"It flies in the face of the conventional wisdom about who is doing a better job of reaching out to the unpledged delegates," he said.
It is an idea that flies in the face of the prevailing ethos on Wall Street and in many executive suites the last few decades.
The company's decision to stay put at its Redmond campus flies in the face of a trend among technology companies to gravitate closer to cities.
His comments the other weekend about cockpit canopies – saying the sport should do "nothing" – totally flies in the face of the FIA's standpoint on safety.
For one thing, missing this link flies in the face of mounting scientific evidence of a higher probability of extreme events occurring with global warming.
That Trump has been elected with a campaign slogan that flies in the face of this consensus is cause for great concern, maybe even alarm.
A litmus test from any political party that requires candidates to support abortion flies in the face of scientific advances about the beginning of life.
"To say the individual market is imploding flies in the face of the data," says Peter Lee, executive director of the state's insurance marketplace, Covered California.
Saudi Arabia is one of only a handful of countries that impose the death penalty against children, which flies in the face of its international obligations.
It flies in the face of a movement that I'm part of that was mostly woman-led, mostly led by people of color and LGBTQ people.
That flies in the face of reports in recent weeks, which described the death as a calculated murder to silence a critic of the Saudi regime.
"The PTAB's ruling flies in the face of core legal principles that govern the interference-in-fact inquiry, and defies common sense," the UC brief states.
Trump's decision to repeat the statement flies in the face of his public statements of support for the Iraq War before and immediately after it started.
The number rigging, critics say, flies in the face of food self-sufficiency targets that Joko Widodo has been aggressively pursuing since taking office in 2000.
"It flies in the face of the traditional wisdom that women have these symptoms for three to five years around the final menstrual period," she said.
This myth flies in the face of the experience of many countries that have re-accessed the international capital market after having defaulted on many occasions.
Experts say that arguments flies in the face of Supreme Court precedent on how much of a law to strike down when one part is overturned.
This flies in the face of public debate over the safety of GMOs and whether products made with GM crops ought to be labelled as such.
The retirement also flies in the face of studio time and collabs Nicki's already got lined up, so the whole thing's a little hazy right now.
The tax refund decision flies in the face of previous shutdown plans — and interpretations of federal law — when the I.R.S. was prohibited from dispensing tax refunds.
The move, first reported by POLITICO's Kyle Cheney on Twitter, flies in the face of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who previously blocked Paul's question.
Not only could this shortsighted decision lead to higher prices for consumers, it is also bad energy policy that flies in the face of common sense.
That flies in the face of current House rules that would have made the process quite cumbersome to immediately hold him in contempt at the hearing.
This flies in the face of what you usually hear: Don't obsess over an issue or be a perfectionist, and don't keep putting off getting started.
"It literally flies in the face of criticism of 'fake news' when you see how rigorous they are before anything ends up in that newspaper," she said.
The fourth-quarter sell-off flies in the face of history, as the last three months are typically the strongest time of the year for the markets.
However, Shawn Achor, world-famous speaker and author of "The Happiness Advantage," has found a key to mental toughness that flies in the face of traditional thinking.
Believing that flies in the face of a common sentiment that the need for oil costs lives, especially when discussing the first and second Persian Gulf Wars.
What's worse is that all of this flies in the face of any number of studies indicating that diverse companies, boards, and investment partnerships produce better results.
This coercive power over employees, many of whom want nothing to do with a union, flies in the face of America's traditions of voluntarism and free association.
The nonchalant dismissal of the condom today flies in the face of the very culture of sexual health that gay men and lesbians constructed in the 1980s.
But it also flies in the face of the values Lambda typically espouses: namely, that ISAs align its incentives with the goals and aspirations of the students.
This theory flies in the face of common sense on one hand and a thorough academic study showing Russian influence did little to change any voters' minds.
From rolling back women's reproductive rights to defending white supremacists and far-right nationalists - President Trump's behaviour flies in the face of ideals America was founded upon.
It not only flies in the face of the moral good, but also shows a complete disregard of the broad, historically proven failures of trickle-down economics.
Within Bradford's "Pickett's Charge," there is a rawness, a free construction that flies in the face of popular culture's insistence on a simplified historical and visual record.
The Democratic presidential candidate's forecast of economic tumult flies in the face of much political conventional wisdom stating that Trump's biggest re-election advantage is the economy.
This flies in the face of the fact that these emails were unmarked at the time they were sent, and have been called 'innocuous' by certain intelligence officials.
"Sinai says they are focused on resident wellness given recent events but this kind of flies in the face of that," Myles*, a second-year resident told Refinery29.
A lot of this flies in the face of the 2018 info released by Netflix itself—which is suprising in itself, as it's super-stingy with viewer details.
It's a fact-free approach that flies in the face of what cooler heads have been telling businesses for years: Just because you can doesn't mean you should.
Even so, it is unprecedented in modern French election history and flies in the face of the image of probity that helped him win the center-right ticket.
In fact, there's good evidence to support the idea that hearing something that flies in the face of our beliefs only causes us to cling to them more.
But political law veterans on both sides of the aisle insist Trump's bear hug of the legal profession flies in the face of the most elementary campaign wisdom.
This tentative allyship between a wide variety of bigots and regressives flies in the face of the onetime consensus that the internet would usher in an information utopia.
"This really flies in the face of the rhetoric that pervades in the budget that says states have the flexibility to focus on the most vulnerable," Solomon said.
That claim flies in the face of open-source evidence that strongly indicates that the gunman was the only person who could have posted the four-page rant.
The couple say their experience flies in the face of government statements that only looters or thugs were killed or injured in violence following last week's disputed election.
That flies in the face of President Trump's declaration, after his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, that the nuclear threat from the North was over.
"Today's decision flies in the face of a unanimous Supreme Court ruling in favor of Samsung on the scope of design patent damages," Samsung said in a statement.
He needs to know that "zero tolerance" flies in the face of justice and that the Trump administration has been obstructing asylum seekers' right to a safe haven.
What's more, the majority's decision to ignore this evidence of anti-Muslim bigotry flies in the face of a high court decision weeks earlier in Masterpiece Cakeshop v.
These countries are being asked to vote in favor of a resolution that makes a mockery of the historical record and flies in the face of religious tolerance.
A Maryland federal judge blocked the executive order on Wednesday, finding that giving states the power to veto refugee resettlement "flies in the face" of what Congress intended.
To the Editor: To suggest that this energy source that's polluted half the globe is the answer to climate problems flies in the face of decades of evidence.
"It really flies in the face of conventional wisdom in politics, which is: be scripted, get it right, go back to the same few talking points," she said.
The report flies in the face of confident assertions by Republicans in the Trump administration and in the Senate that their tax cut plan would pay for itself.
Like much of what has been Trump's strategy, waiting until this late in the election cycle to spend money on TV ads flies in the face of conventional wisdom.
"Today's decision flies in the face of a unanimous Supreme Court ruling in favor of Samsung on the scope of design patent damages," Samsung said in a statement online.
It flies in the face of existing law put in place by Congress and changes completely the way that immigrants approaching the border and seeking protection will be treated.
But that flies in the face of well-documented investigations showing the UAE as a human rights abusing nation employing western spies and tools to clamp down on dissent.
Another interesting wrinkle is that this finding flies in the face of what many SEO consultants recommend: Many SEO agencies preach a "quality over quantity" approach to link building.
"For WADA to sit on the sidelines in the face of such allegations flies in the face of WADA's mandate from sport, governments and clean athletes," Mr. Tygart wrote.
Maybe it's this intense emotional involvement that allows newcomers to swallow the wider dictum around men being the oppressed sex, something that flies in the face of popular evidence.
But his claim that he alone can fix America's problems flies in the face of anarchists' conviction that only direct action by ordinary people can produce a fair system.
"That Trump would call climate change a hoax -- the singular health and environmental threat to the world today -- flies in the face of overwhelming international science," the duo said.
"It's one of the things I appreciate about Brave browser, and it sounds like Google has figured out that it flies in the face of transparency and choice," she said.
On top of that, the bots will be relegated to low population industrial areas, which kind of flies in the face of the whole notion of delivering stuff to people.
The Trump administration and GOP's efforts to take away access to affordable contraception could lead to an increase in abortions, which flies in the face of their anti-choice stances.
Like we said, it's just odd -- the Secret Service statement about her access definitely flies in the face of the White House saying Omarosa would stay on until Jan. 20.
Despite pledging to remove posts that advocate for white supremacy or white nationalism, Facebook has not removed content posted just this week that flies in the face of that decision.
The intimate greeting flies in the face of royal protocol, which dictates that anything other than a handshake is highly frowned upon when meeting a member of the royal family.
The idea that "patronizing" feminists are inappropriately driving the Zika reproductive rights debate flies in the face of the severity of contraceptive and abortion laws in some of the Americas.
" Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., a lawyer at Gibson Dunn who has previously worked on high-profile media cases, said the lawsuit "flies in the face of basic First Amendment doctrine.
That duality "flies in the face of the very definition of the role of an adequate class representative, which is to serve with undivided loyalty to the class," defendants said.
In six short years of existence, OnePlus has managed to buck a number of industry trends with a controlled growth that flies in the face of wider industry smartphone trends.
What makes this policy reversal remarkable is that it flies in the face of conservative rhetoric that local approaches and solutions are best, especially when it comes to tackling poverty.
He added that the "unilateral decision flies in the face of the work that the M.T.A. has done" with city transportation officials to speed up bus times and increase ridership.
Jim's attorney says this flies in the face of Burton's claim he suffered loss of companionship when White died from an overdose ... which is part of the wrongful death suit.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said his office would appeal Tuesday's ruling, saying "the decision is disappointing and flies in the face of basic human decency," according to Reuters.
It's a rallying cry for activists and a concern of critics for whom the policy flies in the face of what they would like to think are modern American values.
It takes courage and strength to do something that flies in the face of what everyone thinks is normal, even if what you do isn't a big public act of resistance.
It flies in the face of how a rap song should feel, and there was a giddy thrill at hearing something that should be a joke in concept slapping in execution.
It's an insight that flies in the face of the recent fragmentation of the venture business in the U.S. and Europe where firms are segmenting themselves by stage, geography, and industry.
Greener types argue that the delay flies in the face of larger trends toward clean energy: across America far more people already work in the solar industry than do in coal.
"Craig Lang supports Cristhian's right to be in this jurisdiction and for the government to support any other idea of status publicly flies in the face of such statement," Richards wrote.
All of this crying wolf flies in the face of an economy that has surged, unemployment that has dropped to 21625 percent, and significant improvements in the lives of minority households.
It flies in the face of the way the current fee program was established and the way it's used at certain parks today, including the most-visited one in the nation.
" That account flies in the face of Trump's previous insistence that he barely knows "the gentleman" — which Trump repeated at the White House Wednesday, saying, "I don't know him very well.
But this data certainly flies in the face of prior observations, and raises significant concerns, namely that we've been recommending practice that might be harmful if it were possible to achieve.
For the commission to declare that this is a time for austerity flies in the face of a reality that for many Italians is closer to a personal and national emergency.
That flies in the face of a basic assumption of how the economy works: A tight labor market is expected to lead to pay increases that in turn fuel broader inflation.
First, the White House's view that a new authorization from Congress is unnecessary to escalate Washington's global military commitments flies in the face of commonsense interpretation of an unambiguous constitutional rule.
But the idea that we're all just a few well-timed CBD gummies or drops of a CBD tincture away from living our best lives flies in the face of reality.
As the parents fight to regain custody of Noah, the case is raising questions about what right parents have to determine medical treatment when it flies in the face of doctors' advice.
This approach to the series flies in the face of other television adaptions, namely Game of Thrones, which, until later seasons, largely stuck to a single book for laying out the show.
All this flies in the face of what many national Republican party officials see as a lost cause in Virginia, especially since its popular Senator, Tim Kaine, is Hillary Clinton's running mate.
The encryption will be require that users opt-in to use the security measure, which bows to the the FBI's wishes, and flies in the face of what experts consider best practices.
The whole idea of a smart assistant has created a single unified experience — having an assistant designed to work with other assistants kind of flies in the face of all of that.
The gloomy picture Trump sketched of the nation flies in the face of evidence that the economy is in healthy shape, crime is down and the nation is relatively safe and secure.
It violates the very ideals behind our all-volunteer force, deprives us of much-needed talent, and flies in the face of the President's own promise to take care of our troops.
And a lot of the hand-wringing about this report on smoking heroin flies in the face of years of harm reduction research which suggests that smoking is less risky than injecting.
This comes amid the months-old Saudi-led blockade against Qatar, and flies in the face of Saudi Arabia's demand that Qatar restrict its ties with Iran before the blockade be lifted.
The 16 media outlets believe this is a massive overreach and flies in the face of journalistic principles ... and the NPPA president is urging members to refuse to sign Ariana's photography agreement.
Notably, just over half of Americans say they have purchased something from their smartphone — a stat that flies in the face of studies claiming online shoppers overwhelmingly prefer to buy on desktop.
"Obviously what Trump said flies in the face of everyone's standards when it comes to what you can say about the Fed," said Daniel Alpert, managing partner at investment firm Westwood Capital.
Defending against attack flies in the face of the idea of mutually-assured destruction, the idea reluctantly embraced during the Cold War (and after), to lower the risks of nuclear first strikes.
Second, the statement flies in the face of what Singer wrote in black and white ... at the time he said he was getting pressured by the government to lie in the case.
But the President's hedging on this flies in the face of what he said last year, that he'd be "1003%" willing to testify under oath about former FBI Director James Comey.  2100.
"OCR's cruel new policy flies in the face of the highest court rulings on this issue, which found unequivocally that denying transgender students appropriate bathroom access is a violation of Title IX."
But the best work that the finale does is with Karolina and Nico, a pairing that both deviates from the comics and flies in the face of Marvel's overwhelmingly heteronormative approach to romance.
The President's fascination with the royals and his decision to bring his adult children along for the ride flies in the face of centuries of American skepticism about hereditary monarchs, Kate Maltby wrote.
PARIS (Reuters) - A proposed increase in France's share tax flies in the face of efforts by the government and the financial industry to lure banking jobs from London, financial sector lobbies have warned.
The research flies in the face of previous suggestions that the T-Rex was a lover as well as a fighter, which used its little arms to clasp its partner close during sex.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) - The U.S. decision to impose tariffs on Canadian, EU and Mexican steel and aluminum flies in the face of international law, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said on Thursday.
The comment flies in the face of much of what Trump has said and done over the last two years, such as quickly labeling violence abroad as terrorism even before any official confirmation.
Pelosi said the Republicans' strategy of waiting for the next president to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia marks a "breathtaking" case of neglect that "flies in the face" of their constitutional duties.
Its entire aesthetic flies in the face of how most people behave on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter — as if we're waiting to be plucked from obscurity by a talent agent or model scout.
BASH: But also because it flies in the face of a lot of things, never mind the sex toy law, but a lot of the things that you espouse and you believe in.
"This action flies in the face of massive opposition to offshore drilling and exploration from over 90 percent of coastal municipalities in the proposed blast zone," said Diane Hoskins, campaign director at Oceana.
The administration's reticence to make the rules public flies in the face of the current claim that the White House seeks to be more "transparent" about its use, and the impact of, drones.
This "show me your papers law on steroids" flies in the face of the freedoms and liberties that Americans hold dear, and we are confident that the courts will ultimately strike it down.
Persistent low inflation with the economy nearing full employment flies in the face of traditional economic modeling and is leading to a growing disagreement among Fed policymakers about the course of future policy.
That theory flies in the face of the unanimous assessment from US intelligence agencies that it was the Russian government who interfered in the 2016 election, and their goal was to elect Trump.
The fact that the faces of many of us who use social media are now being harvested for profit flies in the face of our human rights and puts our safety in jeopardy.
Just as important, his assertion flies in the face of the articles of impeachment voted against President Richard M. Nixon by the House Judiciary Committee — of which I was a member — in 1974.
No wonder the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership says the Trump rule "flies in the face of all the hunters and fishermen" and American Rivers calls it a "crippling blow" to clean water protection.
Fifth, Trump's decision flies in the face of seven decades of U.S. policy — and the consensus of the international community — steadfastly refusing to recognize Israeli claims to sovereignty over any portion of Jerusalem.
All of this flies in the face of what the conflict in Afghanistan has become, a reality made clear in a recent report from the Defense Department's special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction.
But in trying to denigrate Obama's approach to the Middle East at every turn, Pompeo — purposely or accidentally — expressed a sentiment that flies in the face of Trump's latest moves in the region.
The U.S. determination to "manufacture tensions" flies in the face of the wishes of countries in the region to seek cooperation and development and will not enjoy popular support, the foreign ministry said.
In a time where queer visibility is perhaps greater than ever, Atlus's erasure of positive queerness flies in the face of its purported ideals, representing outsiders as heroes who can facilitate greater societal change.
This euphoria flies in the face of a rising interest rate environment as well as the unprecedented record expansion now approaching 8 years and is already the fourth longest in the last 150 years.
"This was first conceived in response to what's been called the 'travel ban' of the Trump administration, which I think flies in the face of the founding principals of the United States," he stated.
Sebastian's acceptance of the gig in the name of financial security becomes a crucial breaking point in his and Mia's relationship, since it flies in the face of all their bohemian hopes and dreams.
His injunction, the newspaper argued, flies in the face of skepticism from both U.S. Supreme Court and the Iowa Supreme Court about whether a court can ever enjoin the press in advance of publication.
By discouraging public participation in the rulemaking process, the Regulatory Integrity Act flies in the face of such bedrock laws as the Administrative Procedure Act, which have long guided agency development of new safeguards.
"It flies in the face of the way in which every American president, Republican and Democrat, has viewed the Justice Department," Holder told several reporters in a Senate hallway shortly after he watched Sen.
Each of these actions flies in the face of the popular -- and bipartisan -- consensus regarding America's role in the world that has guided our foreign policy since the end of the Second World War.
"The African Union issued an immediate response: "Given the historical reality of how many Africans arrived in the United States as slaves, this statement flies in the face of all accepted behavior and practice.
The ingredient lists are stellar, containing a blend of Korean herbal extracts, and the soap's effectiveness flies in the face of everything we've always had a problem with when it comes to cleansing bars.
WeWork's roadshow flies in the face of reported advice from its investor SoftBank, which will likely face a multi-billion dollar write down if WeWork debuts at a valuation between $15 and $20 billion.
And this flies in the face of the refrain from state media that holds that traditional masculinity is the bedrock of national strength and that this masculinity "crisis" bodes ill for the country's future.
Our tolerance for any continuing injustice is repugnant to our position as a progressive government and flies in the face of the great leaders who took on the fight in the days before us.
This assessment flies in the face of North Korea's pointed recent statements and long history to the contrary, and it contradicts a new Pentagon report that suggests Mr. Kim views nuclear weapons as essential.
The decision not to block Huawei's access has attracted criticism within Germany, and flies in the face of continued US pressure on allies to ban the Chinese tech giant over security and espionage risks.
" But Craig Stevens, a spokesman for the MAIN Coalition, a pro-infrastructure group, condemned the move as "a purely political decision that flies in the face of common sense and the rule of law.
Certainly Mr. Trump's habit of blaming refugees for terrorism, used to justify his signing a revised executive order banning travel from six predominantly Muslim countries on Monday, flies in the face of the evidence.
What makes Pelosi's remark so stunning is that it flies in the face of her often-repeated philosophy that she has espoused to House Democrats since taking control of the chamber in the 2018 midterms.
"Identifying specific countries with Muslim majorities and carving out exceptions for minority religions flies in the face of the constitutional principle that bans the government from either favoring or discriminating against particular religions," he said.
This verdict simultaneously destroys both of the two best elements of Christie's political appeal or "brand," and it also flies in the face of a new anti-corruption message from his political ally, Donald Trump.
Prioritizing high traffic speeds at all times of day on all types of roads—regardless of the impact these decisions might have on communities more broadly—flies in the face of Secretary Foxx's own efforts.
"We are building a very successful consensus around making sure companies pay their fair share in tax, and pay in the appropriate place, and the commission's decision flies in the face of that," Murphy added.
This, he says, flies in the face of how big tech views itself, championing "the fearless entrepreneur, the alienated geek working in the garage" — Steve Jobs, Jack Ma, Bill Gates, Larry Page and Jeff Bezos.
This flies in the face of the stereotype of intercourse as the be-all and end-all of sexual activity -- and suggests that couples should explore the whole range of pleasurable options for achieving climax.
But Amazon's reimagining of Peter Weir's seminal 1979 film Picnic at Hanging Rock flies in the face of this presumption, reading instead like a reclaiming of the iconic touchstone that explores girlhood through women's perspectives.
This would usually be a correct assessment, but now the kid from Stranger Things has done one on his Twitter and... it flies in the face of expectation by being kinda good and immensely adorable.
"T-Mobile's and Sprint's sudden claims that neither can create a competitive 5G network separately flies in the face of announcements, disclosures, and marketing to consumers and investors over the past two years," they wrote.
The problem with this scenario is, as noted above, it would still mean agreeing to the free movement of people — and that flies in the face of the populist politics that delivered the Brexit vote.
Constitutional scholars say that it is the first time India has passed a law that treats people differently based on their religion, and that it flies in the face of the country's commitment to equality.
Robertson's pronouncement flies in the face of a CNN/ORC post-debate poll that found Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Fighter pilot vs.
But the deafening silence from these members of the Trump administration in the wake of this month's reversal on flavored e-cigarettes flies in the face of their most sacred commitment: First, do no harm.
We revere her because she is beautiful, because she is Black, because those signifiers both matter and they don't, because her very existence flies in the face of every lie we've ever been told about ourselves.
The move flies in the face of guidance from the Food and Drug Administration that prohibits companies from adding CBD to dietary supplements until the agency has a chance to write new rules regulating its sale.
Pittsburgh International has been pushing for years for this change, which flies in the face of the Transportation Security Administration's policy of trying to reduce the number of people and bags going through the meticulous checks.
Their analysis revealed that atmospheric pressure 2.7 billion years ago was at most only half of its present value—a result that flies in the face of our understanding of the Earth during the Archaean period.
Despite the song's eminent grossness and Thicke's extreme punchability, the decision is still a very bad one for the music industry as it flies in the face of what is considered protectable expression in case law.
Many landless workers' movements seek to take over properties in the name of social and economic justice to more equally distribute rural wealth, but farmers argue this flies in the face of the country's property laws.
Mothers and fathers raising families in New York City see NYPD efforts first hand -- but also see the strength and resilience of everyday New Yorkers that flies in the face of those who would frighten us.
It also flies in the face of the basic reality that the United States has a much higher murder rate than any other rich country, even though video games are widely available in Europe and Japan.
Trump's tweet is absurd on its face, contradicts the intelligence community's consensus conclusions, and even flies in the face of what the president's own intelligence officials have said about Russia's interference in the election in 2016.
This approach certainly flies in the face of the first pardon ever issued but more disturbingly, creates a scenario in which the moral judgment of an impeached president usurps law, facts and in some cases, reason.
Richard Bernstein, CEO and chief investment officer of Richard Bernstein Advisors, similarly told CNBC's "Squawk Box" this week that this kind of speculative trading flies in the face of slowing growth, calling these surges warning signs.
"Threatening innocent children and families fleeing violence and seeking asylum is unacceptable and flies in the face of our values as a state and a nation," they said in a joint statement on Twitter on Friday.
Trump advisers vow that tariffs will be used to eliminate deficits with foreign trade partners—though that flies in the face of economic theory about America's inherent advantage as the issuer of the world's main reserve currency.
If senior management happens to have fallen in love with a darling, a change inspired by something obscure that flies in the face of actual on-the-ground user experience, it would be wise to kill it. 
"To see an almost normalization of hazing as an activity, which is suggested by the defense lawyers as something that's acceptable, that all flies in the face of the tragedy that happened to this family," Kline said.
Ironically, the Governor's stance flies in the face of some other CDC data -- the fact they're now seeing more and more patients in their 30s, 40s and 50s suffering severe COVID-19 symptoms ... many in critical care.
"Biden's ties to the dairy industry and indifference to the suffering of farmed animals — something he basically never talks about — flies in the face of everything he claims to stand for," a spokesperson for the group said.
This argument flies in the face of the plain text, structure and purpose of the law — the whole point of which is to remove the intelligence community's political leadership from having a say over whistle-blower complaints.
Apple's use of Chinese subcontractors has led to speculation that the company's products are at risk of being compromised by the Chinese government—a prospect that flies in the face of Apple's reputation for being virtually unhackable.
Her family lacks the means to pay for the therapy she requires, but church leaders have demonstrated a sense of entitlement that "just flies in the face of what happened to these two survivors," the attorney said.
And the fact that sinking billions of captive customer dollars into that fossil fuel project flies in the face of Governor Northam's well-received call for 100 percent zero-carbon electricity by 2050 has not gone unnoticed.
This flies in the face of a decade of bipartisan work in Congress to address the harm caused by drug addiction, and threatens to make federal drug enforcement efforts even more pointlessly cruel than they already are.
So let me be clear: Adding new ways to control your phone is great, but restricting it to a single function is not, and it flies in the face of what makes Android an attractive alternative to iOS.
"We need to improve re-entry services ... This move flies in the face of that consensus," said Kevin Ring, whose non-profit Families Against Mandatory Minimums has recently launched a Twitter campaign to raise awareness of the problem.
This pretty much flies in the face of everything we'd expect for a world so small that sits so far from the sun, and planetary scientists have struggled to explain it for the better part of a year.
Boss Key Productions, headed by Gears of War designer Cliff Bleszinski, is hoping that this four-on-four multiplayer shooter flies in the face of genre convention by offering greater verticality, gravity-disrupting powers, and evenly matched characters.
Hence the prediction in a Reuters poll this month that the dollar will end 2019 around 5 percent below current levels.. That flies in the face of the current trend, with futures showing dollar positioning near historical highs.
Swedish YouTuber SweViver recently posted a video showing off his first spin with it, and so much of it flies in the face of what's normally considered the "best" way to make a first-person virtual reality game.
Formed in 1980, PETA makes no apologies for using scantily-clad women to advance animal rights, though it flies in the face of the mushrooming #MeToo social media campaign aimed at building a culture of respect for women.
The entirety of Trump's plan to deport our way to prosperity flies in the face of both theory and evidence, but in the larger context of Trump's bragging on the economy it doesn't even make surface-level sense.
And Trump's upbeat and misleading rhetoric on the economic impact of the crisis also flies in the face of the facts that key US industries -- especially in the travel sector -- are now experiencing real consequences from the outbreak.
The travel ban also flies in the face of the World Health Organization's decision to label the coronavirus outbreak as a pandemic on Wednesday: the designation calls for a global response to a problem that is effectively borderless.
On one hand, the legislature's revival of exact match -- and Kemp's zealous use of it to his own benefit -- represent a shocking exercise of nakedly partisan power, one that flies in the face of both laws and norms.
Trump's attitude — and just how much it flies in the face of the theater's rich history as a space for political dissent — could have enormous impact on what political art will look like in the years to come.
While this flies in the face of international attempts to limit the amount of HEU in circulation, a number of countries benefit from Russia's surplus of uranium, including France and Germany, which use it to power domestic reactors.
That kind of power grab flies in the face of the way free trade agreements are supposed to work: They may never balance power perfectly, but at least on paper they're meant to be beneficial for all parties involved.
"Jeff Sessions' obsession with marijuana prohibition defies logic, threatens successful state-level reforms, and flies in the face of widespread public support for legalization," Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said in a statement.
Mnuchin's comments were quickly panned by many in the technology world as it flies in the face of the conventional wisdom that automation and artificial intelligence could eliminate a significant number of jobs in the not-so-distrant future.
" Former Secretary of State John Kerry also condemned Trump, saying in a Twitter message that Trump's remarks about Germany and NATO were "disgraceful, destructive and flies in the face of the actual interest of the United States of America.
It might be official, and a perfect way to play Nintendo Switch games on a TV, but it comes with a steep price tag, and a bulky design that flies in the face of the Switch's best feature: portability.
"While we do not comment on pending litigation, we strongly believe that racial discrimination is unacceptable and it flies in the face of our mission to bring people together," Nick Papas, director of public affairs for Airbnb, told CNBC.
" The idea that resources might be better spent trying to delay aging rather than to cure diseases flies in the face of most disease-related philanthropy and the Obama administration's proposal to spend $220 billion on a "cancer moonshot.
And this clearly flies in the face of a disabled person's right to equality of opportunity, one of the four key promises laid out in the preamble of ADA, along with full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency.
Turkey's Foreign Minister says "Idlib's borders will be preserved," and "Russia will take precautions to prevent the regime from entering and to prevent attacks," which flies in the face of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's reaction to the plan.
Others have pointed out how Ms. Harris's admission that she smoked marijuana in college flies in the face of her record as a prosecutor and the fact that she opposed marijuana legalization during her time as California attorney general.
Of course, this idea––that the backlash to Kanye's loud, low-information Trump support helped more than hurt––flies in the face of everything argued by the people who are most forgiving of (or excited about) said Trump support.
"His denial of Russian hacking during the Presidential campaign flies in the face of the strong consensus of our intelligence agencies, and indicates a willingness to ignore the hard truth when it conflicts with his own interests or predilections," California Rep.
The report puts Juul in a tricky position, both because it's come under fire for its well-documented popularity with teens and because accepting such a huge cash investment from Big Tobacco flies in the face of its quit-smoking branding.
There's a whole art to it, so the notion that you're just going to make everything sound the same with some fancy processing in a way flies in the face of what headphone nerds have been stressing over for decades.
This, legal scholars on the left shot back hours later, flies in the face of the fact that Congress chose not to touch those provisions in the very piece of legislation that ended the penalty for failure to carry insurance.
Friday's report about the Trump Organization billing the Secret Service, meanwhile, flies in the face of Eric Trump's claim that if his father travels, members of his government detail "stay at our properties for free meaning, like, cost for housekeeping."
"Government surveillance that targets journalists, individuals providing legal services to migrants, or critics of the Trump administration's immigration policies is absolutely unacceptable and flies in the face of our most deeply held Constitutional rights and principles," Udall said in a statement.
But it flies in the face of expectations of what a Netflix cartoon can be, whether it's subverting toxic masculinity and traditional story arcs about how heroes will always triumph, or openly embracing queer stories, rather than leaving them as subtext.
"Given the historical reality of how many Africans arrived in the United States as slaves, this statement flies in the face of all accepted behavior and practice," Ebba Kalondo, a spokesperson for the 55-nation African Union, told the Associated Press.
They are typical, and that is to make voting difficult, to make voting something that all Georgians cannot participate in, and we believe that flies in the face of both the letter and the spirit of the National Voter Registration Act.
"It was a great report card for the Canadian jobs market and it flies in the face of some of the other statistics that we've been seeing lately out of Canada," said Scott Smith, managing partner at Viewpoint Investment Partners.
Why it matters: The research flies in the face of commonly held views that more science literacy and greater education around controversial scientific issues will diffuse polarization but supports a growing body of evidence about how our identity forms our views.
This flies in the face of Executive Order 12866, which sets out principles of cost-benefit analysis and directs agencies to adopt regulations that "maximize net benefits" to the public to the extent permitted by law, not minimize costs to corporations.
This flies in the face of what the producers are actually saying, and in what they are doing as well, given OPEC actually raised output in August by 40,000 bpd from July, taking it to a record 33.5 million bpd.
Trump's call for high tariffs flies in the face of the platform's push for free trade, his disparagement of the Trans-Pacific Partnership counters the platform's endorsement, he's waffled on tax cuts for the rich and he's criticized Citizens United.
Hungary, where the relic has been for 800 years, is now led by a prime minister, Viktor Orban, who promotes a blend of nationalism, populism and Euroskepticism that flies in the face of the values represented by the European Union.
"He continued: "It flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place.
A French bulldog jumped 6 stories off the roof of a Manhattan building, crashed through a car's sunroof, and survivedCelebrity chef David Chang implores Stephen Ross to reconsider Trump fundraiser: 'It flies in the face of everything we believe in'
The move is part of the Trump administration's effort to loosen restrictions on the coal industry, and it flies in the face of a recent congressional report that warns of climate change's dire consequences (and that the President flatly dismissed).
"It flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place," Chang said.
The use of taxpayer money to resolve problems and therein protect retail bondholders in all three banks has been highly contentious given it flies in the face of the European Commission's commitment to avoid bailouts and all of the recent legislation.
It flies in the face of scientific consensus about sex and gender, and it imperils the freedom of people to live their lives in a way that fits their sex and gender as these develop throughout each individual life cycle.
"Biden's ties to the dairy industry and indifference to the suffering of farmed animals — something he basically never talks about — flies in the face of everything he claims to stand for," a spokesperson from Direct Action Everywhere said in a statement.
This is not only an unsolicited concession from the White House, but it also flies in the face of the strong advice from GOP congressional leaders like Senator John Thune who urged the Trump team to present a much narrower deal.
Brazil expects to see upwards of 3 percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2083, Brazilian Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles told CNBC Tuesday, a figure that flies in the face of the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) forecast of 1.5 percent.
Unfortunately, the president-elect's choice for Education Secretary has indicated she supports an approach that flies in the face of America's long-time, commonsense investment in public education opportunities that recognizes education is an essential rung to climb the economic ladder.
"I think our research actually flies in the face of the preconception that time-saving services are just for rich people," said Elizabeth Dunn, professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia and a co-author of the study.
The idea that folding a patchwork of smaller programs into a single universal program represents "dismantling" those programs — much less giving Republicans permission to dismantle those programs — flies in the face of basically every Democratic attempt to expand social insurance ever.
But to suggest that a person's artistic impulses and affection are legitimate determinants of racial identity flies in the face of history and in the experiences of the vast majority of people whose labels have been determined by factors outside their control.
The big picture: Trump's claim that the U.S. has "defeated" the Islamic State, or ISIS, in Syria — which he called his "only reason" for remaining in the war — flies in the face of assessments by both the State Department and the Defense Department.
The patents have not yet been granted—indeed, they may not be—but the request flies in the face of the AI community's accepted norms of openness and tech-sharing, says Miles Brundage, who studies AI policy at the University of Oxford.
It flies in the face of the ideals on which America was founded—the rejection, as Thomas Jefferson put it, of the "artificial aristocracy" based on birth, which had corrupted Britain, in favour of a "natural aristocracy" based on "virtue and talents".
"The disclosure flies in the face of what Mr. Trump and Mr. Cohen have been trying to tell the American people for months, and it directly contradicts Mr. Trump's videotaped comments on Air Force One back in early April," Avenatti previously told PEOPLE.
The President's decision flies in the face of his 2016 campaign rhetoric, when he said he would be a strong defender of the LGBT community -- and even claimed he would be a better president for LGBT Americans than his opponent, Hillary Clinton.
This report flies in the face of satellite images just last week showing North Korea dismantling its Sohae Satellite Launching Station — ostensibly a gesture honoring the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (DPRK) promise made to the United States at the Singapore summit.
"The pipeline flies in the face of a lot of the values we're seeing from the prime minister—like his great statements about Canadians believing in climate action after Trump pulled out of Paris," says Mike Hudema, a climate campaigner with Greenpeace Canada.
Experts on both sides say that line of thinking falls short because it flies in the face of Supreme Court precedent, which looks to the intent of Congress when deciding what components of a statute should remain after a provision is struck down.
Erik Altieri, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), warned that the move by Sessions "flies in the face of sensible public policy and broad public opinion," and imperils an industry estimated to be worth $16 billion.
"There's a glorified notion of local sovereignty that flies in the face of 200 years of constitutional progress in the United States," said Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonprofit focusing on issues of democracy and equal rights.
"This deal is a stark violation of international law, flies in the face of U.S. laws passed by Congress, and is a callous response to the families and individuals running for their lives," said Margaret Huang, the executive director of Amnesty International.
"Biden's ties to the dairy industry and indifference to the suffering of farmed animals — something he basically never talks about — flies in the face of everything he claims to stand for," a spokesperson from Direct Action Everywhere said in a statement Tuesday.
"It flies in the face of the tradition in the United States of allowing people seeking asylum to make that claim and to remain in the safety of the United States instead of having to be in places like Matamoros," Castro said.
For now though, as a woman whose career thus far has been fed by sex appeal and social media, Kardashian's move is a bold one, picking a direction that demands a completely different skill set, and flies in the face of expectations.
If carried through, the order — which lifts American limits on carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired power plants, the largest contributor of particulate pollution — flies in the face of the United States' pledge under the Paris climate accord to cut its emissions.
"The disclosure flies in the face of what Mr. Trump and Mr. Cohen have been trying to tell the American people for months, and it directly contradicts Mr. Trump's videotaped comments on Air Force One back in early April," Daniels' attorney, Michael Avenatti, tells PEOPLE.
"The final IRS rule flies in the face of a century of federal tax law that says state choices to provide tax incentives for charitable donations do not affect the federal deductibility of those gifts," according to a joint statement released by New York Gov.
The move is reportedly the result of several years of CARB's work with industry and public-health groups, and it flies in the face of moves by the Trump administration to push for lower fuel efficiency standards and to promote the use of fossil fuels.
" Joan Nyanyuki, director for East Africa at human rights pressure group Amnesty International, said: "This verdict is outrageous and flies in the face of Uganda's obligations to uphold the right to freedom of expression ... and demonstrates the depths of the government's intolerance of criticism.
"This verdict is outrageous and flies in the face of Uganda's obligations to uphold the right to freedom of expression ... and demonstrates the depths of the government's intolerance of criticism," said Joan Nyanyuki, director for East Africa at human rights pressure group Amnesty International.
" Sack: "I'm sympathetic to the difficulties in providing vaccine but the idea that they are going to improve sanitation when they can't give a simple oral vaccine flies in the face of reality... This is often thought of as a dichotomy — vaccines or sanitation.
Giving Monsanto a platform to defend itself without substantial background or counterargument flies in the face of Nye's proclaimed mission to explain science to the masses, and overshadows the other perfectly rational points he and the panelists make about the benefits of GMOs in general.
This proposal, aimed at Planned Parenthood, is a clear suppression of free speech that flies in the face of the robust First Amendment that has evolved since the Supreme Court, by a 803 to 4 vote, upheld an earlier abortion gag rule 27 years ago.
Norman L. Eisen, the chairman of CREW, said the Justice Department's claim that a federal court has no power to intervene — even if it finds a president's behavior is unconstitutional — "is a remarkable assertion" that flies in the face of decades of judicial decisions.
"A presidential power to create permanent national monuments flies in the face of the plain text of federal law, the conventional relationship between presidents and Congress and historical understandings of executive power," conservative attorneys Todd Gaziano and John Yoo wrote in Los Angeles Times.
When I think about it like this, there's a sense in which ''The Happy Song'' flies in the face of my arguably quixotic parenting ethos, much of which boils down to: ''Keep capitalism as far as possible from the children for as long as possible.
" In his first live TV appearance since being stripped of his security clearance, Brennan told MSNBC on Friday that the president's move was "an egregious act" that "flies in the face of traditional practice, as well as common sense, as well as national security.
"This administration is intentionally undermining well-established procedures for safely vetting and reviewing asylum claims which is both illegal and flies in the face of our national traditions," said Michelle Brane, director of the Migrant Rights and Justice program at the Women's Refugee Commission.
"On the flip side, there have been things like giving amnesty to Joe Arpaio — I think that flies in the face of the legal issues, logic, common sense and the mountain of evidence presented against him for abusing the rights of American citizens," said Lopez.
"While every country has the right to set its own immigration policies, this new policy flies in the face of the values of freedom and tolerance that the USA was built upon," said Khan, who is a Muslim and has spoken against Trump's immigration policies before.
"Even with rosy economic assumptions and proposed spending discipline that flies in the face of recent experience, the president's budget would still be in deficit over the next 28503 years," said Robert L. Bixby, executive director of The Concord Coalition, which advocates for lowering the debt.
But on the second alignment, both candidates received zero support, a result that flies in the face of caucus rules mandating that a candidate considered viable after the first round of voting — usually by notching at least 6900 percent support — cannot lose support in the second round.
The post last week observed that Mr Phillips's religious-liberty claim flies in the face of both reason and the Supreme Court's long-standing position that neutral laws of general applicability do not violate the constitution when they only indirectly impinge on an individual's religious practice.
It is "un-British to be rolling out the red carpet this week for a formal state visit for a president whose divisive behaviour flies in the face of the ideals America was founded upon – equality, liberty and religious freedom," Khan wrote in the Observer newspaper.
While the decision flies in the face of the Trump administration's preferences, it will please conservative groups, which had hoped that the debt ceiling would be raised separately from a larger fight over government funding in September and used as a vehicle to extract fiscal reforms.
Buying Deep Basin flies in the face of the very identity of Cenovus, which was spun-off from predecessor Encana Corp to focus on crude, said one investor, who spoke on condition of anonymity as the person was not authorized to speak publicly on the issue.
"I haven't seen this much energy around the labor movement in my 220006 years of union work, and it really flies in the face of the stereotypical idea of what a union member looks like," said Sara Nelson, the president of the Association of Flight Attendants.
As Justice Stephen G. Breyer's majority opinion last week made clear, that stance of complete judicial deference flies in the face of the Supreme Court's rejection 24 years ago of "unnecessary health regulations" that impose a substantial obstacle to abortion access without conveying a health-related benefit.
Such an extreme power to silence dissent flies in the face of our longstanding constitutional commitment to uphold an individual's' right to free speech, and threatens to put the United States on par with regimes like that of Bahrain, which Washington has consistently and legitimately criticized.
Since he became chief of staff last July, Mr. Kelly has toiled to control access to Mr. Trump to try to ensure that his actions are informed by an orderly process in the West Wing — a pursuit that flies in the face of the president's freewheeling style.
It is "un-British to be rolling out the red carpet this week for a formal state visit for a president whose divisive behavior flies in the face of the ideals America was founded upon – equality, liberty and religious freedom," Khan wrote in the Observer newspaper.
And the precedent it sets — in which powerful government leaders can theoretically shut down a movie's release because they heard something on TV about a trailer for a movie nobody's seen — is a move toward government censorship that flies in the face of First Amendment freedoms.
Madrid — which allowed a nonbinding referendum on independence in 2014 — has taken a hard line this time, arguing that a unilateral act of separation flies in the face of the rule of law, and sets a dangerous precedent for other European countries struggling with similar movements.
Indeed, the word "presidential" was drawn upon repeatedly, with the implication that this is not a term that has sprung to mind often during the 45th President's short reign to date, given his unique personal and professional style that flies in the face of much established White House protocol.
Reality Check: Trump's claims of 'large scale' voter fraud But Trump's claim three weeks before Election Day -- as many voters are already going to the polls -- that the race is being being deliberately stacked against him by a fearful political establishment flies in the face of historical precedent.
She added that the company keeps track of any behavior that flies in the face of American trade sanctions, as well as activity that might tie into the Specially Designated Nationals list, a lineup of individuals or groups associated with terror or drug trafficking activity, among other things.
Although Democrats pledged last fall that if elected to the majority they would return to the "regular order" of more open committee and floor participation, the talk now about abolishing or severely limiting the minority right to offer a final recommit amendment flies in the face of that promise.
Conservation groups have heavily criticized the new Interior policy on document requests, arguing it flies in the face of FOIA law by creating unwarranted delays and in some cases appears to allow senior officials the ability to push back and try to block public information from being released.
The transition deal flies in the face of statements by Davidson and environment minister Michael Gove, another Scot, who last week set out a view that control over fishing was "vital" to Scotland, raising expectations that British control over fishing would be achieved from Brexit day in March, 2019.
What complicates and deepens that narrative is that both Brown and Allen are black, and their success flies in the face of a genre that has often been ruthlessly closed-minded about who can lay claim to the rural experience, at least when it comes to songs about it.
"This insouciance about the prospect of putting off any deal has completely upended market expectations that we were potentially millimetres away from a deal, and also flies in the face of the optimism that has seen markets rally strongly over the last few weeks," CMC analyst Michael Hewson said.
The change in tone towards support for a variety of housing solutions -- including a concerted drive to improve the attraction of renting for the longer term and initiatives concentrated on enhancing community living solutions -- flies in the face of years of government measures aimed at encouraging and advocating home ownership.
The placement of the hinge on the right side of the Axon M means that all the buttons are shifted to the left, including the power button, which flies in the face of years of ingrained logic from iPhones, Samsung Galaxy phones, Google Pixels, and almost every other major phone.
"This flies in the face of the United States's longstanding position that such a formulation should be reached only through negotiations by the parties and not by the United States, the United Nations or any other third party," House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (Md.) said in a statement earlier Wednesday.
The suspension of referrals flies in the face of what the Justice Department was telling reporters was operational Thursday, leaving the impression of an administration at odds with itself on a policy that has generated weeks of outrage and emotional reaction even from some of the President's most loyal supporters.
There is some internal logic to this argument but it flies in the face of 40-plus years of common-sense precedent that holds that doctors stand in the shoes of their patients, who would not otherwise be able to get into court to assert the rights that they indisputably have.
Members of the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws faulted lawmakers for passing the bill during end-of-year sessions and said the delay "flies in the face of the will of the voters" who approved the ballot question legalizing the drug.
As Mr. Trump stands in the East Room making a speech that flies in the face of facts, with a lobbyist for the coal industry and another for the oil industry at each elbow as props, it's hard to imagine anyone taking seriously his claims to be protecting our environment.
As Mr. Trump stands in the East Room making a speech that flies in the face of facts, with a lobbyist for the coal industry and another for the oil industry at each elbow as props, it's hard to imagine anyone taking seriously his claims to be protecting our environment.
"The Netanyahu government's Entry Law, which is a travel ban that uses blacklists and litmus tests to bar visitors from entering Israel based on their beliefs, flies in the face of the democratic principles enshrined in Israel's declaration of independence," said Daniel Sokatch, the CEO of the New Israel Fund.
Late last month, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation allowing student athletes to receive payment for such things as product endorsement deals and use of their likeness in video games, a potentially lucrative opportunity for college sports stars that flies in the face of long-standing National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules.
"He personally addressed Ross, whom he said sometimes listened to the podcast, saying the fundraiser "flies in the face of everything we believe in at Momofuku, it frightens many of the people who work for you, and it contradicts what I hoped to accomplish by taking your money in the first place.
The use of taxpayer money to resolve problems within the banking system and therein protect retail bondholders in all three banks has been highly controversial given it flies in the face of the European Commission's commitment to avoid bailouts and all of the recent legislation that it has passed geared towards that purpose.
"It flies in the face of our most basic concepts of an accurate and just system: Simply put, I think the whole thing is despicable," Larry Krasner, Philadelphia's district attorney and a former defense lawyer, said when asked to comment on Mr. Dennis's case and another similar deal arranged by his predecessor.
The premise that President Trump would root out corruption and self-dealing by politicians and their families flies in the face of any semblance of reality, given the utter lack of transparency with respect to his own finances, which he promised to release, and that of his children and son-in-law.
" Mr. de Blasio called the accusations outrageous and absurd and said at the Friday news conference that "the notion of calling this city and our Police Department 'soft on crime' is unacceptable on its face and flies in the face of everything we have seen over the last quarter-century in this city.
Vice President Mike Pence took a hard stance on the murder of Jamal Khashoggi during a Washington Post space event Tuesday, demanding answers from the Saudis over their account of the journalist's death, which he said "flies in the face" of the facts of the investigation laid out by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The reason that federal commandeering of state legislative processes is unconstitutional -- Justice Samuel Alito&aposs sports betting opinion likened commandeering to having a federal agent on the floor of each state legislature give a thumbs-up or -down to proposed legislation -- is that it flies in the face of the Guarantee Clause of the Constitution.
"To hold that sexual orientation does not fall under 'sex' in Title VII flies in the face of common sense, the understanding of more than 200 bipartisan members of the House and Senate who have cosponsored the Equality Act and the position taken by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other federal circuits," they wrote.
He admitted to falsely claiming that the push for the Moscow development ended in January 2016, when talked actually continued through to June that year Cohen's guilty plea flies in the face of Trump's repeated denials that neither he, nor his associates, had any contact with Russian officials, nor any business dealings in Russia.
" Ann E. Marimow and Maria Sachetti report: "'Giving states and local governments the power to consent to the resettlement of refugees — which is to say veto power to determine whether refugees will be received in their midst — flies in the face of clear Congressional intent,' [District Judge Peter] Messitte wrote in a 21-page decision.
In light of these facts, it is vital that President Trump ignore bad advice from the fake JCPOA opponents in his administration who are recommending that he extend the Iran deal and try to fix it — a preposterous course of action that flies in the face of the president's principled support of the Iranian protesters.
In the wake of movements like #OscarsSoWhite and #TimesUp, which have been critical of Hollywood's lack of inclusion of women and people of color — an exclusion that flies in the face of Hollywood's supposed progressivism — the Oscars ceremony made a conscious effort to celebrate and spotlight the contributions of those people who have historically been excluded.
The fact that DeepMind had taken active steps to gain approval for AI research on the Royal Free patient data as far back as fall 2015 flies in the face of all the subsequent assertions made by the pair to the press and public — when they claimed the Royal Free data was not being used to train AI models.
That suggestion flies in the face of Cartwright's guilty plea in federal court and comes on the heels of Trump arguing that the presidential election is "rigged" and rejecting the US intelligence community's conclusions that Russia has been behind a series of hacks of Democratic officials' emails -- all comments that could erode public trust in key US government institutions.
Bernie SandersBernie SandersJoe Biden faces an uncertain path Bernie Sanders vows to go to 'war with white nationalism and racism' as president Biden: 'There's an awful lot of really good Republicans out there' MORE's explicit call for tax hikes on the middle class is a political gamble that flies in the face of conventional political wisdom.
This flies in the face of at least nine blanket denials from Trump world of any contacts with Russia More on Trump associates' contacts with Russians At least 12 of President Donald Trump's associates had contact with Russians during the presidential campaign or transition, according to their own statements, court filings and reporting from CNN and others.
"Our immigration public-charge policy has always recognized two principles: first, the nation's desire for immigrants who are able-bodied and employable, capable of supporting themselves and their families; and second, our commitment to assist members of our communities who fall on hard times," they wrote, arguing that the rule "flies in the face of these long-held values."
As a result of situations like these, when workers suspect they have the coronavirus, nearly a quarter of them have a clear incentive not to self-isolate by continuing going to work — which flies in the face of health advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) aimed at stemming the spread of the virus.
But it's also an approach that flies in the face of the political reality that his own unpopularity is a millstone for Republicans in competitive House seats, especially in suburban areas outside cities such as Minneapolis, Chicago and Detroit, where his populist nationalism doesn't connect as well as in the deep red territory where he holds rallies.
The American Kratom Association, which estimates that three to five million Americans use or have used kratom, blasted the FDA's use of a computer model as an "unprecedented abuse of science" that flies in the face of available research showing that kratom doesn't seem to be as addictive as abused opioids or as likely to cause overdose symptoms like slowed or stopped breathing.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE's termination of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, at first blush, flies in the face of popular will.
"A lower cost of capital may lead to more investment that may lead to more productivity growth, but to assume that will trickle down to middle-class wages flies in the face of everything we've seen for the last 20 years," said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and an official in the first Obama administration.
The conclusion "flies in the face of the best available science, which indicates that stronger protections are needed to prevent the extinction of our native fish and wildlife, like endangered winter-run chinook salmon and delta smelt, particularly in light of the effects of climate change," said Doug Obegi, an expert in California water law with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group.
As CNN noted, the number of sexual assaults flies in the face of Uber's "safe ride home" branding, which promised safety to riders who were in many of the 103 cases inebriated: Its print and digital ads show women taking Ubers for nights out, and a partnership with Mothers Against Drunk Driving includes a "designated rider" campaign urging users to take an Uber to avoid driving under the influence.
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump in recent days has fumed about the immigration courts that handle cases of people seeking entry into the US. But Trump's fixation on the courts and the judges who staff them flies in the face of what his attorney general has been trying to do to reshape the courts to align with the President's vision, including hiring more immigration judges and restricting asylum laws.
Wozniak's optimism also flies in the face of a report, published Tuesday, from 26 AI experts who warn humanity is not adequately preparing for the malicious potential of AI. "It is often the case that AI systems don't merely reach human levels of performance but significantly surpass it," says Miles Brundage, a research fellow at Oxford University's Future of Humanity Institute and one of the co-authors, in a written statement.
Setting aside the obvious problems with Trump's travel ban -- that Americans are statistically more likely to be killed by a child with an automatic weapon or falling out of bed than by a refugee, that it flies in the face of all the successful counter-terrorism tactics honed by US and its allies in recent decades -- it is the insidious nature of the decision making and crafting of the decree that is troubling America's traditional allies.
In a dramatic ruling that flies in the face of what most legal experts had argued, US District Judge Reed O'Connor, who sits in Fort Worth, found that a tweak to the Affordable Care Act that Congress made last year makes a key part of the law unconstitutional, which means all of the hundreds of provisions in the over 900-page law, including popular provisions such as protections for people with preexisting health conditions, are invalid.
"That the Assad regime and its supporters would continue these attacks, without cause and without sufficient regard for international obligations to safeguard innocent lives, flies in the face of the unanimous calls by the ISSG, including in Munich, to avoid attacks on civilians and casts doubt on Russia's willingness and/or ability to help bring to a stop the continued brutality of the Assad regime against its own people," spokesman John Kirby said in a statement Monday afternoon.
If we have this policy, and we can either do it one way, which exacerbates and augments the childhood adversity, or we can do it in another way, which enhances and maximizes buffering and reduces the dose of adversity — the idea that we would choose to do it in a way that increases the stress and the trauma, and therefore increases the physical and psychological harm to the child, feels like it flies in the face of the science and the research.
Watch More from VICELAND: Putting aside that no toxicological tests for drugs and alcohol have been released to the public, putting aside that the local French prosecutor in charge of Bourdain's case said there's no indication he was drinking at the hotel in the days before he was found dead, putting all that aside, the commentary from Karr flies in the face of everything we've come to learn in recent years about how addiction and recovery plays out over the span of one's lifetime.
"You know general, I've had a little military experience myself including in close-air support, and for you to sit there and tell me that we could be using the F-16 and the F-15 when we're not, and your plans are to use the F-35 at ten times the cost, eventually it flies in the face of not just my experience but the experienced pilots that I know, the U.S. Air Force pilots that I'm in constant communication with," he said.
" – Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanEmbattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway Latina leaders: 'It's a women's world more than anything' MORE (R-Wis.) > Former Secretary of State John KerryJohn Forbes KerryA lesson of the Trump, Tlaib, Omar, Netanyahu affair Trump's winning weapon: Time The Memo: O'Rourke looks to hit reset button MORE exploded with anger, releasing a blistering statement lambasting Trump's "disgraceful" and "destructive" behavior that he said "flies in the face of the actual interests of the United States of America.
Tom CottonThomas (Tom) Bryant CottonCongress must address gender gap in nominations to military service academies GOP senators press Google on reports it developed a smart speaker with Huawei Sunday shows - Mass shootings grab the spotlight MORE (R-Ark.) and David Perdue's (R-Ga.) White House announcement of the new version of the RAISE Act, a bill that aims to lower legal immigration to the U.S. by more than 22019 percent by turning away non-English speakers and low-skilled or unskilled immigrants, flies in the face of American ideals and is simply bad policy.
Trump's statement that the state of California "wants" the wall built seemingly flies in the face of statements from California's leaders, including Attorney General Xavier BecerraXavier BecerraCalifornia leads states in lawsuit over Trump public charge rule Overnight Energy: Trump sparks new fight over endangered species protections | States sue over repeal of Obama power plant rules | Interior changes rules for ethics watchdogs California counties file first lawsuit over Trump 'public charge' rule MORE, who vowed to keep fighting the Trump administration in court over immigration and border security issues.

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