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266 Sentences With "fly in the face of"

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

Both of these laws fly in the face of Roe.
These assessments fly in the face of the ACA's accomplishments.
Here, again, these claims fly in the face of precedent.
However, recent research findings fly in the face of this assumption.
New opportunities that fly in the face of that plan are rejected.
How does Wheeler justify policies that fly in the face of science?
And their efforts fly in the face of widespread public support for Dreamers.
And many of those views fly in the face of well-worn scientific evidence.
The leaks fly in the face of his "man of the people" public image.
I get it, those last two fly in the face of the conservative agenda.
But worse were those comments that fly in the face of our core values.
It does fly in the face of what we see in as basic demand conditions.
But that would, obviously, fly in the face of our basic understanding of human behavior.
These vacuous appeals fly in the face of facts and are simultaneously laughable and infuriating.
To the Editor: Republican plans to lower benefits fly in the face of economic reality.
These artists' works fly in the face of the stilted airs and apathy of the flâneur.
They say a prohibition would fly in the face of centuries of religious and cultural tradition.
Buying a huge, illiquid asset like a house seems to fly in the face of this principle.
But the thing is the statistics fly in the face of what we emotionally believe is correct.
Sure there are those who would argue that such moves fly in the face of our Democracy.
Ms. McEntyre's dress was intended to fly in the face of convention — and conventional notions of beauty.
But Trump administration policies fly in the face of what is needed for a long-term solution.
And empty rhetoric won't fly in the face of the allegations made by Comey in his book.
Hopes that Mr. Trump would sustain such fruitless measures fly in the face of his own words.
"The (President's) comments are unkind, divisive, elitist, and fly in the face of our nation's values," Rep.
The calls for preemption in Iowa and Missouri fly in the face of longstanding norms in state politics.
Our policy agendas fly in the face of critics who say this movement lacks specificity regarding our goals.
Her claims also fly in the face of the standard view of tech employees as coddled and overpaid.
"Ben Carson, DeVos, the education nominee, those just don't fly in the face of good governing," Richmond said.
Blunt public warnings from Chinese government institutes are uncommon, and fly in the face of rosy official propaganda.
Algorithms evolve and find patterns on their own that might fly in the face of what their creators intended.
And it's a testament to the thoughtfulness of a company willing to fly in the face of some conventions.
"Frankly, Trump's comments fly in the face of the founding principle of the United States," he said last month.
That would fly in the face of the Fed's dual mandate to support full employment and control price increases.
And, in any case, these rhetorical acts of chivalry fly in the face of their legislative acts of misogyny.
Any move to cut U.S. contributions to the UN, then, will fly in the face of considerable bipartisan opposition.
These political moves fly in the face of what everyone knows about gender from religion, science and nature itself.
Democratic lawmakers have raised concerns over the proposed panel, saying it would fly in the face of scientific evidence.
Trump's comments are at odds with reality and fly in the face of repeated warnings from public-health officials.
"The President' comments today are unkind, divisive, elitist and fly in the face of our nation's values," Love tweeted.
Doesn't this fly in the face of the west's old, stereotypical view that women in China are meek and oppressed?
These laws are designed in the name of public health and safety, but fly in the face of scientific evidence.
Doesn't that fly in the face of the President's promise of tighter immigration rules and policies that protect US workers?
Sanctuary cities don't just fly in the face of federal law – they also create an ecosystem friendly to criminal behavior.
They were trying to signal they were aware of social justice, but [their actions] fly in the face of that.
The US going it alone would fly in the face of the international law that workable agreements must be kept.
Trump's remarks were "unkind, divisive, elitist and fly in the face of our nation's values," she said in a statement.
The idea of a dollar-for-dollar tax credit, then, would fly in the face of this policy, he said.
I recognize that this might seem to fly in the face of the very concept of a New Year's Resolution.
These cultural shifts are causing physicians and nurses to act in ways that fly in the face of our calling.
Trump's words were "unkind, divisive, elitist and fly in the face of our nation's values," Love said in a statement.
Griff says Public Enemy is all about change -- radical change -- and the Academy's efforts fly in the face of that.
Its lengthy interior monologues and over-explanations fly in the face of director Ueda's much-lauded "design by subtraction" ethos.
A further 10 percent depreciation in the yuan would fly in the face of recent Chinese efforts to stabilize its currency.
KT4 claims that these sales fly in the face of rights it has as an investor to participate in such transactions.
"The president's comments are unkind, divisive, elitist, and fly in the face of our nation's values," Love said in a statement.
Those in the far right and far left, because – so often, the facts fly in the face of your own worldview.
But that conclusion would likely fly in the face of Horowitz's own findings, which are expected to not bear that out.
That would fly in the face of decades of conventional wisdom on Capitol Hill about how you move a contentious bill.
And university administrations have been too meek in addressing protesters whose messages have seemed to fly in the face of free speech.
Too often an affecting narrative from a sympathetic case produces outcomes that fly in the face of evidence, historical fact and data.
These realities fly in the face of commonly held stereotypes that students at elite schools are all rich or upper-middle class.
But his work does fly in the face of what SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has said about Starlink and its astronomy repercussions.
But his work does fly in the face of what SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has said about Starlink and its astronomy repercussions.
The issue with all of this evidence and this new frame is that both fly in the face of what is known.
You have to induce them to say things that fly in the face of the laws of common sense, life experience, and probability.
Entrepreneurs are innovators, not administrators, but too often we are hindered by archaic compliance laws that fly in the face of common sense.
"The (President's) comments are unkind, divisive, elitist, and fly in the face of our nation's values," Love said in a statement Thursday night.
I like to live in communities that put a premium on getting things right even when they fly in the face of social norms.
That long period of quiescence seems to fly in the face of the popular belief that serial rapists and killers are incapable of stopping.
But just as he did as a candidate, Trump's string of tweets is setting out policies that fly in the face of Republican orthodoxy.
They can even decide that there are a couple of issues on which they are going to fly in the face of public opinion.
The perception is that he's fulfilling this need that I think is pretty deep-seated—this need to fly in the face of that.
The new rules fly in the face of everything the American public has learned from the #MeToo movement over the past year, Davidson said.
They're distinctly immoral, uniquely willing to fly in the face of decency and patriotic duty and basic morality to make money and gain power.
Nicky Morgan, chair of the powerful Treasury Select Committee, said the charges by Britain's biggest domestic bank "fly in the face" of clarity and transparency.
Our fear of germs leads to an overuse of antibacterial products that not only fly in the face of science, but pollute the environment too.
Trump pushing for truly universal health care or a public option would be an incredible development and would fly in the face of Republican orthodoxy.
Both of those laws would fly in the face of Roe because they would ban abortion, either outright or effectively, before a fetus is viable.
"These new conditions also fly in the face of longstanding City policy that promotes cooperation between local law enforcement and immigrant communities," the lawsuit said.
Some in the media admire his strength and ability to get things done even if those things fly in the face of any previously held position.
There is a perception that romantic feelings should arise from a soul-level connection, and both V-Day and MDMA fly in the face of that.
We can't let them do some of these things that really fly in the face of reasonable international law without some sort of response by us.
"I know it appears to fly in the face of what everyone is wanting to promote today, and that is equality," Buckingham told the Arizona Republic.
That said, every year, brave filmmakers, fearless documentarians, fly in the face of this rule—brazenly touting their right to investigate despite the club's stringent policies.
The possibility of Edgemont establishing its own government would seem to fly in the face of statewide efforts to eliminate layers of government and share services.
Friday's decision by the Trump administration to wall off the border from potential infections seems, for the moment, to fly in the face of transmission patterns.
Softening the rule would fly in the face of post-crisis policy towards the financial sector, said Sarah Henchoz, a partner at Allen & Overy in London.
In fact, China's attempts to position itself as a champion of globalization fly in the face of its status as one of the most protectionist major nations.
But, if Citizen Lab's findings are accurate, then the company's activities fly in the face of Canada's international human rights obligations and commitments regarding free speech online.
These findings seem to fly in the face of several previously published studies — and they even contradict the hypothesis the researchers had when they began this study.
Moia says it's only going to use "legal" driver sources, and will not fly in the face of existing regulation and infrastructure to provide its labor pool.
This seems to fly in the face of financial aerodynamics, much as Mr Bolt's towering figure (too tall for a sprinter, apparently) defies physics on the track.
It would fly in the face of their efforts to link spending or regulatory reforms to the budget, a position endorsed by the conservative House Freedom Caucus.
After all, Nintendo's infamous for keeping a tight grip over its IP and likely doesn't want people building any creations that fly in the face of that.
The law would also fly in the face of Vietnam's commitments to various trade agreements, including under the World Trade Organization, and would likely unnerve foreign investors.
And while many women derive their deepest fulfillment as mothers, it doesn't preclude their ambition or fly in the face of leaning in or out or sideways.
This would be a poor choice and fly in the face of the mandate that the American people gave President-elect Trump to bring change to government.
This seems to fly in the face of decades of precedent including the Nixon case which states that no one, including the president, is above the law.
But new ads from the fiery Florida congresswoman fly in the face of arguments some fellow Republicans have been making as a debate over transgender rights heats up.
In theory, signing onto a letter of support shouldn't influence those decisions, but it would fly in the face of many of the president's most vocally held policies.
Nelson can appear very stoic at times, so the dance inspired videos fly in the face of a lot of peoples' impressions of the jiu jitsu black belt.
What makes these actions so disconcerting is that they fly in the face of all that the Chinese government and people have accomplished, and undermine its future potential.
The latest evidence is this tweet by conservative commentator Erick, son of Erick: On Nov 8, Clinton's claims of a mandate will fly in the face of reality.
" Trump's reasonable actions, in McCain's judgement, deserve to be separated from Trump's "statements and comments [that] fly in the face of everything I've believed in my whole life.
"Some of the key concepts discerned in the study," comments Jim Collins, "fly in the face of our modern business culture and will, quite frankly, upset some people."
But this, and any scenario that includes keeping the x86 architecture, seems to fly in the face of the rumors that Apple wants to unify its software and hardware.
Trump's actions also fly in the face of the wishes of many U.S. companies, including those that are supposed to be beneficiaries of the withdrawal, such as Exxon Mobil.
More specifically, allegations of "hacking" and "rigging" fly in the face of the heroic efforts by our nation's election administrators to prepare the system for voters on Election Day.
The conclusions of study seemed not only to fly in the face of Ngo's position on the matter, but put the onset of decrepitude way earlier than I'd imagined.
D.L. thinks Alice and her champion, Kim Kardashian, were simply a good photo op -- while Trump's still making other moves that fly in the face of real prison reform.
Although Ms. Harris's lack of history in the state might fly in the face of New Hampshire tradition, it does not seem to have hindered her in the slightest.
It's instructive how what passes as erudition can fly in the face of felt harm — and this is one of the key threads that runs through all the stories.
MSNBC is remaining stone silent as old blog posts that seem to fly in the face of star Joy Reid's alleged progressive values continue to pile up, one after another.
It would fly in the face of Kim's rule that the hero must be "physically beautiful," and promote the idea that all people, including the disabled, are worthy of respect.
And fans, critics and fellow celebrities have reacted quickly and forcefully, often taking him to task for what some say are remarks that fly in the face of historical facts.
Did this study's findings truly fly in the face of past research and show that we are initially thrilled to help others, but in reality would truly rather help ourselves?
Proposals to get NASA "back to" some other kind of science not only ring false but their wasteful price tag would also fly in the face of fiscal conservative values.
The comments fly in the face of Pompeo's reassurances that the talks had been "productive" and were conducted in "good faith," and Trump's own optimism in the aftermath of the summit.
A big blanket tariff would slice through supply chains, hurt American consumers and fly in the face of the global system of trade rules overseen by the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
I saw that argument made today by the ACLU that some children should have their cases litigated soberly from their parents which seems to fly in the face of family unification.
Trump's claims fly in the face of a George Washington University study commissioned by Puerto Rico's governor examining the effects of Maria in the six months following landfall in September 2017.
That legislation, which would effectively make California a sanctuary state, would fly in the face of a federal order blocking grants to agencies that fail to comply with those detainer requests.
Not only are these actions irresponsible, but they also endanger the lives of American and Russian soldiers alike and fly in the face of decades-long agreements between our two nations.
" Love, who was born to Haitian parents, said the president's comments about those from Haiti and African countries were "unkind, divisive, elitist and fly in the face of our nation's values.
"This study is another example of when data and numbers fly in the face of logic and common sense," said Jennifer Baker, the NRA's director of public affairs, in a statement.
"We are a closed life business and it would fly in the face of our strategic logic," CEO Clive Bannister told Reuters when asked about the possibility of expanding into open books.
"President Trump's comments fly in the face of the responsibility our city's officers display in the line of duty," Maya Wiley, chairwoman of the Civilian Complaint Review Board, said in a statement.
The move would fly in the face of the Chinese government's mission to bring down the country's soaring debt, a goal President Xi Jinping has made a cornerstone to his economic platform.
Trump's recent warnings that he would embrace a government shutdown to get funding for his border wall seem to fly in the face of comments by his own officials and Republican leaders.
Stronger earnings from industrial companies fly in the face of data points like euro zone industry sentiment, which fell for a fifth consecutive month in March and was well below market expectations.
That might fly in the face of golf's current youth-oriented infatuation with the current Big Three — Jason Day, Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth — or Big Four if Rickie Fowler is included.
Findings like these fly in the face of the idea that black students think academic achievement is "white" or negative, or that it's something they must actively shun for acceptance and popularity.
As with the Air Force request, the Army's proposals could fly in the face of any additional reprogramming reductions in FY 2020 military construction funds to provide more money for the wall.
" This would fly in the face of a recent official White House statement by press secretary Sarah Sanders, who said on July 2: "We do not recognize Russia's attempt to annex Crimea.
Building such a tool would also fly in the face of public statements Apple and CEO Tim Cook has made about data and user privacy since the release of iOS 8 in 1942.
Yet even as we watch this progress continue, some federal lawmakers insist the regulations formed in the wake of the crisis are holding markets back – claims which fly in the face of reality.
Of course, that policy seemed to fly in the face of the association's self-proclaimed purpose of promoting education and serving students who just happen to be very good at sports, but whatever.
" George Osbourne, the chancellor of the Exchequer at the time, once told the House of Commons that Trump's critiques about London "fly in the face of the founding principles of the United States.
"Such disingenuous actions and statements fly in the face of the transparency needed to ensure that the regulatory process is reasonable, fair and consistent with the law," said NELP's executive director, Christine Owens.
However, to dismiss that standard as "ridiculous" is to fly in the face of evidence that leaders' early accomplishments matter a lot and that early mistakes and losses can inflict potentially irreparable harm.
We're about to apply this process to Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans—making them actually edible may fly in the face of their artistry, but we'll never feel closer to the pop art icon.
House Democrats sued the administration in April, arguing Trump's actions fly in the face of multiple congressional votes denying additional funding for the wall; other lawsuits challenging Trump's plans are pending in several courts.
But Trump also said that he would like to see South Korea and Japan obtain nuclear weapons, which would fly in the face of non-proliferation efforts that have been American policy for decades.
Trump's regressive climate policies fly in the face of the consensus of scientists and economists, who say natural gas and renewables like solar and wind power are eclipsing coal as cheaper, cleaner energy sources.
When Trump quipped at the second debate that if he was president, Clinton would be in jail, many observers shuddered, hearing the kinds of threats that fly in the face of our democratic traditions.
In fact, this could present an opportunity to try something different, to fly in the face of the so-called conventional thinking that has ended in a resounding failure for the past 24 years.
While a majority of voters do support work requirements (67 percent), that already exist, the proposals by the House Committee on Agriculture fly in the face of the 61  percent who oppose SNAP cuts.
So this side of Uber — the side that offers yacht parties and chopper rides to decadent richies — seems to fly in the face of the egalitarian image that Uber is desperately trying to maintain.
These denials fly in the face of everything uncovered in the massive wait-list scandal at the VA nearly two years ago, and the tens of thousands of veterans still waiting months for care.
For Trump-haters who say his tweets are embarrassing the country and fly in the face of the society our Founding Fathers would have wanted, they might want to brush up on their American history.
What they'll really be arguing for, though, is the right to use religious beliefs as a license to discriminate, and to provide special protections for Christians that fly in the face of the First Amendment.
Senate fallout The Senate, especially on repealing the state and local tax deduction, is about to do things that fly in the face of what House leaders have negotiated to appease some of their members.
In the letter, the company said that "succumbing to political pressure to do what is expedient" would fly "in the face of our fiduciary responsibility as stewards of the company for the benefit of shareholders."
For example, it alleges that payments by foreign officials who book rooms at the Trump International Hotel in Washington fly in the face of the constitutional language designed to limit corrupt behavior by federal officials.
On the other side: Those numbers fly in the face of data on business investment that show firms dramatically slowing down spending and delaying big projects because of the uncertainty caused by the trade war.
These people said that all three candidates have proposed policies that would fly in the face of the free-market philosophy shared by much of the network, which is partially funded by billionaire Charles Koch.
It's hard not to feel that this was an act of defiance on Perry's part, a way to take ownership of the competition and fly in the face of those who felt he didn't belong.
I remain furious that women's health decisions are ultimately being made by dudes-who-aren't-doctors, but who have a whole lot of opinions that, by design, fly in the face of science, medicine, and compassion.
" According to Price, Trump is "laying the groundwork with preemptive attacks to weaken those messages, to weaken them in favor of his policy preferences which fly in the face of the objective facts they put forward.
And drag only becomes more pointedly political in an environment where an illegitimate regime seeks — picking just one example — to impose reductive and cruel ideas about gender that fly in the face of gender's proven complexity.
In the interview, Giuliani states that Trump "denied the merger," which appears to fly in the face of months of assurances from the DOJ and the White House that Trump had no influence over the decision.
This means both resources and political will to help empower local governments to incorporate immigrants, and fight against those that actively take punitive exclusionary stances that fly in the face of decades of civil rights protections.
Looking back just weeks, today's quotes also fly in the face of previous comments from the government's financial regulators, which had said that it plans to prevent minors, foreigners and institutions from owning and trading cryptocurrency.
The possibility of a "local veto" on deciding where to house patients would "fly in the face of a compelling need for a centralized state authority to control and manage communicable disease outbreaks," Mr. Becerra wrote.
Here are some other key findings from this year's analysis: Many of these numbers are discouraging, and fly in the face of moments of high-profile progress that women have been expected to be so grateful for.
The notion that newspapers aren't adequately prepared to play Facebook's game isn't terribly new, but it does fly in the face of the company's recent efforts to put a positive spin on its relationship with the media.
Trump's refusal to consider changes to entitlements, hard line on immigration and the raucous, often vulgar, tone of his campaign also fly in the face of Ryan's orthodox conservative philosophy and hopes of broadening the GOP's appeal.
Image: G. M. EricksonNot only does Erickson's finding fly in the face of conventional wisdom, it implies that the badass reptilians of the Cretaceous were at a decided disadvantage when it comes to coping with environmental disturbance.
But at least Trump has a roughly consistent jobs worldview, one that mostly aligns with ordinary Republicanism, save for his hardline views on trade policy, which fly in the face of the GOP's usual free-market economics.
I love these comments because they fly in the face of all the hand-wringing that Western tech companies feel compelled to do when discussing transhumanism or any other long-term future interaction between humans and machines.
For Zeman, smoking may well remain an act of cultural insubordination, flying in the face of present day sports science in the same way that his often obtuse formations fly in the face of the tactical norm.
The end result is that those who feed from this trough are unable to engage in an honest conversation about the policies and behaviors of their benefactors — even when they fly in the face of U.S. interests.
Michael, 65, Maryland (African-American) As an African-American, I celebrate the achievements of anyone who looks like me and whose accomplishments fly in the face of conventional or negative perceptions about what we are capable of.
This development would seem to fly in the face of the sanctions imposed by President Barack Obama in 2014, though those restrictions apply to the financiers and producers of Russian oil and natural gas, not the output.
Ruskin and other critics of Monsanto, Bayer, and other companies that produce GMOs charge that they sell seeds that grow monocultures — one type of cotton, for instance — that fly in the face of the diversity of nature.
When he was working his way through the ranks, Romero's physique and his unrefined striking raised a lot of questions about his gas tank, but his repeated third round finishes seemed to fly in the face of that.
LONDON (Reuters) - To his detractors, including the British government, Salman Butt is an extremist whose views on Islam fly in the face of Britain's values and help foster an atmosphere where young Muslims can be radicalised by militants.
Lombardi's two Stanley Cups with the ultra-talented Los Angeles Kings fly in the face of his desire to build an international team that reflects 1996 hockey instead of the modern-day version that rewards speed and creativity.
Davis's work seems to fly in the face of the conquests of empire by generating fragments of a rich and colorful culture that exists outside these white walls and can never be fully or properly understood within them.
There's something to some of this, but it does tend to fly in the face of the basic reality that politicians perceived as moderate tend to do better and taking unpopular stances on issues tends to hurt candidates.
Tracks like "Gelatinous Cube" and "The Static God" show a band that's become not only more ambitious, but one that's more capable of pushing themselves to write songs that fly in the face of the band's original thesis.
A risky civil war But unleashing a Republican civil war is fraught with risk, has staggering implications for the party itself and appears to fly in the face of the grim precedent of divided parties in American political history.
The stage seems set to leave Americans on their own to travel a potentially bumpy economic road, a scene that would seem to fly in the face of the picket-fence stability and localism bandied about in conservative rhetoric.
China's denials fly in the face of a flurry of leaks that detail the measures the Chinese government is going to in order to target, detain, and reprogram the thoughts of ethnic minorities who have not committed any crimes.
Her comments fly in the face of the official position of House Democratic leadership, which has long been that it's too early to talk about impeachment and that special counsel Robert Mueller must complete his investigation before Democrats can consider impeachment.
Find out how it works An Ohio sheriff is taking a stand in the war on heroin addiction that he said will get at the root of the epidemic, and that seems to fly in the face of standard police practices.
Eggers's proclamation that the Golden Gate is beloved because it's outrageous and weird may fly in the face of just about everyone's attitude about infrastructure, but it also gets at exactly what we should be feeling about bridges and tunnels. Awe.
That would seem to fly in the face of the market view that winter should lead to stronger demand for higher-grade ore, given that the last year the poorer quality grades actually closed the gap on the top-quality ore.
"These new conditions also fly in the face of longstanding City policy that promotes cooperation between local law enforcement and immigrant communities, ensures access to essential city services for all residents, and makes all Chicagoans safer," the lawsuit, filed Monday, states.
Obstructionist cities, like Chicago and others, are preparing illegal alien ID programs, which fly in the face of identification standards called for in the REAL ID act (enacted in response to the 9/11 hijackings) and our voter-integrity laws.
Claims that "the oil industry lacks the technology to recover significant percentages of spilled oil even from calmer, temperate waters," fly in the face of numerous studies and a long history of more than 22019 years of successful Arctic development.
"Again and again, the Trump EPA has tried to push through policies that jeopardize our health and fly in the face of the law -- and again and again, we've taken them to court and won," Underwood said in a statement.
"Again and again, the Trump EPA has tried to push through policies that jeopardize our health and fly in the face of the law — and again and again, we've taken them to court and won," Underwood said in a statement.
Asking them to put aside their egos as they are constantly confronted by reporters asking about the pact is bound to lead to unscripted moments, like Kasich's pair of remarks that seemed to fly in the face of the agreement.
Both artists, in fact, veer toward the unbridled limits of profound insolence, which suggests that their paintings fly in the face of the status quo in a way that few painters in recent years are capable of doing or even comprehending.
But if you want to see where the price of Bitcoin is actually determined in round-the-clock bidding, you have to go to a number of unregulated exchanges that often fly in the face of American and European laws.
But that is hardly as disturbing as the treatment Caravaggio accords Lazarus, whose left arm is apparently stiffened with rigor mortis, and perhaps the right arm, too, even if such an interpretation would fly in the face of the work's premise.
The fact that such a small fraction of those displaced people are even identified for resettlement to the United States or other countries — after undergoing a rigorous vetting process — seems to fly in the face of the politics and news about refugees.
Republican U.S. Representative Mia Love, a daughter of Haitian immigrants, said the comments were "unkind, divisive, elitist, and fly in the face of our nation's values" and called on Trump to apologize to the American people and to the countries he denigrated.
In this space, more than 2,000 people normally excluded from the ball scene came together to make their own queer, beautiful traditions that fly in the face of a society that has branded them with the brush of "failure" in the first place.
"The data will push tracking on U.S. GDP (gross domestic product) lower and really fly in the face of the strong data story that we have seen over the last month," said Gennadiy Goldberg, interest rate strategist, at TD Securities in New York.
The tweets fly in the face of the statement issued on Wednesday night which had appeared as an attempt by Trump's staff to tamp down the raging political storm over Russia which has resulted in Trump's worst week in office so far.
A rollback of transgender protections in health care would fly in the face of the medical community, which has issued numerous official statements deeming transition-related care "safe, effective and necessary," said Branstetter, the spokeswoman for the National Center for Transgender Equality.
The directing team of Géraldine Gaston, Alexis Magaud, Flora Andrivon, Maël Berreur, and Soline Bejuy have something special in their ability to a story while incorporate interesting visual elements that fly in the face of everything science has taught us about nature.
For some longtime fans, that might fly in the face of the company's "never settle" mantra, but at this point in the smartphone game, it probably makes the most sense for a company of OnePlus' size to focus on a single model.
Washington (CNN)Secretary of State Mike Pompeo insisted Thursday that there has been no contradiction in the shifting US strategy in Syria or confusion about it -- claims that fly in the face of shocked responses from allies in the Middle East and beyond.
His statements appear to fly in the face of the longstanding assumption underlying U.S. foreign policy -- that supporting allies financially, diplomatically and militarily promotes a global system of unfettered free trade, democracy and stability that is overwhelmingly in the national interests of the United States.
"Any story claiming that John McMillon was beaten by correction officers before his death would fly in the face of the Washington County medical examiner's findings, as well as the preliminary results of the investigation by the department's Office of Special Investigations," Mr. Mailey said.
"The administration's actions fly in the face of the millions of Americans who have rallied, marched, and called to support healthcare access, including a woman's constitutional right to access abortion care," read a NARAL Pro-Choice America press release about Trump's first 8.74 days.
Mr. Greenberg's assertions that he left details of the two transactions to other A.I.G. executives fly in the face of his reputation "for being a detail-oriented micro manager," said David Schiff, a former insurance analyst who followed A.I.G. stock in the later Greenberg years.
This year's marches fly in the face of a vice president who, the president joked, would like to hang all gay people; of the ongoing use of conversion therapies; of the continued executions of gay people in Iran and in Islamic State-controlled territories.
Unless Congress jettisons these artificial limitations on defense spending — limitations which fly in the face of increasing global demands on our armed forces — it will be virtually impossible to provide the sustainable, predictable funding needed to rebuild our military and support the National Defense Strategy.
As I've pointed out elsewhere, a decision in the ACLU's favor in Harris Funeral Homes wouldn't merely fly in the face of the public meaning of federal employment law and its legislative history, undermining the ability of Americans to rely on what the law says.
In the years since, and especially in recent months, governments in Italy, the U.S., Hungary and elsewhere have adopted tough anti-migrant policies that fly in the face of Francis&apos oft-repeated call for governments to open their hearts and doors to those in need.
Acts of violence anywhere fly in the face of this principle, but ones in houses of worship do so even more heinously because they attempt to threaten the very reason worshipers have gathered -- to share the two-fold love they feel called to embody and express.
Chancellor Philip Hammond wrote a letter to U.K. lawmakers on Wednesday to undo the changes proposed just a week ago in the U.K. government's annual Spring Budget, after a torrent of protesters argued that the hike would fly in the face of a core manifesto commitment.
The response stuck with me because it simultaneously encapsulated the (admittedly attractive) idea that we should always squeeze tangible payoffs from the time we have, and seemed to fly in the face of the (also attractive!) notion of being open to and present in the moment.
While the group's less scientific views alone would seem to fly in the face of much of Google's cutting-edge, scientifically grounded work, the inclusion of a figure openly dedicated to fighting against the rights of the transgender community is causing the company's latest culture conflagration.
French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen has vowed to halt free education for the children of "illegal immigrants," once again putting herself at the center of controversy and inviting criticism that her harsh remarks fly in the face of the French republic's core values.
It's a risky thing to deliberately fly in the face of digital culture and insist on the value of manual artistry and that which cannot be shared or liked en masse, especially at a time when fashion seems to measure its worth by numbers of followers.
He has also signaled a willingness to discuss items on Mr. Putin's agenda that fly in the face of American policy and alarm European allies, including the lifting of sanctions on Moscow, the recognition of Russia's annexation of Crimea and halting NATO's military exercises in the Baltics.
"Pai's decisions fly in the face of the F.C.C.'s core mission to ensure that broadcasters using the public airwaves adhere to the principles of locality, diversity and competition," Christopher Ruddy, chief executive of Newsmax, wrote in an op-ed article in The Washington Post this week.
"Because outgoing administrations are no longer accountable to the voters, they are much more prone to issue midnight regulations that fly in the face of the electoral mandate the voters just gave the new, incoming administration," said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte before the vote.
Not only did the practice seem to be an end-run around the city's own rule on solitary confinement, these critics said, it seemed to fly in the face of the plan to close Rikers Island and move inmates closer to their families and to legal services.
Putin likely understands that when it comes to Trump, the fourth American president since Putin's ascension as Russia's top leader, flattery pays off — and that Trump, as recent events show, can be persuaded to agree to things that fly in the face of his advisers' counsel.
The real estate magnate also appeared to equate all Muslims who seek to come to the United States with the perpetrators of recent terror attacks -- another claim that seems to fly in the face of the evidence about a community that has been present in the U.S. for decades.
He continues to promote a message and policies that often fly in the face of Republican orthodoxy, but still gets to have that coveted "R" next to his name on the ballot in all those red states where running as anything other than a Republican is political suicide.
And Trump's contention that the meeting was just run-of-the-mill appears to fly in the face of regular campaign practice as well as comments by his nominee for FBI director, Christopher Wray, Wednesday that any political campaign that got approached by Russia should call the bureau.
Assuming it will do so again in the near future, Mr. Trump's decision to decertify Iran on his own would fly in the face of the IAEA's considered, scientific and professional assessment - not that he has shown much care in the past for the views of other international bodies.
Instead of continuing to fork over millions of American dollars in exchange for policy outcomes that everyone agrees fly in the face of our national interests, we'll put pressure on the side that deserves it rather than the side that some people think is best-equipped to handle it.
In addition, the suggestion that the immigration courts could be done away with altogether would likely fly in the face of the Constitution and a host of domestic and international laws that bestow rights on everyone in the US and crossing the border, regardless of whether they are citizens.
An EPA ban would fly in the face of the judgements of more than 100 countries — including Canada, the U.K., Japan and Australia — that have reviewed the science and allowed farmers to use the product on more than 85033 different crops, including corn, citrus, grapes, soybeans and wheat.
In a move that appears to fly in the face of the Home Office's official anti-drug reform mantra, both Durham and Avon & Somerset Police forces have for several months been operating "diversion" schemes which have resulted in scores of drug users avoiding court, jail, and a criminal record.
Powell's courage in not bending to President Trump's bullying stands in sharp contrast to that of the Republican controlled Senate, which has hardly covered itself in glory by failing to resist Trump's pursuit of economic policies that fly in the face of long established Republican Party economic principles.
This seems to fly in the face of a logical assumption: that services like Netflix, Hulu, and HBO Now, which allow potential moviegoers to stream movies at home rather than spend money on tickets and go to the theater to see them, would cut into the theater business.
"We have come a long way in how we understand and talk about HIV as a nation, and comments like those made by Georgia State Representative Betty Price fly in the face of that progress, and of basic decency," the group's president, Sarah Kate Ellis, said in a written statement.
MORE TOP STORIES: 'Every day I feel like I put body armor on': Nikki Haley Trump to offer U.S. farmers billions to ease trade pain The decision also appeared to fly in the face of recent comments from Albayrak, who said over the weekend he would not fight with the markets.
But then I think of Trump, whose Muslim ban would fly in the face of the Constitution, whose threats to the press strike me as constitutionally hostile, whose advancement of torture would seem to me constitutionally questionable (to say nothing of its legality in the face of international norms and treaties).
The New York archdiocese is essentially allowing Father Timone to continue serving as a priest because of a bureaucratic technicality — a position that seems to fly in the face of the pledge by Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, the archbishop of the New York Archdiocese, to aggressively handle sexual abuse accusations.
It would also fly in the face of recommendations for more troops from the State Department, which is seeking to stabilize Mr. Ghani's government, and the nation's spy agencies, which rely on the military for security to carry out their covert missions inside Afghanistan and across the border in Pakistan.
The projects, coupled with perhaps the most severe water shortages the region has ever seen, have reignited a debate about whether 20th-century solutions can address the challenges of a 21st-century drought, with a growing chorus of prominent former officials saying the plans fly in the face of a new climate reality.
"Given the previous statements you've made that fly in the face of explicit scientific evidence and the findings of your own [Department of Defense] and Director of National Intelligence, we have serious concerns about any effort to construct a secret committee to question the basic scientific fact of climate change," the lawmakers wrote.
"Given the previous statements you've made that fly in the face of explicit scientific evidence and the findings of your own [Department of Defense] and Director of National Intelligence, we have serious concerns about any effort to construct a secret committee to question the basic scientific fact of climate change," the lawmakers wrote.
Israel's former Prime Minister Ehud Barak bets big on emergency app Reporty The Israeli government's decision to reverse math and English learning requirements for the country's ultra-Orthodox schools could deal a serious blow to Israel's vital technology industry and seems to fly in the face of the wishes of the ultra-Orthodox community itself.
But it soon becomes clear that following Operation: Cinder requires Iden to do things that fly in the face of the peace and order she's always felt the Empire stood for, and as the game progresses she finds herself torn between the orders of her father and her own internal sense of right and wrong.
In two letters sent to the president this week, the incredulous lawmakers urged Trump to reconsider the council -- which is being likened to a similar attempt by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to craft a "red team, blue team" approach to delegitimize climate science -- saying it would fly in the face of scientific evidence.
"In the ten months that Donald Trump has been president, his administration has launched unprecedented attacks on the Renewable Fuel Standard — attacks that fly in the face of promises Trump made as a candidate to our nation's farmers that he would champion the [Renewable Fuel Standard] program if elected," Duckworth said in a statement.
In two letters sent to the president this week, the incredulous lawmakers urged Trump to reconsider the council — which is being likened to a similar attempt by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to craft a "red team, blue team" approach to delegitimize climate science — saying it would fly in the face of scientific evidence.
WASHINGTON — In his State of the Union address, President Trump announced a bold plan to end the scourge of H.I.V. by 2030, a promise that seemed to fly in the face of two years of policies and proposals that go in the opposite direction and could undermine progress against the virus that causes AIDS.
"We have come a long way in how we understand and talk about HIV as a nation, and comments like those made by Georgia State Representative Betty Price fly in the face of that progress, and of basic decency," said Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of the LGBT media monitoring group GLAAD, in an emailed statement.
Sometimes the media enthusiasm around these places, while perfectly understandable, can seem to fly in the face of observable reality—such as the fact that despite the recent proliferation of nostalgic slice shops like F&F Pizzeria, Upside Pizza, and Norm's Pizza, the city is still home to hundreds of pizza shops, many of them very good.
But the controlled bursts of raw energy bounding through Paradise fly in the face of despair, reflecting the natural-born, scuffed and scruffy resistance of young artists to the reactionary politics foisted upon them (as well as the culture wars to come), refusing to be stunned into silence, doing everything they could to be seen and heard.
Her remarks "fly in the face of all the evidence gathered by the UN, and the testimony our own teams have heard from countless survivors," said George Graham, director of humanitarian advocacy at Save the Children Gambia has argued it is every country's duty under the convention to prevent a genocide from taking place, or to punish those responsible.
"The reactions of people who are offended by Gary's presence at the Oscars, first of all, don't reflect the overwhelming support from California voters who passed these reforms, don't reflect the judgment of the court that found he was no longer a threat to public safety and fly in the face of opportunities for reform, rehabilitation and redemption," Romano said.
Now, workers there say there have been routine layoffs, low pay, and insensitive comments from the CEO that seem to fly in the face of the company's values—Jezebel reports that Matt Kaness, who took over as CEO in 2015, told employees in a meeting that plus-size models should appear less on Modcloth because they aren't "aspirational" (Kaness denies saying this).
Most businesses feel that failing to accept these major card brands is not a competitive option so they continue accepting electronic payments even though the costs are squeezing their business, and the inflexible acceptance rules fly in the face of free market enterprise, while also inviting more fraud into the payment system by favoring the less secure and efficient signature card brands.
" Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia and an advocate for congressional prerogative on matters of war, said the veto was "part of an alarming pattern of Trump turning a blind eye to Saudi Arabia's actions that fly in the face of American values, like the murder of journalist and Virginia resident Jamal Khashoggi and the jailing of women's right activists.
Allowing a monopoly on trading of a security on a single exchange with a single-market participant, a risk-derived spread, suspended unlisted trading privileges (UTPs) and dark pools may appear to fly in the face of Reg NMS and the recent market structure trend, but I do not believe there is a single-market structure that works for all tradable products.
But behind the scenes, many current and former employees paint a picture of dysfunction and hypocrisy, with clashes between Agrawal and key members of her team, employment policies that seem to fly in the face of the company's women-first messaging, and an increasingly volatile work environment that's led many of those who were instrumental in creating the brand to tender their resignations.
"The arbitrary detention of political opposition leaders and their supporters, the recent ban on live media coverage of opposition activities and the violent disruption of peaceful opposition gatherings in the lead-up to and since Election Day not only violate Uganda's own Constitution but also fly in the face of its regional and international human rights obligations," said Muthoni Wanyeki, Amnesty International's director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes.
Far-right French politician Marine Le Pen goes after free education for children of "illegal immigrants" Far-right French politician Marine Le Pen goes after free education for children of "illegal immigrants" French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen has vowed to halt free education for the children of "illegal immigrants," once again putting herself at the center of controversy and inviting criticism that her harsh remarks fly in the face of the French republic's core values.
And oddly, its success in the States has come by embracing strongly features that fly in the face of American platforms but are central to Chinese social media: It aggressively mines user data, its videos require sound, it is largely oriented around a central recommendation algorithm instead of a network of friends and family, it emphasizes memes and challenges over individual influencers, and it continues to add addictive features to make it impossible to avoid bingeing as Silicon Valley offers dubious tools to curb screentime.
Interestingly, a Reuters poll released toward the end of the year implied that the company's reputation didn't take too big a hit in the U.S. New numbers from Harris Poll seem to fly in the face of that sentiment, with the company taking a major hit in its 2017 Reputation Quotient Ratings report, as the South Korean Galaxy-maker dropped a staggering 42 places from last year, from the No. 7 slot to a much more dismal 49 — just ahead of the United States Postal Service.
Despite these benefits, in the ten months that Donald 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 has been president, his administration has launched unprecedented attacks on the program - attacks that fly in the face of promises Trump made as a candidate to our nation's farmers that he would champion the RFS program if elected.
Over the many years that the 'world class' debate has been raging, criteria have ranged from a player's club contributions to his international performances, or an ideal combination of both; their performances at major tournaments or their number of career trophies, regardless of performance; their statistical worth in terms of goals, assists, clean sheets and the like, or their imperceptible ability to fly in the face of statistics and still be great; their capabilities at set pieces, their close control, their passing range, their chance creation, their discipline; the worth of their endorsements, the value of their image rights, their estimated transfer costs; the number of FIFA covers they have been on, and how often they appear in global advertising campaigns selling cologne, or dietary supplements, or nutritional suppositories, or designer pants.

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