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604 Sentences With "granted that"

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

I had taken for granted that people would be supportive.
Some of the women interviewed took for granted that Mrs.
Granted, that probably rules most of our eukaryote readers out.
Mr. Baroni granted that the governor had not been displeased.
It's kind of taken for granted that people die without consequences.
It is taken for granted that he is an unusual candidate.
Republicans must not take for granted that everyone likes tax cuts.
Investors take for granted that the Federal Reserve controls interest rates.
Everyone took it for granted that the taps would keep running.
" Daniels granted that there was "a lot of wisdom in those words.
And on Wednesday, the justices granted that request in a brief order.
I definitely took for granted that she would be with me forever.
Sometimes I take for granted that some people have fears with cars.
Most existing research takes for granted that billions of people will die.
I feel that we take for granted that human beings are sacred.
Governments took it for granted that managing economic demand was their responsibility.
And he's taking it for granted that women seeking abortions deserve it.
Granted, that time wasn't necessarily happier, even if it was more innocent.
The Senate granted that power to the President by acquitting him. Rep.
I don&apost take for granted that my family is financially stable.
They just take it for granted that Dad is in a band.
Before that, I'd taken for granted that my parents would remain protected.
And if voters take it for granted that he will, he might not.
Granted, that argument would probably fail, but you could still totally make it.
The High Court granted that declaration, which was appealed by Mr Y's solicitor.
I took for granted that the Puerto Rico I knew would always exist.
The president granted that outside experts disputed the casualty numbers as too low.
No one takes for granted that he will lose next year's presidential election.
So many freedoms we take for granted that we did not have then.
Beijing was granted that post on Friday, after the decision to list Pakistan.
Waivers were granted that allowed banks to continue doing certain types of business.
I think we should not take it for granted that consciousness will continue.
I don't want to take for granted that there's anything natural about it.
What have they taken for granted that might not, after all, be true?
Granted, that ride was on the relatively calm streets of Mountain View, Calif.
It's taken for granted that such a thing as that is beneath contempt.
People sort of took for granted that the Affordable Care Act was lost already.
TechCrunch requested an interview with Yang, but has yet to be granted that request.
And granted, that recovery was the weakest in American post-World War II history.
Toby took it for granted that he had a lock on the robber part.
Some people may have taken for granted that I'd been around for a while.
I took it for granted that my mother could, and did, have it all.
They simply take it for granted that it's part of a designer's job today.
"Every voter who wants to vote will be granted that opportunity," DeWine said Monday.
Granted, that took eleven years, but it was eleven years of slow, incremental prosperity.
But we can't take it for granted that governments will do the right thing.
It's widely taken for granted that matters of principle aren't weighing on him here.
Last year, only 7,000 had been granted that privilege, compared with 40,000 in Canada.
It was simply there, and I took for granted that it would be there forever.
With no renewal granted, that four-month extension lapses at the end of this month.
Granted that Char's experience was nowhere as concerning (or legally questionable) as the United incident.
I never really took it for granted that I would be able to write this.
Clinton cannot take for granted that women will cast their votes based on shared anatomy.
It's taken for granted that everyone knows how to do it and what it is.
It shouldn't be taken for granted that the internet will remain an equal playing field.
Now that Sony has granted that wish, it can get to work on the rest.
"Granted that boy has remained a dear friend of mine since 7th grade," she wrote.
Many people take it for granted that white men should be in charge, studies show.
Granted that her shell was conventionally beautiful, what was living in there was quite strange.
Today, we take for granted that our computers, smartphones and tablets are nearly always active.
In April, the court granted that request, putting the lawsuit on hold for 22.5 days.
"We can't take for granted that there's just one way to intelligence," Mr. Amodio said.
It is taken for granted that poor children have no future, that they are disposable.
"There are lots of rights that we take for granted that didn't exist," he said.
Other people may take it for granted that they have a face like a superhero's.
We just take certain things for grantedthat of course straight men are into lesbian porn.
We can't take for granted that things are going to work out toward the public good.
For years we took for granted that a more "connected" world would be a harmonious one.
Today, we take it for granted that humans are hardwired to pursue power, pleasure, and profit.
"The things you take for granted that will happen automatically no longer occur," Dr. Grubb says.
On May 31st, the judge, Michael Stelzer of Missouri Circuit Court in St Louis, granted that.
In December, Justice Manuel J. Mendez of State Supreme Court granted that request from Mr. Schneiderman.
Back then governments took it for granted that it was their responsibility to pep up demand.
Granted that cost is concentrated in one event, rather than spread out over a pet's lifetime.
"Some people may have taken for granted that I'd been around for a while," he continued.
If granted, that means the witnesses' testimony couldn't be used against them in later court cases.
Shouldn't it just be taken for granted that I would be studying, or going to work?
We take it for granted that we can control when and how we want to reproduce.
Mr. Trump's comments, she said, seemed to be taking for granted that mass shootings would continue.
He's always taken for granted that it will always be there, and now, it's really wanting.
Suddenly, recipients got to experience what US citizens take for grantedthat to excel is good.
It's a long season, and you can't take for granted that you're going to be there.
Granted, that crash course is filtered through the sensibilities of Saturday Night Live alums and Documentary Now!
And if it&aposs -- there are grounds for them to seek asylum here, they&aposre granted that.
You hear a lot of people say I took for granted that these rights would be safe.
Granted that kind of immunity, insurers felt far more willing to accuse their own customers of crimes.
All of this takes for granted that humans should aim to spread life elsewhere in the universe.
They take for granted that they have an ethical and intellectual superiority that entitles them to govern.
It is now more or less taken for granted that solar panels are getting cheaper and cheaper.
A lot of people, myself included, more or less took it for granted that Clinton would win.
Democrats don't take for granted that Sessions will have Congress's back, especially since he recommended Comey's dismissal.
Just think about all security failures you now take for granted that once would have been unthinkable.
"Once you think you know what you're doing, you take for granted that you're good," Andrews says.
They took for granted that Trump might care about access to birth control for low-income women.
It used to be taken for granted that musicians made music, actors acted, and chefs made food.
Trump asked the Supreme Court to stay that decision, and the justices granted that stay on Monday.
We take it for granted that President Trump says demonstrably false things on any number of topics.
We take it for granted that gun-control groups have to define their base by moral outrage.
In the future, we will take for granted that I am a feminist, Latina, queer, and progressive.
Some might take for granted that every polling site is accessible, but that's not always the case.
She knew President Lincoln from before his White House days, and he granted that young nurse's wish.
"I am taking it for granted that it won't happen, it is just government propaganda," he has said.
And in fact, it was soon taken for granted that a consequence of cloning was an early grave.
I was naive and took it for granted that I could earn money playing with this huge industry.
That may sound crazy, if you take it as granted that our world must be divided into nations.
"Many journalists take for granted that self-reported behaviors are the same as actual behaviors," Levy Paluck writes.
But the good parts of social media have become so taken for granted that we've stopped praising them.
Other cases granted that day were argued and decided by the end of the last term in June.
And then, it's an assumption that we take for granted that your own country will have your back.
"I don't take it for granted that people are talking about the movie 20 years later," Stiles said.
The court granted that request, saying that allowing the sale created more of a risk than stopping it.
In America, we take it for granted that our presidents can be ridiculed to their faces with impunity.
The Wade children did not take it for granted that they would do so well with their admissions.
It's so commonplace that most people seem to take for granted that it's the best option for them.
There's no reason to take for granted that most countries in Europe would remain open, pro-Western democracies.
"We've long taken for granted that norms and practice were enough to mitigate overreaches of power," Chenoweth says.
Varadkar said, however, that Ireland was "not taking for granted" that corporate tax receipts would continue to exceed expectations.
We live day to day taking for granted that our relatives are safe, and we can call our mother.
Four days later, fellow beauty YouTuber Tati Westbrook granted that wish, but likely not in the way Charles envisioned.
We take for granted that you can send images, links, and videos on Messenger, but what if you… couldn't?
Are we all just taking it for granted that an actual folding phone exists and will ship next month?
We are so used to taking for granted that liberalism is an age-old and venerable Anglo-American tradition.
A judge in L.A. County granted that request earlier this week ... and now Telfair must steer clear of Samantha.
In June, the government filed an unusual petition, rarely granted, that would allow it to circumvent a trial altogether.
Granted, that is less than one half of the fraction in its rosy original projections, but still somewhat startling.
It's taken for granted that the patient would leave with heart medication and a referral to a cardiac specialist.
A Leadership Vacuum We cannot take for granted that the internet will continue its trajectory of growth and expansion.
Given the confusion, we should not take for granted that traditional U.S. allies will continue to stand with us.
"They took it for granted that he was a sitting duck," said Tony Pua, an opposition member of Parliament.
Over 20 years on, it's taken for granted that Tokyo has the look of a cyberpunk or anime film.
Granted, that comes with "60+" channels, more than either Sling or Vue, which begin at 31 and 47, respectively.
One injury and withdrawal later and he has been granted that in the number ten ranked Chan Sung Jung.
Before Snapchat, the industry took for granted that everything users posted to the internet should remain there by default.
All six had applied for asylum, though Mr. Hartwig did not say if they had been granted that status.
Farage refused to say who he was meeting there, and most now take for granted that it was Assange.
A simple example would be: Savvy political reporters took it for granted that all candidates would be risk-averse.
Professional athletes, of course, are not granted that luxury, as New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is reminding us.
Santiago granted that the gangs of El Salvador were violent, but theirs was a violence of a different nature.
Granted that we've often had excellent political leadership; this is not the only factor to take into account, however.
Granted, that Cam Ward extension looks iffy, and looks more like a loyalty move than a defensible hockey decision.
It is, at this point, taken for granted that congressional Republicans will protect their co-partisan at any cost.
But even if it felt inconsequential at the time, I don't take for granted that I had a choice.
It's taken for granted that people are various creatures, and that such variety is cause for celebration, not censure.
Publishers and broadcasters should take it for granted that Facebook and Twitter are not disposed to act against disinformation.
It's often said our electricity is so taken for granted that we believe it comes from the light switch.
"You sort of take for granted that he, like Biden, are institutional figures for very different reasons," Ceraso said.
By now, diplomats from the North simply take it for granted that someone else will pay their way, Lee said.
While we might easily take Marquita's right to defend herself for granted, that issue is on the ballot this November.
"We shouldn't take for granted that because they have lived as long as they have they will survive," Lerner says.
Though it is now largely taken for granted that "women's rights are human rights," this was not always the case.
People didn't take it for granted that if you're a high school dropout, there must be something wrong with you.
Examiners work fast, creating "an environment where patents may be granted that do not fully meet patentability standards," GAO found.
We take it for granted that we can now call or Snap or DM anybody whenever the hell we want.
"We take for granted that the Germans of the 1930s were quite different from ourselves," our reviewer, Timothy Snyder, wrote.
Another bigger problem is that many journalists take for granted that self-reported behaviors are the same as actual behaviors.
In April, a judge granted that request, finding eBay's arbitration clause to have a "broad" scope that covers the claims.
In April, a judge granted that request, finding eBay's arbitration clause to have a "broad" scope that covers the claims.
Granted, that sounds a bit strong in a discussion about a clothing brand, but psychologically it all plays a role.
Now, there's no reason to take for granted that Rubio would even beat Trump in a one-on-one matchup.
It used to be taken for granted that raising the minimum wage would lead to a reduction in low-wage jobs.
So it was kind of taken for granted that it was not happening at Pouzza, but I guess we were wrong.
And we take this for granted that there's an ability for us to transact securely end-to-end on the internet.
Hull's great-great-grandfather and the thousands of soldiers who lie around him in Poplar Grove recently were granted that respect.
It's easy to take for granted that English is the international language of commerce and politics when it's your mother tongue.
Insured firms, however, cannot take for granted that their traditional coverage or even their cyber policies will cover all cyber risks.
"There are little things we take for granted that we see all the time or we've grown up seeing," Jarrell said.
While we've come to take it for granted that Trump is controversial and unpopular, this is dramatically outside the historical norm.
There are so many things to do that we can't take for granted that kids are just going to play hockey.
"Because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States," she said.
Granted, that doesn't exactly make them less scary, but for the moment, this aspect of Judgment Day seems very far away.
Many take for granted that this is just the way things are on the south and west sides of the city.
Today, she is cancer-free but Sherry has said that she doesn't take for granted that the cancer could come back.
For me, "hoejabi" symbolizes the way that Muslim women are never granted that middle ground — the word itself is a bridge.
"People shouldn't take it for granted that there is time to connect with them later, particularly older family members," Kaminski said.
We take for granted that we can send out one email and a follow-up text to every single crew member.
Granted, that description pretty much only fits Zootopia, but it's still surprising to see how well the movie pulls it off.
Because I felt, with Obama in the White House, I could just take for granted that good people were in charge.
"It's not just because there's an offer of a lower sentence or release that they will be granted that," said Sen.
What makes me a nigger is that it is not taken for granted that my out-going impulse is my right.
They commanded armies, enforced royal decrees, and took it for granted that the rulers who appointed them could claim their loyalty.
We're taking for granted that presidents would not want to use the veto, but some clearly relish their fights against Congress.
In medicine, it is taken for granted that all people born before 25 had measles, whether they remember it or not.
Still, Mactaggart granted that some violations of the law might be hard to detect in the first place, let alone police.
"I can't think of any waiver that has been granted that actually constrained the eligibility of a mandatory group," Mann said.
As humans, we take it for granted that we can track and predict the trajectory an object moving through time and space.
Negotiators in Brussels are also keen to remind Britons that they cannot take for granted that negotiations will follow a predictable course.
To ensure that no stone is left unturned, we have granted that request and anticipate a report by the end of May.
We have come to take for granted that there is some responsible, capable institution or individual to intervene and save the day.
"Nevertheless, developments in corporate debt bear close scrutiny because we cannot take for granted that it will stay this way," Brazier added.
"We can't take it for granted that TPP is dead yet, and we certainly can't say that Trump killed it," Brune said.
Granted that it will take time for the Department of Education to vet applications, an announcement should be expected sometime this year.
It's taken for granted that the moral and philosophical rubrics of conservatism can be shed in pursuit of the basest immediate goals.
They take for granted that groups and communities contribute to violent dynamics between individuals, and that they can also help change them.
He had been granted that release even though security forces knew that Herman had been in contact with extremist elements in prison.
" But one neighbor, Beth Joy Papaleo, put it bluntly: "We took it for granted that New York would always be New York.
Most of us take it for granted that we have a right to quit our current job and find a new one.
"Nevertheless, developments in corporate debt bear close scrutiny because we cannot take for granted that it will stay this way," Brazier said.
"He could have granted that pardon months ago," Marie-Jane Ody, the vice president of a union representing magistrates, told French radio.
Jane Jacobs wrote "Death and Life" at a time when it was taken for granted that American cities were riddled with cancer.
"Toy specialists used to take for granted that the holiday season was easy money, but now it's a knife fight," he said.
Many of us take for granted that other investors will remember you simply because you have co-invested with them in the past.
He asked the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to look into its validity, and in early September, the USPTO granted that request.
The report added that Autostrade granted that there was no danger unless the strength of the tie-rods went down by 50 percent.
But he cannot take for granted that he would be the one to profit from the additional powers that the reforms would confer.
The lawyers asked the District of Columbia Court of Appeals to dismiss the case, and the court granted that request on Wednesday afternoon.
Fine, granted, that fire might, theoretically, in the long run, and/or in the wrong, might eventually become some kind of a threat.
"However, product developers should not take it for granted that their customers won't expose their devices to uncontrolled environments such as hotel rooms."
Earlier this week Lopez Obrador said he would demand a vote-by-vote recount in the state but authorities have not granted that.
Play your cards right, and you could come into a bit of luck, granted that you stay humble and keep a cool head.
Instead, these regulatory battles are a product of an entrenched monopoly's taking for granted that a more efficient, more responsive service might emerge.
Since inside the bubble it's already taken for granted that "the Clintons" are crooks, the bar for scandal exploitation is set impossibly high.
The nuance that consumers take for grantedthat all tech companies are not created equally  — is easy for media and policymakers to overlook.
Gergel granted that pause, but said that the same logic means BOEM should be prohibited from granting any permits until the government reopens.
"I took it for granted that you could just walk up to someone and say 'hi' and gauge their facial expression," she explained.
When most of us think of law, we think of statutes passed by Congress, and we take for granted that they are public.
Gergel granted that pause but said that the same logic means BOEM should be prohibited from granting any permits until the government reopens.
It can be taken for granted that their perception of machines, and thus of the world itself, differs a lot from our own.
Granted, that planet orbits much closer to its star than Mercury orbits the Sun, so it's probably way too toasty to support life.
Logic, inference, circumstantial evidence — the hunger for the tape takes for granted that the other side will reject these things out of hand.
I've taken for granted that we have clean air to breathe in cities, relatively speaking, and most people have access to clean water.
Theories of democracy, from the ancient Greeks through the Enlightenment to today, take for granted that the world around us yields to understanding.
In the past, despite our differences, we could at least take for granted that all participants in the political process were human beings.
Civics Often we take for granted that the United States is a democracy, and that democracy is a form of government worth celebrating.
Michael Ortiz, 30, a New York tea distributor, said he had taken for granted that smoking marijuana would be O.K. with his girlfriend.
In short, political gerrymandering — in which it was taken for granted that Democrats sought an advantage — helped maximize the voice of African Americans.
The G-spot has become so well known that most people take for granted that it's a distinct part of female genital anatomy.
In the aftermath, its swiftly installed Republican state government has gone to great lengths to punish and alter the courts that granted that right.
Mr Chu is "not at all" convinced by official financial projections, which, he says, take for granted that land prices will continue to rise.
Even though women are half the population, we live in a world where it's taken for granted that the male perspective should be centered.
He urged Americans not to take it for granted that someone else was going to ensure that their computer security was up to snuff.
Granted, that comment was about wiretapping Merkel, not Trump or Trump Tower, but it was still somewhat of a rhetorical win for team Trump.
Aniara, in contrast, presents a possible flipside, in which humans take for granted that our wellbeing is deeply rooted in our proximity to Earth.
In our Mentor Text edition on audience, we discuss how much a writer can take for granted that his or her audience will know.
It is because identities and values aren't taken for granted that acts of conspicuous consumption (or, in Morris's case, conspicuous destruction) become so appealing.
"My daughters, and all our sons and daughters, now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States," she said.
Many younger progressives will take it for granted that moral people are citizens of the world, equating nationalism and patriotism with racism and fascism.
These are young women who have grown up in Europe, where it is taken for granted that women can control much about their lives.
First off, we all seem to take it for granted that it's okay to talk about taxpayers along imaginary and often derogatory "class" lines.
The FAA granted that exemption in March 2016, allowing Apple to "operate an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) to conduct data collection, photography, and videography".
Because the anchors, candidates and audience took for granted that the answers to both were yes, the seven-hour long event was refreshingly substantive.
I have never and never would take for granted that because of my gender or my race, that people will naturally come to me.
Granted, that would have required a tricky 15-letter entry fill down the center, but I like to see constructors think big on Fridays.
Mainstream Democratic Party politicians, in other words, are beginning to take for granted that their constituents will embrace the more institutional understanding of racism.
And I get to talk about it because I don't take for granted that I haven't looked like a woman for a very long time.
Granted, that fight lasted 12 rounds and 36 minutes, Mayweather's total purse was a whopping $32 million and he won the bout by unanimous decision.
Our city is pretty poor, so I guess I just took for granted that I would always live approximate to poverty, if not IN poverty.
"A lot of people take for granted that art surrounds them all the time, whether it's architecture or the music you listen to," Selekman said.
Granted, that is dearer than in the recent past, but it is well below the average coupon of 3.4% on its existing stock of debt.
We take norms so for granted that we just can't believe the norms he's violating, because we've taken them for granted in every other presidency.
Brinkman said it never occurred to her that Ferraro was unusual; she took for granted that it was normal for women to participate in politics.
But he does not take for granted that on any day, a single tweet could upend his world, just like it did two years ago.
As you can imagine, Patagonia insists the beer meisters should never have been granted that right, because its been using the name since the '60s.
But most agree that people need to be made aware of the issue rather than taking for granted that nothing bad will happen to them.
Aisha had two brothers and a sister, and she took it for granted that each member of the family would look out for the others.
This was the same trial in which federal prosecutors motioned – and were grantedthat no mention of Fast and Furious be allowed during the trial.
McConnell said he "took for granted" that House Democrats would be able to pass the resolution condemning anti-Semitism following controversial remarks by freshman Rep.
The scene makes your jaw drop—and it works because it takes for granted that stories like this are a common part of women's lives.
" He assumed that there had been "derogatory information" in Hadid's record, he said, because "there is usually a negative reason why you're not granted that.
You've been brought up to take it for granted that others will always try their luck, that it's your own responsibility to mitigate the consequences.
The guy kept talking about boys he wanted to bring home, but took it for granted that any gender-nonconforming femme was just a friend.
"He (Jager) has emerged as the strongest steeplechaser this season, and we no longer take it for granted (that the gold is ours)," said Kirwa.
But that's in part because we take for granted that presidents will successfully manage situations before they boil over and become enormous life-threatening crises.
That principle is now taken so much for granted that many French people were shocked to learn that Americans can simply cut some children off.
To ensure that no stone is left unturned, the Board subcommittee has granted that request and we anticipate the report by the end of May.
"It woke up women out of their slumber, those of us, even me, who took it for granted that could never happen," Ms. Senior said.
Today, we take for granted that professors, and employers, cannot act as Mr. Walcott did and that if they do, there will be serious consequences.
"Sometimes with children, we take for granted that they're not able to process a certain level of depth, but I think they are," she said.
Contemporary YA is a launching point for major franchises because, in a post- Harry Potter world, it is taken for granted that YA is universal.
But if we do take it for granted that Mueller is trying to flip Manafort, several other questions then arise about the special counsel's strategy.
"We live in a country where there's large crocodiles, and people take for granted that when you go into a river that you're safe," he said.
I have really low confidence in my math abilities, so I took for granted that the combinations that he asked me for added up to $48.
Many people take for granted that nobody is peering into their home through their internet-connected cameras, but that's not an assumption that's safe to make.
American policymakers—like their U.K. and EU counterparts—have taken for granted that an open global economy implies (and even requires) the mass migration of people.
This modulation, some say, was a natural side effect of the #MeToo movement, which nearly allowed us to take for granted that women would speak out.
He appeared to take for granted that the PD would never consider hooking up with 5-Star, with which it has traditionally had angry, raw relations.
It's now taken for granted that when you write a phrase in alternating lowercase/uppercase type, you're referencing this meme and mocking an idea/thing/person.
It's easy to take for granted that iPads come with cameras (on the front and back), but back in the day $499 got you zero shooters.
"Over the 19 years before my accident, I had really taken it for granted that I can have so much control over my hand," said Burkhart.
They paid for my education, and I do not for one minute take for granted that I was able to start my adult life without debt.
Granted, that fine is expected to exceed RBS's 3 billion pounds in provisions, making it likely the bank will once again report a full-year loss.
Truevine all but takes for granted that albino black men in early-twentieth-century America were titillating, without much delving into why that might have been.
We take it for granted that the closet and getting dressed in the morning is always gonna be a thing, it's always gonna be a hassle.
She tells Broadly that victims being stripped of anonymity happens quite often—sometimes during pretrial and even when a victim has previously been granted that right.
Yet it can be taken for granted that a clutch of parties supported by the government in Beijing will continue to dominate Hong Kong's political system.
"What this recent event has proven is that you can't take for granted that you know what the fight is going to look like," Renken said.
"My daughter and her generation, and generations after that, they take for granted that they're going to do whatever is their calling," she explained to THR.
We take it for granted that rebels are good and empires bad; our favorite mass entertainment depends entirely on the felt familiarity of this simple division.
I talked to somebody yesterday who said they didn't know that we could take it for granted that the administration would approve a Medicaid expansion plan.
Johal was outspoken, arrogant, and anti-authoritarian; it was taken for granted that this trash-talking, track-suited gangster would be the star of the show.
If you are saying to yourself that it's just a movie, you probably take for granted that there are many movies that feature people like you.
Like what if you asked your audience to take it for granted that someone poorer than them is also human and then moved on from there.
Like others of his generation, he took for granted that he could study in other European countries and cross the Continent by rail without his passport.
Antonio Conte, still technically in charge of Chelsea, has battled all year for more control of transfers; he would not be granted that at Real Madrid.
"I kind of didn't focus on that at first because I just took it for granted that I have the experience to do it," he said.
Today many parents and caregivers take it for granted that kid-friendly foods must be fried, greasy, salty or sugary to win over their target audience.
Many islanders take it for granted that he is the biggest private landholder on the islands, and some suspect he owns more land than the government.
"I have never and never would take for granted that because of my gender or my race, that people will naturally come to me." she added.
"Sometimes you take for granted that you're seeing some of the best in the world, and all of a sudden this kid comes in," Veach said.
Adam Smith adumbrated the basic workings of a market economy, she observes—but erroneously took it for granted that such a market was inherently self-regulating.
In the early days of A.T.M.s, networks were independent and isolated; now customers take it for granted that their cards will work at nearly any machine.
Many people take for granted that they have access to Wi-Fi and broadband, but in rural states like West Virginia, this is not the case.
I'd taken it for granted that such a thing would exist, as I took most scientific progress for granted, the vaccines and the high-speed Internet.
But the people circulating the document simply take it for granted that Republicans won't address any of these issues: Party loyalty will prevail over constitutional responsibility.
There weren't smartphones, online gaming, e-commerce — all the things we take for granted that have a lot of labor that requires IT skills barely existed.
But now, it seems, we take it for granted that cell carriers know where our phones are, and we merely expect that data to be kept private.
Granted, that was eight years ago, but it's obvious Swift has made an impression on Spears, even if the 34-year-old couldn't recall their initial introduction.
Here, all of the charging is done on contact — which means, granted, that you won't be getting much use out of the phone while using the feature.
In 20013, we generally take for granted that just about everyone has seen Star Wars, and that just about everyone who's seen Star Wars likes Star Wars.
In a speech at the forum, Rajan warned that investors cannot take it for granted that "sensible negotiations" will happen between the U.S. and its trading partners.
While Americans may take for granted that they have "stable institutions" and "a functioning market economy," creating such things from scratch is a complex and difficult job.
They left notes of thanks to a woman who was arrested when she dared to vote and who did not live to see women granted that right.
I see now that I took for granted that these parades would never build to anything truly threatening, and I think it's impossible to think that anymore.
The pattern is so widely taken for granted that one local newspaper printed the headline "Murder at a Good Address" after a homicide on tony Michigan Avenue.
Where some of System Shock 2's spiritual sequels (primarily Prey) present this as an optional moral choice, it's taken for granted that you'll follow her advice.
We take for granted that the Germans of the 1930s were quite different from ourselves, and that our consideration of their errors will only confirm our superiority.
After Sullivan granted that sentencing delay, Flynn hired Powell, who has claimed in court filings that federal prosecutors suppressed evidence that could help prove Flynn was innocent.
The overwhelming majority of workers granted that status hail from El Salvador, Honduras and Haiti, and many have flocked to low-paying health care professions as well.
I think most people take it for granted that they are human, but when you get to the ADX, you realize that being human isn't a birthright.
And because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States.
If we take for granted that men get screwed in custody court settlements, which I don't, we're still only talking about something like 4 percent of divorces.
It is often taken for granted that students know how to learn, when in fact, it is a skill (art, craft?) that must be practiced and honed continually.
And because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all of our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States.
Opposite-sex guards can watch you dress and piss and make offensive remarks, and it's taken for granted that sexual assault by staff is covered up or ignored.
In a similar vein, Oudea said the euro zone should have a say over decisions by non-euro zone countries affecting it if Britain were granted that right.
What's interesting is that he was living and working in an era where that was possible, and how it was taken for granted that men could do that.
We take it for granted that we can view any website using any browser, and we can send SMS messages to any friend regardless of their phone carrier.
Often, we are only granted that perspective in the form of an NPC or two in an entire game (I'm looking at you Shadow of the Tomb Raider).
Artificial Intelligence (AI) may be revolutionizing our world, but we can't take it for granted that these technologies will be positive for our kids and the next generation.
It is simply taken for granted that if a job exists, it serves a useful purpose, and that it's better that someone is doing it than doing nothing.
"And because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all of our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States."
As a parent, I took it for granted that the moral framework of contemporary children's books, when it made an appearance, would remain disengaged from any actual dogma.
Having those employers sponsor meals for kids who aren't getting meals at school would be great, too, but Mr. Leeds granted that would also be tough to arrange.
A preliminary injunction was granted that, for now, stops the government from terminating temporary protected status, known as TPS, for immigrants from Sudan, El Salvador, Haiti and Nicaragua.
Just because permanent security clearance has not been granted, that doesn't necessarily mean there are problems with an individual's background, legal experts said, according to the NBC report.
Most of the radicals took it for granted that their threat of armed revolution was no more serious than Mick Jagger's dream of being a street-fighting man.
The remainder of the audio is given largely to the whining of a lot of people who customarily take it for granted that they can always be heard.
JIM CRAMER: Now, again I what I hear is that we do have to not take it for granted that the deficit with China is an okay thing.
They are perhaps taking it for granted that every deceased person has money in the bank or plenty of other assets that will cover burial and funeral expenses.
Rather, it seemed to take for granted that viewers would just stick around while the writers expanded the story's universe in a string of poorly paced, overlong installments.
It's an underplayed pattern, but the show takes for granted that we understand exactly how the sense that something is wrong leads us to look for something better.
"Because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States," Obama said.
" Because of Clinton, she said, "my daughters and all of our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States.
We don't hear too much about those generally, because we take for granted that the rich are gonna do that, and they have a lot of political clout.
"I think a lot of people take for granted that women have the right to vote, and they don't realize that it could be within someone's lifetime," she said.
It simply takes for granted that the firm posed a unique and existential threat to democracy, and that figures like Carroll and Kaiser are changing the course of history.
On July 1st, the court partially granted that request, ordering Tesla to submit "limited and focused" photographic, audio, or video evidence specifically related to the February and April incidents.
Granted, that goal was only $125, but the fact that people are throwing money at a leather webcam cover company shows that, really, all laptops should include webcam covers.
Granted, that competition can't be tossed in the air for an effortless shot, and it can't be attached on a stick ($44.90) for a quick, widest-angle-possible selfie.
Apple fans and detractors alike both seem to have taken it for granted that the iPhone X would be as good and as well received as it has been.
On top of that, there are dinosaurs in the core of the earth, in a reveal taken so utterly for granted that not a single character comments on it.
Granted, that might not sound like a ringing endorsement to make Tuesday comedy great again, but it should at least be enough to get "The Mayor" through the primaries.
A day later, the high court granted that request, blocking both of Judge Tigar's injunctions "in full" at least until the Ninth Circuit completes its review of the case.
Granted that technology for sequencing has advanced since 2003 allowing for faster work, this still means that it took a few months from the first knowledge of the outbreak.
"It is not 100% taken for granted that there will be a disorderly exit," De Guindos said at an event in Madrid some six weeks ahead of the Oct.
I'd used the app in the way I do most of the technology in my life: not quite knowing how it works, but taking for granted that it does.
Garrett took it for granted that Cruz is proposing a value-added tax — which Cruz has denied, but which is absolutely true if you look at how it's structured.
In fact, the counterclaim that there is no significant voter fraud has been taken so for granted that the case has rarely been made by Democratic Party politicians in public.
He's not alone: All of the White House staffers who had been granted that level of interim access to government information also had their security privileges downgraded, according to Politico.
"All of us who are adults remember how daunting it was, but we sometimes take it for granted that children will be able to cope with the change," William wrote.
Why do we take it for granted that cell carriers have these things in 2019 when we were stunned that they would dare to track our phones seven years ago?
The Ministry of Finance last week posted a list of goods for which waivers could be granted that includes meats such as beef and pork, soybeans, coal and copper scrap.
I could've been a statistic and granted that when I was coming up, I sadly got the firsthand experience of people passing, so it was a different experience for me.
"I didn't take it for granted that I had six or seven hours to pretend like I'm a shaman," Bentley tells EW of his commitment to the clip, streaming above.
We take it for granted that the world cares about elephants because people have fallen in love with them through heart-warming documentaries on National Geographic or the Discovery Channel.
We'll never make contact with aliensWe take it for granted that eventually—whether it be next week or sometime during the next millennia—we'll make contact with an extraterrestrial intelligence.
Granted, that probably doesn't give you the same nostalgic twinkle as Jack setting up his "Twittr," but, like it or not, it's still an important part of the company's story.
When congressional Democrats drafted the Affordable Care Act back in 2009 and 2010, they took it for granted that all states would accept federal funding to expand their Medicaid programs.
However, Colas granted that "it is definitely a worrisome number" – particularly because it is just one among many that suggest moderate, if not severe, overvaluation in American large-cap stocks.
When everyone takes it for granted that you've done the dirty—when, in fact, you haven't—it's difficult to shake the feeling that you're slightly deficient as a human being.
"It has been taken for granted that plants like Bratislava would just carry on and produce the next generation model," Carol Thomas, an auto analyst at LMC Automotive, told Reuters.
The first great wave of women-led reform took for granted that women inhabited a noble, hygienically refined realm far above the base and corruption-prone system of 
male politics.
From asbestos to leaded gasoline and CFCs, we take it for granted that policymakers do not just discourage consumers from using these products, but also restrict or prohibit their production.
" Ruth May, England's chief nurse, said in a statement: "Periods are part of life, and too often we take it for granted that everyone has easy access to sanitary products.
In a hearing in District Court for Polk County, a judge granted that request, ordering Mr. Greene out of the house by next Sunday and to pay his mother $10,000.
Whereas Smith, Ricardo, and Mill had taken for granted that land was one of the three factors of production with labor and capital, Solow assumed that land did not matter.
And the discussion of Syria earlier kind of took it for granted that it was kind of up to the next president to put troops kind of where they want.
In many other nations — in China, in Russia, in Germany, say — it is taken for granted that if you know someone's age, you also know what he or she survived.
"It has been taken for granted that plants like Bratislava would just carry on and produce the next generation model," Carol Thomas, an auto analyst at LMC Automotive, told Reuters.
All of us find ourselves utilizing narratives, stories, accounts that we take for granted, that we just assume by virtue of the place that we were born and raised in.
ROME (Reuters) - Italian Economy Minister Pier Carlo Padoan said on Wednesday that it should not be taken for granted that Germany's Jens Weidmann will be the next European Central Bank governor.
All these years I'd been taking for granted that a good boot just needs a little breathing room; a cropped silhouette offsets the humdrum look of skinny jeans into black boots.
Advertisers increasingly need to earn the attention of consumers instead of take it for granted that you are buying a 15-second or 30-second spot that they need to consume.
As with the JAMA study, outside experts such as Cohen complained the study took for granted that the diplomats had been attacked by some device and accordingly came to their conclusion.
The 7th Circuit on Friday granted that request, vacating the earlier decision of its three-judge panel and setting a new round of oral arguments to be heard on Sept. 26.
Granted, that care is often for tobacco-related conditions, a cycle that strikes some observers as a common-sense, harm-reduction approach to the real world, and others as completely insane.
The interesting thing about apocalyptic stories, we noted, was that in the past, humans took it for granted that the apocalypse would be a judgment visited upon them from on high.
Granted, that nightmare scenario is why companies implement disaster recovery or failover systems, but the easier (and simpler) solution is to build an infrastructure that flat-out works, regardless of circumstances.
Voter turnout among Latinos will be critical to the Democrats' chances in November, so Clinton cannot take it for granted that antipathy for Donald Trump will drive Hispanics to the polls.
The Intelligence Committee, which last month issued a subpoena to Cohen compelling his testimony Tuesday in a closed session, had granted that requested delay, Cohen's lawyer Lanny Davis had said Monday.
These days, it's pretty much taken for granted that if you're running as a Republican and want to win, you probably need to oppose abortion and take other socially conservative positions.
Granted, that tip will be played into the ground thanks to the appeal of rock's one remaining band, not to mention radio laws that require Nickelback on air at all times.
Granted that Trump is deeply ignorant about policy; still, you might have thought that he would try to signal his independence from the establishment by, say, turning to some business economist.
Three decades on, we take it for granted that games can be played over the course of days, months, or years, ready to be picked up at the last save point.
That was the spirit behind the most important message he said he had given to Lance Jr. "Never take for granted that you made it," McCullers Sr. said, repeating his advice.
Security devices like Ring can be effective in deterring theft, granted that people notice them, know what they are, and believe the cameras could get them in trouble, according to Hayes.
Rovers fans contended that theirs was the only club granted that right — earned by virtue of the club's winning the F.A. Cup three times in a row, from 1884 to 1886.
For example, it was taken for granted that suspected pirates captured at sea, whether U.S. citizens or not, were entitled to the "due process of law" guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
Now, granted, that "anything goes!" vibe is probably exactly what Lemony Snicket is aiming for — but that doesn't make the show nearly as fun to watch as it thinks it does.
By now, it's taken for granted that Donald Trump, the candidate of anti-immigrant bombast, is a favorite to win or place second in Iowa's first-in-the-nation primary contest.
While we know that software to record and produce music on is never more than a cracked Fruity Loops torrent away, we take for granted that kids even have access to laptops.
Because American players grew up surrounded by MLB and take for granted that their country is the world's baseball titan, they may feel less pressure to demonstrate its superiority at the WBC.
It used to be taken for granted that raising the minimum wage would decrease the number of low-wage jobs, and that teenagers would have a harder time finding part-time work.
Those of us with cars just take for granted that we can go wherever we want at anytime we want, while there are citizens of our population who don't have that ability.
The first one is if you as a customer know that there's a different way, don't take for granted that the way it's been done in the past is the best way.
And I think its hard again to remember, but I think if you go back and look at some of the footage, we took for granted that he was a charismatic figure.
As has been the case with immigration, the bipartisan coalition of policymakers had taken for granted that because their policies generally produce prosperity that they were not obliged to sell them anymore.
Maybe not always in the smartest way (hey, Independence Day President Whitmore, did you really need to nuke Houston?), but it's taken for granted that we will at least try to #resist.
Granted, that bar wasn't very high, but Corrigan would go on to score 152 goals in an NHL career that spanned 10 seasons, peaking with a 37-goal campaign in 1972-73.
Granted, that is not a massive portion of the market, which is why I'm confident in saying that for most consumers, HomePod will be the best-sounding speaker they have ever owned.
If she had taken it for granted that Evan would lead a long and happy life, like her grandfather, could she not have made similar mistakes in blindly taking everything for granted?
We take for granted that not being able to walk a straight line or stand on one leg means that you're drunk, and that being drunk means it's unacceptably dangerous to drive.
"May gives the impression that she takes it all for granted ... that she's not going to have the voters interfere," Sir Robert Worcester, senior adviser to the ISPOS-MORI polling group, said.
And yet one more: We shouldn't take it for granted that intervening with early medication or lifestyle changes for the people at highest risk will make a difference in lowering their risk.
We're told to take it for granted that a vague form of energy (a physicist might ask the simple question: which kind?) lies at the root of ailments and stubborn mental trauma.
It's easy to take for granted that carrots are, for the most part, orange, but it's also interesting to dig a little below the surface, and see that it isn't always so.
A panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granted that relief, reasoning that "clearly established" federal law obligated the state to comply with the initial plea agreement.
It's difficult to convince people who for generations have taken local sand for granted that, like passenger pigeons a century ago, something they had thought of as infinite is now dangerously finite.
The presumption on my part was taking for granted that, hypothetically, I would be acceptable to Canada as a legal resident rather than as a relatively harmless and easily jettisoned summer person.
Apple and Android devices now tell you which features apps have requested access to and if you've granted that access — and give you the ability to change those permissions in some cases.
I think most people around the world take for granted that every day, they are able to do something very simple, which is at the end of the day, they go home.
"If you get in the habit of checking in everywhere you go, you just take it for granted that you have this version of your memory that you will never forget," Crowley says.
Which takes for granted that there is a grand plan, rather than merely a chaotic, arbitrary, and sometimes disappointing world, in which we do not know things much more often than we do.
He moved with the ease of the high school boxer he'd once been, and always spoke in the quiet, measured voice of someone who takes it for granted that he'll be listened to.
The Guardian, citing court records, said that Moore in a 753 court filing admitted to all of the claims Allison Moore had made in her divorce complaint, which was granted that same year.
We often take for granted that the "ordinary" things we use every day are in fact extraordinary inventions and breakthroughs that took years of investment, hard work, and commitment to bring to life.
"Whites will not look at an all-white picture again and just take it for granted that it's normal," says Podair, a professor of history and American studies at Lawrence University in Wisconsin.
This explains research showing that people who graduate from college during a recession are more satisfied with their work three decades later: They don't take it for granted that they have a job.
But these discussions have taken for granted that the piece was sui generis and have obscured Dvorak's original purpose: to acknowledge contributions black musicians had already been making to the American cultural landscape.
Agriculture is so fully integrated into world markets that consumers everywhere take for granted that ripe peaches will be available to everyone, everywhere in January, while Zinfandel, Shiraz and Prosecco are universally available.
I'll admit I've taken it for granted that my daughter will be healthy, that she will get her vaccines, and that if she has a cold or bout of diarrhea, she will recover.
Drivers take for granted that the "greedy apps," as some called them, are architects of their misery, but are also quick to blame other drivers, the TLC, the political establishment, and the media.
Granted, that might be hard to practically hide from someone, but studies also rarely blinded the researchers who had to measure and calculate the results they got from the volunteers—another science no-no.
On this front Texas is better placed than California, but it cannot take for granted that it will maintain its edge over other states that levy no income tax and offer even lower costs.
Some have asked the president for permission to stay on for the rest of their six-year terms, but critics fear the only judges to be granted that permission will be the pliant ones.
Most Americans take for granted that citizens convicted of felonies lose their right to vote, but the intersections of these prohibitions with mass incarceration have radically reshaped the voting population of states like Florida.
Puigdemont cannot take absolutely for granted that he will be Catalonia's next president because the other two separatist parties, the CUP and ERC, have shown some reluctance to put him back at the helm.
It is now widely taken for granted that this golden age will go on, that this ecosystem of startups and giants, and startups becoming giants, and giants acquiring startups, has become an unstoppable flywheel.
Under the new rules, those who are granted that status will be allowed to immigrate to the United States with unmarried siblings who are over 21 and a related caregiver, such as a grandparent.
Like so many places in New York that are taken for granted, that people go to once or twice and then forget about, the room had the potential to be inspiring, but was not.
It's taken for granted that social mobility only happens after you make it to Harvard; what happens for the vast majority of the population for whom that isn't in the cards is easily forgotten.
A finalist for this year's Pulitzer Prize, "The Wolves" is perfectly attuned to this moment — taking for granted that young women are whole human beings, and aware that not everyone sees them that way.
Granted that it's difficult to pass the clinical trial stage to get FDA approval, stem cell research may lead to new treatments for several health conditions that could completely change the health care landscape.
Anyone on prescription medications, especially for mental health indications, should think through carefully the complexities of bringing an adequate supply, and should not take for granted that the same products will be available abroad.
Fortunately, Congress could fix this issue by making explicit that which was (until very recently) taken for grantedthat a loan which is valid when it's made remains valid, even if it is sold.
But at the very least, the people who use these programs should be aware of these problems, and not take for granted that a computer can produce a less biased result than a human.
"It is not legally binding, but I would take it for granted that Sweden would follow it," Per Samuelsson, a lawyer representing Mr. Assange, said on Thursday before the Swedish government confirmed the panel's findings.
"While many of us take for granted that we have Wi-Fi in our homes … there are many in the city who don't have the same access," he told the city paper Metro in 2015.
The flier contends that the USA RIGHTS Act would enable "terrorists" to sue the US government for spying on them; another claims that "foreign spies" would be granted that same opportunity—which is patently false.
Dyson's comments seem to take for granted that a viewer of any color would be open to the idea that black Americans have a deep fear of the police and other forms of institutionalized racism.
We take it for granted that a song like "Options" by NSG is number 11 in the official chart, but not too long ago being west African was, in the words of Skepta, a diss.
He takes for granted that the biblical account of Jewish history, a story of tribes merging voluntarily, is historically accurate, and then more or less asserts that the biblical account is typical of all nations.
Most people take for granted that both Mr. Mueller and the new attorney general, William Barr, accept the current Justice Department legal position — reached in a 2000 opinion — that a sitting president cannot be indicted.
In the post-Watergate era, most Americans have taken for granted that a president would not fire an F.B.I. director investigating him, or replace an attorney general for insufficient loyalty to the president's personal interests.
For Vancouverites who a generation ago took it for granted that they could buy a home or condo near the urban core, the trade-offs for the steep rise in prices are hard to accept.
Their singing and banter is so vivid and so natural that you almost take for granted that they appear to be mechanical objects clicking and whirling in physical space, sharing the frame with human characters.
Departing from standard microeconomics and game theory, behavioral economics takes it for granted that real-life decision-making is flawed in systematic ways, and that people often do not recognize what is in their best interest.
Many of us living in developed countries sometimes take for granted that — despite the cramps, the tampon tax, and other minor inconveniences — getting our periods doesn't have a huge impact on our day-to-day lives.
A normal, sensible person could take for granted that the country was going to basically function from one day to the next in a non-catastrophic manner and move on with the problems in their lives.
But while it may be taken for granted that looking at cute animals improves mood, researchers have wondered whether looking at cats when we're supposed to be doing something else makes us feel guilty for procrastinating.
Granted that the bulk of the Art Jakarta organizing team did work for Art Stage during its heyday and may even have tapped into this experience, but their engagement with their local artistic communities echoes authenticity.
Granted, that level of shipments doesn't seem to present much of a threat to top suppliers Russia and Saudi Arabia, whose exports to China in October stood at 211.8 million bpd and 2.23 million bpd respectively.
Today we take for granted that federal law promotes nondiscrimination norms in the workplace in matters of race and gender, while an active political debate is ongoing about extending this principle to LGBTQ and transgender Americans.
Granted, that still puts the stock at less than four cents, but it is a significant bump — and when a company is struggling for survival as much as MoviePass is, financial market optics can be everything.
I dared to take it for granted that this country was as much mine as it was white people's — or, at the very least, that enough Americans hoped such a thing would be true one day.
At 103, Ruline Steininger became one of the first people in Iowa to vote in person for Clinton during early voting in September, a day she didn't take for granted that she was able to see.
We take for granted that a button of a certain size, shape, and color will reliably perform a very specific task, and that it can always be found on a certain part of a web page.
Commonly, the clinical trials supporting breakthrough drugs lack some of the scientifically rigorous features found in the research backing drugs that have not been granted that designation, a new study published in Tuesday in JAMA found.
We might take it for granted that we have multiple different apps that can tell us exactly where to go, when to turn, and the ways to best avoid traffic, but it wasn't always this simple.
The very idea of utopia—a place where everyone is happy—could not have occurred to people who took for granted that individuals have irreconcilable desires and ideals, and that conflict is therefore impossible to eliminate.
Many of us take for granted that if we want to rent a particular unit, we can walk in the door, fill out the forms, and we're going to have a shot at getting that apartment.
Which is why, finally, McElroy seems to take for granted that nobody in such a second marriage would ever consider permanently leaving it, or permanently living as brother and sister, or permanently refraining from receiving communion.
Some of us called last fall for a broader impeachment inquiry that would more or less take for granted that conviction was impossible, and instead simply try to amass a full public record of Trump's misconduct.
William Friedkin, the Oscar-winning director of "The French Connection" (1971), observed that the police in that film, based on a true story, took for granted that they could do what they wished with criminal suspects.
"Here was everyone taking it for granted that I must be miserable when I wasn't," she thinks, after a reunion with a group of married high school classmates who seem appalled by her nonexistent love life.
Yes. The reason why I'm here in DC and the reason why I was actually granted that gap year was because I told Harvard that for the next year I'm working 100 percent of the time.
Granted, that might not be immediately obvious to anyone who came over from Breaking Bad expecting the show to contain the kind of action that facilitated the rise and fall of drug kingpin Walter White (Bryan Cranston).
"A lot of people take it for granted that the US builds the best tech in the world, and I think that's a dangerous assumption to make," he says, saying that a wake-up call is due.
What Men Want will be based on the 2000 Nancy Meyers film What Women Want, which starred the Daddy's Home 2 actor as Nick, a sexist advertising executive who's granted that mind-reading gift, but with women.
But its fundamental problem is so different from the age-old theory of democracy which everybody takes for granted that it seems that this difference has not been grasped, just because of the simplicity of the theory.
" Jones added that admitting a loved one to the care of medical professionals "is an act of trust and you take for granted that they will always do that which is best for the one you love.
In a time of rapidly evolving surveillance technology and movements for reform across the U.S., intelligence and law enforcement agencies often take for granted that a 28503s view of how surveillance affects our rights still applies today.
There is a real learned helplessness to this: Americans just take it for granted that this is the way things work, it is the way things have always worked, it is the way things always will work.
Vietnam '67 When I first got to Saigon as a journalist, in 1963, I took it for granted that American policy to counter Communist expansion into the southern part of Vietnam was the right thing to do.
I take it for granted that the tech barons are acquiring the power to tilt elections, and that they'll be happy to play handmaidens to tyrants soft and hard so long as they can monetize our data.
In Vietnam, we became the bridge between two eras: the pioneers of World War II and the women of the modern era, who by the 1991 Gulf war took it for granted that they could cover wars.
They take for granted that the most important sex education may take place on Pornhub, that the purpose of their work is essentially remedial, and that there is no escape from the world that porn has made.
If granted that would authorize the Scottish government to hold another a vote on leaving the U.K. Despite the SNP gaining a swathe of votes in Scotland, transferring that power from Westminster may prove hard to secure.
We have a long way to go, but early on in my career I realized how bizarre it was that I take for granted that the main character is usually white when I read a comic book.
Normally, it takes quite a bit to excite my neighbors under the languid southern sun, but as one horror has followed another, I am no longer taking for granted that they will put up with this much longer.
Granted, that was back when it was awarded automatically to the goalies on the team with the fewest goals against, like the Jennings is today, but saying "four-time Vezina winner" sounds impressive so we'll go with that.
By the time I finished one side of my head, I noticed my hair was starting to frizz up again (granted, that could be because I was sweating from all the hot air in my window-less bathroom).
It's often taken for granted that most people can register to vote while on a routine trip to the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) to receive or renew their driver's license, but before 1993 that wasn't the case.
"Calder's embrace of toys, play and the like was further complicated by his having grown up in an artistic household where it was taken for granted that such childish things had a more than childish value," Perl explains.
Because of her tough-guy tomboy antics and her stage voice sounding bigger than five bouncers put together, I apparently took it for granted that she would just live forever and couldn't be touched by mere mortal afflictions.
Ever since Mr. Buttigieg was first elected in 2011, many in South Bend took for granted that he aspired to higher office, with the support of the local Democratic machine, and was carefully building a record of accomplishments.
And the authorities stated what many people had always taken for granted: that the attack had to do with Mr. Rushdie's book, which infuriated Muslims around the world — a theory that the police played down a generation ago.
"I think for a couple of decades we've taken for granted that things were going so well that we didn't take the time to communicate or educate on why it mattered to our economic platform together," Bond said.
Granted, that shouldn't in itself be a reason to see a movie, but thinking back, I was hard-pressed to think of a single film, especially a comedy, in which a plus-size woman's weight hadn't been explicitly mentioned.
Granted, that isn't a problem if it's this short: I SPY WITH MY BIONIC EYE At the end of season 2, Rachel Duncan, a clone who's grown up under the care of large corporations, is stabbed in the eye.
One key argument is that so few waivers are granted that "the process has not been implemented in good faith," said Sirine Shebaya, interim legal director of Muslim Advocates, a Washington-based civil rights group involved in the litigation.
Some considerations of this have led into darker corners than others, but it was generally taken for granted that we would at least be there, and that the future we made would serve us in some way or another.
Granted, that was a more nuanced stylistic approach than the tacked-on endings we're talking about here, particularly because he was putting together a film that mixed footage of the real JFK with the mythologized versions of these characters.
What I don't get is it seems like when I talk to people, everybody takes for granted that we all really want a hangover cure, but then everybody also seems to take for granted it's impossible to find one.
Having long taken for granted that he is the greatest composer-lyricist the United States has produced, we can perhaps now notice that he is also an artist to place in the line of America's foundational 20th-century playwrights.
It was taken for granted that the same anti-government zeal that had fuelled the Reagan Revolution, of the nineteen-eighties; the 26 Republican takeover of Congress; and the 24 Tea Party insurgency would continue to drive the Party.
The group of young researchers from institutions across America who wrote the paper, led by Julia Monk, a graduate student at Yale, argue that conventional models of sexual behaviour's evolution take two things for granted that they should not.
"Jupiter's relatively steady main aurora has a power density that is so much larger than Earth's that it has been taken for granted that it must be generated primarily by the discrete auroral process," state the authors in the new study.
A duty to act We're at a point today where Western values of the rule of law, democracy, mutual respect, dissent, love of peace and tolerance, are so taken for granted that people no longer see them as worth fighting for.
In an extended exchange with Justice Elena Kagan, Mr Bishop granted that if all that was needed was "a very minimal change" like "digging a few holes", the ESA may permit the government to designate unoccupied tracts as critical habitat.
"I think that's because people have always taken for granted that the right will continue to exist, and we don't need to get exercised about something that's safe," Davis, who is part of the Rise Up tour, told BuzzFeed News.
It makes a difference who gets granted that much free rein and whose concerns get ignored in favor of elevating one person's vision above all else — even when, like Thurman, they're trying to speak up on behalf of their own safety.
While we as a culture are gradually becoming more aware of the many ways that bodies can differ from the norm, much of the world still takes for granted that people sleep at night and are awake during the day.
This Is Your Digital Life, the app created by researcher Aleksandr Kogan, which served as the harvester for all this data, requested "read_mailbox" privileges for some period and, as Facebook tells Wired, a total of 1,500 people granted that permission.
Senior Justice Department officials told the newspaper it is filing the lawsuit because only the federal government can regulate net neutrality and that the Federal Communications Commission had been granted that authority by Congress to ensure states don't write conflicting legislation.
"The success of the Alternative for Germany is a wake-up call that it can't be taken for granted that society is liberal and will remain so," Heribert Prantl, a journalist at the newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, wrote in a commentary.
But given Houston's commercial importance — and its perch along a well-trod hurricane zone — economists and others have long taken it for granted that an epic storm would hit the region eventually, so have a head start on the numbers.
French's readers like to go online and rank the books (six so far, counting "The Trespasser") in order of preference, and while there's no consensus, it's taken for granted that anybody who's read one will very shortly have read them all.
"We take for granted that workers are safe and that, if anything, by confirming and strengthening planned investments on Italian plants, there will be more jobs in the future," Luigi Di Maio, who is also deputy prime minister, said in a Facebook post.
"It carefully and deliberately sidesteps the sources of controversy and disagreement in the bilateral relationship and implicitly takes for granted that contact between Trump and Putin will provide a completely new direction and impetus for restoration of cooperation and mutual trust," Weiss said.
"We take it for granted that we can look up movie or TV credits on IMDb and see everything, down to production assistants," says Jackson, who recently hosted a standing-room-only panel on metadata at the Music Biz 2019 conference in Nashville.
This is a significant loss for people who may not have used the site anymore, but took for granted that it would remain an online scrapbook of the years when Myspace was the go-to social network, including for musicians promoting their work.
In Episode 7 of that same season, when Johnny Drama and Turtle take it for granted that either or both of them will get to sleep with their beautiful blonde driver at Sundance, and relentlessly pursue her, I actually felt physically ill.
Hall, Rae, and Martin are all virtuosic comedians, and it's great to see three black actresses in the middle of a big Hollywood comedy that takes for granted that it's perfectly normal, not a signifier of "niche" entertainment, that they're the leads.
Fawcett led campaigning for women to be given the vote in Britain, and the unveiling of the statue was the high point in a series of events marking 100 years since some women were granted that right for the first time in 1918.
"No matter what the historical norms, we never took it for granted that there was a U.S. person for the World Bank and we don't take it as an absolute given that there has to be a European for the IMF," Mnuchin said.
Due to the availability of low-cost natural gas as a result of the shale revolution – and generous subsidies and mandates for wind and solar power – we can no longer take for granted that some nuclear plants will continue to operate much longer.
Granted, that formula -- a bit of an experiment, given the current drift of the movie business -- doesn't create a huge incentive to rush out and see "Logan Lucky" in the theater, especially with the rights having already been parceled out to Amazon.
The issue is with you going to the unknown, you don't know how things are happening there, so when you go to a place like the Caribbean, you take certain things for granted that you assume are normal in Canada that actually aren't.
Granted that "best economy in over a decade" award requires a wonky appreciation for decimals — GDP growth in 28500 was 6900 percent while growth in 2628 was 28503 percent — but there is no doubt economic performance was solid at the end of 22019.
"The world is changing, it's true and we need to ensure that our Pacific partnerships get stronger with time, that we never take them for granted, that we are a reliable and steady member of the family," Morrison said during the announcement.
"We don't take for granted that each one of you uses Facebook to connect with your constituents, and that the people you represent expect authentic experiences when they come to our platform to share," Mr. Stretch said in his opening remarks on Tuesday.
Granted, that 200% return from buying at the pre-Great Depression peak is less impressive than the nearly 3,000% return our hypothetical investor could have received buying near the lows of the mid-1970s bear market and selling at 2015's highs.
In short order I found myself questioning things I had taken for granted: that I would be around to see my daughter graduate from high school, that my wife and I would grow old together, that I would finish the textbook I'm writing.
So when Collins was asked after his club's rousing 9-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs at Citi Field on Wednesday night whether his starter, Matt Harvey, was hurt, it was taken for granted that his answer was less than totally serious.
As we saw when he pushed aside the Montenegrin prime minister at a photo op in Brussels, Trump is the big rich kid in school who takes for granted that he's got to be in the front row for the class picture.
It's often taken for granted that workers will be available if jobs are created, but without the needed changes in policy that address the disappearing American worker, a significant number of Americans will never experience the social and economic virtues of work.
The New Labour government, which ruled from 1997 to 2010, tended to orient policy around London's financial services and large corporations, while taking it for granted that the heartlands to the north would always return Labour legislators as a matter of tribal allegiance.
The company maintains an aggressive research division based in Pittsburgh that's working on self-driving technology, and at corporate headquarters it's taken for granted that the existing hailing business is just a stool to be kicked aside soon enough in favor of the robotic future.
But he shared that flub — he and Olenna Tyrell and Jaime Lannister all took it for granted that their offspring would be faithful to their noble houses first, and feel nothing but burning, vengeful rage for any organized religion that would compromise their power.
In the United States, we take for granted that the bottle of beer, wine or spirits we enjoy is pure unadulterated product from a guaranteed manufacturer and that its label has been approved, contents verified, and taxes paid as required by federal and state law.
Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists project on government secrecy, said that while Trump has the ultimate authority to revoke the clearances, he would first have to ask each agency that initially granted that clearance and order them to revoke it.
Like many cities around the world, Vancouver is grappling with punishing housing costs that have pushed out large swaths of residents — and are causing distress among young adults who can't afford rent today and take it for granted that they will never own a home.
She takes for granted that her readers know something about the landmark events of early Mormonism, including the mob attacks on Mormon communities in Missouri and Illinois, Smith's murder and Brigham Young's ascendancy, and the dismal wagon train journey to the promised land of Utah.
In the original films, it's taken for granted that Daniel LaRusso's transition from bullied outcast to karate champion is a hero's journey, that Mr. Miyagi is a bottomless font of wisdom and a benevolent badass, and that LaRusso deserves to win the pretty blonde at the end.
The only concrete conception of these ideas comes from science fiction, like cyberpunk classic Ghost in the Shell or the Deus Ex video game series, in which it's taken for granted that society has figured out most of the hard problems and ironed out all the kinks.
IT2: I don't need to make any due diligence if I deal as a lawyer with another lawyer, I give it for granted that the bar association to which my colleague belongs has already guaranteeing on his... So I don't need to make any due diligence.
I think taking on some of the tasks that would typically be thought of as stereotypical mom things, and not taking for granted that you're just going to be able to have the baby and continue to live your life as if you didn't have the baby.
It's usually taken for granted that life expectancy rises each year, especially in developed countries like the US. The CDC's new report highlights the need for an examination into why life expectancy is now going in the wrong direction, and what can be done to address it.
Granted, that particular song is actually an old piece of gospel blues from 1956 by Wynona Carr, and the original is darker and more stirring, but you can't deny this film's ability to put together a killer soundtrack that shits on all adaptations of Oliver Twist.
"It seems as if the U.S. takes it for granted that it has the absolute say over everything in its dealings with the rest of the world, which has to take whatever the U.S. dishes out no matter how arbitrary and despotic that is," China Daily said.
They are traveling in large, organized groups through Mexico and reportedly intend to enter the United States unlawfully or without proper documentation and to seek asylum, despite the fact that, based on past experience, a significant majority will not be eligible for or be granted that benefit.
What's more, the framers of the Constitution themselves did not have a coherent view of removal: "In Federalist 77, for example, [Alexander] Hamilton took it for granted that 'the consent of [the Senate] would be necessary to displace as well as to appoint' officers," Clement wrote.
But the emerging body of evidence on the supply-side benefits of certain programs does mean that the specific structure of a given program matter, and policy makers shouldn't take for granted that the trade-offs around the social safety net always point in the same direction.
And I watch my daughters — two beautiful intelligent black young women — play with the dog on the White House lawn And because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all of our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States.
The US is rejecting the very idea of a "global refugee crisis" — instead taking it for granted that countries have a responsibility for the lives of their citizens, and that if those countries have failed, people who are similar to the displaced citizens ought to step up to help.
"A lot of people still think unconditionally that these technologies can bring about peace, democracy, and prosperity, but we shouldn't take for granted that everyone has access and the positive effects will just unfold," says lead researcher Nils Weidmann, a professor of political science at Germany's University of Konstanz.
" However, some believe that women's dissatisfaction with staying home "Read more:The 50 best suburbs in America, ranked8 things people in the suburbs take for granted that make city folks jealous20 vintage photos of California during its heyday13 vintage photos of the auto industry during America's first auto boom
"I am very alarmed, first, that I was denied an FBI investigation for five days, and then, when one was granted, that it was given on a short timeline and that the people who were key to corroborating my story have not been contacted," Ramirez told The New Yorker.
Clinton and her advisers had taken for granted that states like Michigan and Wisconsin would stick with a Democratic nominee, and that she could repeat Mr. Obama's strategy of mobilizing the party's ascendant liberal coalition rather than pursuing a more moderate course like her husband did 24 years ago.
When we buy toasters or microwaves or other consumer products, we take for granted that those items won't destroy our lives, and a big reason we have such faith in them, whether we know it or not, is a federal regulatory agency called the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
We might take for granted that cars are a major component of CES today — after all, they are essentially very large, mobile pieces of hardware — but that wasn't always the case (not least because the mammoth Detroit Auto Show is just around the corner in the convention calendar).
"I introduced every reading by saying, 'There's 20093,22009 different things you could do in New York any single day, and we don't take for granted that you've chosen to be with us," said Glenn Raucher, who assumed the role of curating and moderating the series a year ago.
For well over a century, anthropologists and historians took it for granted that the skeleton belonged to a man, as graves like these have only previously been associated with male warriors—this despite the fact that stories had emerged during the Middle Ages about fierce Viking women fighting alongside men.
Like, you don't take it for granted that you're still going to be in the same place in 20 years; you see opportunities available to you that would not be obvious, I think, if you didn't develop that inner landscape and learn about what the rest of the world is like.
He argues that it's because we've come to take the free market (which he says isn't really "free" at all because of the tax breaks that cities give big businesses and developers) so much for granted that we don't demand meaningful change where it really counts: in state and city policy.
It's a trope so pervasive at this point that when I saw the trailer for Tag, about a group of men who have been playing the same game for over 20 years, I just took it for granted that Annabelle Wallis' character was going to sleep with one of them.
If the EIA reports another drawdown, "it means we can't take for granted that we're going to be seeing builds for this time of year, even though it's traditionally what we see", said Matt Smith, analyst at Clipperdata, a New York-based firm that tracks oil shipments into the United States.
" Bob Jones University appealed the IRS revocation of its tax exempt status (and the loss of all Title IV student loan funds) to the Supreme Court, which upheld the revocation, reasoning that any organization granted that exemption must not have a purpose that is illegal or against "established public policy.
"All of the conceptual and linguistic back flips being done here in trying to explain that the virtual world interacts with the real world could be circumvented by instead taking for granted that digital connection is new and different but that it's also part of this one social reality," Mr.Jurgenson wrote.
The letter to the Muthanas disputing their daughter's claim to citizenship took for granted that it was simply the right of the executive branch to decide, without any hearing, due process, or trial, that a woman born in the United States, the recipient of two U.S. passports, wasn't a U.S. citizen.
He arrived in office following several decades of uninformed adulation of the military by a population that knew very little about military life, and that now takes it for granted that strapping 21-year-old men with military ID cards should get precedence in boarding airplanes over 65-year-old grandmothers.
Unlike some investigations of the Iraq War in the United States that attempted to point blame at anyone other than the political class who actually launched the war, the Chilcot inquiry took for granted that Prime Minister Tony Blair and his senior advisers bore the primary responsibility for the disaster.
When a delegation of apparatchiks came to see him, he took it for granted that they were coming to depose him, since that's what he would have done in their place, and was startled when they begged him to step forward and lead, being themselves dependent on the cult of the great leader.
"When I was at uni, there were security gates all around Belfast city centre and I took it for granted that I had to go through these barriers — tall metal fences and turnstile gates — to go shopping for clothes or makeup or go out to a cafe with my mates," my mum added.
"The United States has experienced a surge in the number of aliens who enter the country unlawfully from Mexico and, if apprehended, claim asylum and remain in the country while the claim is adjudicated, with little prospect of actually being granted that discretionary relief," Solicitor General Noel Francisco wrote in Tuesday's filing.
"The United States has experienced a surge in the number of aliens who enter the country unlawfully from Mexico and, if apprehended, claim asylum and remain in the country while the claim is adjudicated, with little prospect of actually being granted that discretionary relief," Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco told the justices.
Granted, that is also more or less the arc of the earnestly elegant "Beautiful: The Carole King Musical," which has been running for five years at the Stephen Sondheim Theater, and the chilly, plastic "Summer: The Donna Summer Musical," whose much shorter residency at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater will end on Dec. 30.
Paul granted that Juggalo politics tend to fall left of center, and pointed to ICP's long-held stance against Confederate symbols (one song includes the chorus "Fuck your rebel flag"), a position that has taken on fresh relevance since the election of Donald Trump and more recently after the events in Charlottesville.
"It's hard to get people to change because they take so much for granted that this is the way it has to be," said Leslie Perlow, author of "Sleeping With Your Smartphone: How to Break the 24/7 Habit and Change the Way You Work" and a Harvard Business School dean and professor.
"You don't want it to look like it's complicated, but you do want people to have all the information that they need," Ms. Moskin said, "because it's those subtle things that we know that we kind of take for granted that we want to convey, which is what helps people improve as cooks."
Where fifty years ago it was taken for granted that the problem of age was a problem of the inevitable running down of everything, entropy working its worst, now many researchers are inclined to think that the problem is "epigenetic": it's a problem in reading the information—the genetic code—in the cells.
It left the door open for Murray and when sixth seed Raonic knocked out seven-times champion Roger Federer to scupper hopes of a dream finale, many appeared to take for granted that the Scot would be hugging the Challenge Cup again before he walked on Centre Court to contest his 11th grand slam final.
Imagine if the Germans and Japanese had won World War II.  We take it for granted that America was destined for victory and fascism was destined for failure, but a new television series that appears on Amazon (I know, it's weird to say that) called "Man in the High Castle" makes no such assumptions.
Granted, that discount was no more than $30 off of its usual sale price, but it brings this close enough to the price of Apple's Series 4 watches that they're easier to recommend splurging on, if only for the always-on display that, somehow, doesn't have much of a negative impact on its battery life.
Granted, that could be because he perceives black people as being in some way universally inferior — but more likely (especially given the circumstances in which he's speaking) it has to do with the social circumstances of the time and the particularly uncertain circumstances as racial tension began to bubble to the top and be specifically addressed.
That's been the dream of Super Mario Maker fans the past few days, as they've waited with bated breath to find out who the numerical cosmos would deem The Chosen One, the person granted that singular, one in 20183 million chance to sail through a devilishly clever Mario stage that requires no action on the part of the player.
Many today take it for granted that we can find whatever information we want simply by tapping our little screens, but similarly, now those who have the information know that this is now an essential way to communicate with the wider world, and apps that take you beyond basic reference are the most effective at doing that.
But Jeff Burks, who prosecuted Ms. Brown and is now an assistant district attorney in Madison, Ga., said earlier this month when the hearing was granted that Ms. Brown shouldn't be considered a victim of trafficking, and that she tried to recruit someone to return to Mr. Allen's apartment after killing him to steal from it.
As long as you take it for granted that it's O.K. to commit violence against animals simply because of their biological designation, then that same logic will be available to you to commit violence against any other being, of whatever species, human or not, that you can characterize as a "lower" or more "primitive" form of life.
A little dose of Trump's old-school approach was a necessary and useful corrective to an elite discourse that, four or five years ago, seemed too often to take it for granted that any day now literally everyone would be learning to code from MOOCs while riding in a self-driving car between various exciting "gig economy" employment opportunities at hip downtown lofts.
Our problems aren't as simple as Elementals or sky portals, and yet there are powerful people in our world who seem to believe they are, who argue earnestly that the only thing that can stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun, all the while taking for granted that they are obviously the good guys.
In addition to saying he saw similarities between President Trump and the adolescent tyrant Joffrey, Martin also granted that the view that the series is an allegory for humanity's failure to curb climate change is roughly accurate: It's kind of ironic because I started writing "Game of Thrones" all the way back in 1991, long before anybody was talking about climate change.
"His ground game has been here a while and had staff here for a long time, but similar to Iowa, they took things a little for granted that he was the front-runner, that he had 99 percent name ID," said Megan Jones, a political strategist in the state who worked for Harry Reid, the former Nevada senator and Democratic majority leader.
All those merciless cullings and endless organizational refinements, all that data and all the brilliant minds and machines working it over, all resolving to some underpaid grunt in a folding chair whaling away on a garbage can because the members of the team's brain trust of thoroughbred data nerds simply took it for granted that they could get away with it.
After a brief pause (after all the data and jury was still out at that point), I argued that the country was likely to elect a black man before a white woman because it would mirror the historical sequence at which these groups got the franchise (black men received the Constitutional right to vote, on paper at least, 50 years before women were granted that right).
That to me was a revelation because I just took for granted that everything came easy to David, but really he had a lot of opposition, because he had a family to feed and his Mom and Dad probably didn't want him to be a struggling artist, and if it wasn't for the grants that he received we would not have David Lynch today.
They want real worlds with real people that will under no condition make viewers uncomfortable or remind them of anything remotely strange and unknown… But much of our most successful and daring television is, if looked at broadly, Fantastic with a capital F. Granted, that quote is part of Friedman's lengthy, must-read story about having his identity stolen by an impostor who was using Friedman's office to solicit sex workers, then sneak out on payment.
Now the author will write a sentence so obvious, so taken for granted, that it hardly bears writing, and yet since there is no blank for it on the endless forms to be filled out, I will go ahead and write it here: A young woman grows in the world knowing that she will have to fight for her right to authority, while around her others shrug it on without any effort at all, like a coat.
Kavanaugh accuser Deborah Ramirez, who said the nominee thrust his penis in her face during a party in college, was interviewed by FBI agents, but she voiced concerns about the process: "I am very alarmed, first, that I was denied an F.B.I. investigation for five days, and then, when one was granted, that it was given on a short timeline and that the people who were key to corroborating my story have not been contacted," Ramirez told the New Yorker.
Ms. Del Deo and her husband, the artist Salvatore Del Deo, were leading figures in the bohemian aristocracy that dominated Provincetown's vibrant cultural life in the decades after World War II. Today, it is easy to take for granted that the cape's "back shore" appears much as it did when Henry David Thoreau walked it in the mid-21989s, and that Provincetown, however much it has changed, still looks like a cozy fishing village and art colony of the early 22003th century.
But it is to argue that if you want a new president to be transformative — as, obviously, many people on the left desire — there are clear advantages in electing somebody whose entire career is associated with an ideological insurgency, and whose victory would shock the more adaptable sort of politician into understanding themselves as inhabitants of a new political reality, in which no matter what poll numbers show on any given issue, it's taken for granted that the former world has passed away.
" Danielle Ivory, a reporter at The Times covering business and government, joined KCRW Radio's "To the Point" to discuss her investigation into how private equity firms have increasingly taken over public services like emergency care and firefighting, often with dire effects: "When you go about your daily life, there are certain things that you might take for granted that private equity could play a role in, which could range from the tissue paper that you use in the morning and the glass of water that you drink to buying a house and dialing 911.
Despite the world's bereavement over her death, despite her having been less a household name and more a spiritual resident of our actual home, despite giving us soundtracks for loneliness, for lovemaking, for joy, for church, cookouts and bars, despite the induction ceremonies, medals and honorary degrees, despite her having been the only Aretha most of us have ever heard of, is it possible that we've taken her for granted, that in failing to make her president, a saint or her own country, we still might not have paid her enough respect?
It's also quite pertinent that this retrospective, organized in collaboration with the Tate and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, should begin its New York iteration with these early globular works, not the theosophy-inspired empty grids we are accustomed to, because the early works were essential to her relationship with the city: these were the sort of paintings that Betty Parsons saw in 1957, when she decided she wanted to represent the artist, granted that Martin (who was then living in Taos, New Mexico) move to New York.

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