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246 Sentences With "miss the point"

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

But to call it that is to miss the point.
And lest you miss the point, your Savior is Jewish.
But to do that is to miss the point entirely.
But does that actually miss the point of the show?
He and others who make this argument miss the point.
But these days, to lament cubicles is to miss the point.
Even when such criticisms are well-meaning, they miss the point.
Even voicing that criticism, though, may be to miss the point.
To focus on individual companies, though, is to miss the point.
But to be disappointed by that is to miss the point.
To the Editor: This article and the study miss the point.
But these claims to abject poverty might actually miss the point.
But to call this tale cautionary is to miss the point.
Yet they miss the point and obscure the larger truth, i.e.
But to complain about insufficient originality is almost to miss the point.
Trump seemed to miss the point of the article -- likely on purpose.
She said that was nice, but that they shouldn't miss the point.
These stories miss the point, and are, in my view, wildly misleading.
These assertions from Magerko and the company's social team totally miss the point.
And even then, the film seems to fear you might miss the point.
But people who take this as a criticism of the program miss the point.
But to analyze them rationally is to completely miss the point of these headphones.
The response from the Sweet Dixie Kitchen seems to miss the point a bit.
If we ... talk about geo-politics, legislation, technical problems, then we miss the point.
It's premiered to some fairly harsh reviews, all of which entirely miss the point.
They miss the point, which is not that the virus is a nuclear furnace.
But those who were wrong so many times before miss the point once again.
"If you view money as the goal, then you miss the point," Sabatier wrote.
That argument may, however, miss the point about the future of the communist country.
Slowing down to bargain now would completely miss the point, both politically and atmospherically.
To call the movement to remove monuments identity politics is to miss the point.
To gentrify In the Heights is to completely miss the point of the musical.
So to talk about "pure" Android and "skins" is sort of to miss the point.
Insecure could be described as Girls with black women, but that would miss the point.
But to dismiss them as distractions, theatrics, or mere incompetence is to miss the point.
There would be opposition from some on both sides but those opponents miss the point.
Soldiers complain and roll their eyes; others, like Bergdahl, seem to completely miss the point.
To see Trump's tweet through a partisan or political lens is to miss the point.
Yet to expect a burst of flavor from a Moro is to miss the point.
But to articulate what happens in "Go down, Moses" is almost to miss the point.
But to ask readers to look past Barnum's faults would seem to miss the point.
The column is still being criticized by conservatives for reasons that usually miss the point.
Doing so seems to miss the point of the JBL Link Bar, but it should work.
To make it more complicated is to fundamentally miss the point of how businesses get built.
However, those pushing for the bank to deploy substantially more assets to Asia miss the point.
To critique Harris for his lack of musicianship is to miss the point of his appeal.
Tesla may look expensive and risky in the near-term, but that may miss the point.
But such complaints miss the point in China: Beijing has its eyes on the bigger prize.
Arguing now about whether Bradley deserved to get the job is to completely miss the point.
To expect comedy to have a decisive political impact is to miss the point of humor.
But to blame fossil fuel industry spending for the initiative's defeat is to miss the point.
Dismissing the source of their anger only leads you to miss the point of their critique.
But she also argues that boomers miss the point — that crucial things are a lot harder.
And in fact, there are times when appeals to being apolitical actually miss the point entirely.
In fact to talk of mobile and social strategy as distinct is to miss the point.
Trump seems to wholly miss the point about why people, regardless of country of origin, immigrate.
But reducing Styles' WWE run so far into raw win percentages seems to miss the point.
We miss the point that our future lies in providing education and opportunity to our young.
They're subtle enough not to be distracting, but visible enough that you can't miss the point.
And yet, as is par for the 45th Presidential course, he managed to mostly miss the point.
Why We Miss The Point When We Call Masculinity "Toxic" Yes, Even Millennials Are Confused About #MeToo
Disposable DIS-Dain: Berlin Biennale Critics Miss the Point Artists Imagine Life After a Total Internet Collapse 
Calls to end manipulation miss the point — it is how China is manipulating its currency that matters.
To focus on the extremes of posthuman ambition is, it seems to me, to miss the point.
Proposals to re-impose Glass-Steagall restrictions (or otherwise break up large institutions) simply miss the point.
And to even mention my "haircut from hell" is to miss the point of my performance entirely.
But we miss the point and sell ourselves short to interpret felony disenfranchisement reform as purely partisan.
Critics miss the point of an aid package whose primary aim is to cut RBS's market share.
Oh, and lest you miss the point that this is one bright guy, he's wearing a Harvard sweatshirt.
Ironically, they seem to miss the point that the show is inherently making: No one wins this game.
See, they miss the point: The First Amendment is a right held by every citizen against the government.
But Mr Trump is so prone to this kind of thing that fact-checking may miss the point.
But to focus on the suit, or even the punctuation, was to miss the point of Wolfe's genius.
You completely miss the point that on September 11 we put aside our differences to honor the dead.
Dissenters, including John Roberts himself, miss the point when they niggle over legalistic, ­slippery-slope abstractions, Cole explains.
But, as an account of the "unpresidented" world in which we live, it seems to miss the point.
Yet to get lost in the words is to miss the Point, if you forgive the atrocious pun.
To see such incidents in India as anachronistic aberrations in an emerging nation is to miss the point.
But other Kenyan women told BuzzFeed News that these comments not only miss the point, but trivialize Otieno's death.
Moreover, Democrats who deride his bipartisanship as an electoral strategy or something forced rather than felt miss the point.
Ideally, those moments embody the whole, but more often than you might think, E3 presentations can miss the point.
"And to even mention my 'haircut from hell' is to miss the point of my performance entirely," Kirke continued.
Their complaints always miss the point of what's happening today in our age of safe spaces and trigger warnings.
" On Tuesday, Hanabusa responded on Twitter to Zinke's comments to Breitbart News, saying he "continues to miss the point.
Related: Disposable DIS-Dain: Berlin Biennale Critics Miss the Point What Do Berlin's Colors Tell Us About the City?
Stewart's queer signaling remains subtext, but teens will pick up on it even if their parents miss the point.
"We slightly miss the point if we don't understand how much pleasure their supporters derive from this," he said.
"The idea that Brexit is the only factor affecting the global economy is just to miss the point," he said.
Every time Instagram introduces a new feature — Stories, longer videos, Boomerang — it's exciting, but also seems to miss the point.
It turns out there is a clear takeaway from this moralistic movie: Leave it to adults to miss the point.
But to think of encrypted communications as a fight between corporations and the government is to tragically miss the point.
It is this spirit of magnanimity and kindness that resonates with most Muslims, but ISIS and others miss the point.
To ignore them is to miss the point, to see the world in a fundamentally different way than Trump does.
"For straight people, if you're too afraid to go in too far, you would miss the point," Frank told me.
But keeping score in politics -- especially in special elections by simply tallying up wins and losses -- can miss the point.
Silverstein: And what ways do people try to bring mindfulness into the corporate culture that you think miss the point?
To think about what we need as a kind of wartime mobilization seems to me to miss the point completely.
To say Trump has "snapped" or that something has fundamentally changed with him is, I think, to miss the point.
To the Editor: I was surprised to see Bret Stephens so fervently miss the point behind Elon Musk's cult status.
"And they miss the point -- some for lack of understanding, some purposefully to exploit the fear and the anger," he continued.
But an Aquarius would miss the point and instead launch into a lesson about preparing the perfect cover letter and résumé.
Perhaps. But to delight in underdogs only when they win is rather to miss the point of what an underdog is.
If Pittman played the scene flat—as if the language weren't happening to her—you'd miss the point of Morisseau's script.
As a Floridian writer, I was bothered by this — until I realized that such a theory would miss the point entirely.
If you are going to wonder which one of them is real and which is imagined, you will miss the point.
But to react to Comey's charges against Trump with a comprehensive assessment of his entire career is to miss the point.
But to get too caught up in the calendar is to miss the point, many real estate agents and executive say.
To the Editor: Re "Farms That Depend on Migrants Fear ICE's Toll" (front page, March 18): Immigration opponents miss the point.
But measuring this device against those kind of benchmarks almost seems to miss the point (also: wearing sunglasses at night is creepy).
But doing so would miss the point, because this is a novel that succeeds in spite, maybe even because, of its excesses.
Cue up all the lessons and pithy sayings about how failure is the greatest educator and it's impossible to miss the point.
To say The Line is trying to be anti-war is to miss the point of what The Line is actually expressing.
These teasing biographical gestures blur the line between reality and representation, but to see this movie as confessional would miss the point.
To call these shots objectifying would miss the point: they replicate the way the girls see themselves, as both prey and predator.
Republicans crafted a "deal" on their own, without any real Democratic input, that seemed to miss the point of the stalemate altogether.
To look for a specific problem the expulsion of the Dominican Republic's haitianos is supposed to solve, however, is to miss the point.
That would to miss the point of this wanly diverting exercise, in which film noir dialogue is bleached to flat shades of gray.
And lest you miss the point, the film finishes with several minutes of footage from the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
But this line of thinking seems to miss the point: what matters for the film is the effect this violence had on Conrad.
Then Senior Editor Mike Diver wrote: To make Shadow of the Colossus pretty first and atmospheric second would be to miss the point.
But this is to miss the point: No one better captured the psychology of imperialists — in all their delusion and naïveté and cruelty.
In case we miss the point, the truck driver who is the last person to see her alive compares her to the moon.
But to obsess over that album alone, superb as it is (and we'll discuss it further down the page) is to miss the point.
In case we miss the point, the hapless creatures from Bruegel's "The Blind Leading the Blind" cavort, in miniature, along the painting's bottom edge.
We completely miss the point if we're not inclusive, representative, and making space not just for our own narratives, but for those of others.
In this sense, the very words "Build It Back" miss the point — unless by "back" you mean back, way back, from the water's edge.
But judgments about the nature of officers' individual characters are not only so subjective as to be useless but they also miss the point.
And the glory of it is that the men in the show — even the good men — still underestimate or miss the point of Villanelle.
Most arguments of that time seemed to miss the point that pitchers' stuff depends on how much stuff they are actually tasked to throw.
But they miss the point: voters rarely scrutinize debates line-by-line, instead making their judgments on the overall tone and performance of a candidate.
As the president of a school that is training the next generation of artists, I find that reaction to fundamentally miss the point of art.
To the Editor: Authors shouldn't expect that reviewers have read their book, but when they entirely miss the point the author is entitled to object.
What a third-grader would recognize as absurd, nevertheless got the full political-theater treatment by an oversight committee that seemed to miss the point.
But to call a show that touches on issues that women so rarely get to see explored on-screen is to completely miss the point.
But Jordan Weissman contends in Slate that to quibble about the relative progressivity of different college tuition funding proposals is largely to miss the point.
They tend to miss the point of visiting with Santa Parents are also often so determined to get the photo that they miss the moment.
While calling out political candidates for inconsistencies is commonplace, the framing of the attacks on Sinema have taken a turn that seems to miss the point.
But to hand ownership of the story to only one of these women seems to miss the point — that there's no winning the game they're playing.
Companies can sometimes get caught up in the semantic debates of what does and doesn't count as SDN and miss the point of this powerful movement.
I can appreciate a good meme as much as the next millennial, but these miss the point of 13 Reasons Why, and it's a real shame.
These proposed changes are not only cruel and inhumane, creating obstacles for people who are in desperate need of protection — they also completely miss the point.
Overall, she and others say, questions about the cost of repealing tampon taxes miss the point that menstrual products are basic necessities for millions of Americans.
To obscure the stated reasons for the protest and lump it all into a lack of patriotism is to -- whether accidentally or purposely -- miss the point.
But to focus on them, which so much of the discussion has done since the news of the United ban broke, is to miss the point.
Yet focusing on ratings may miss the point, says Peter Pomerantsev, who wrote a book three years ago that described Russia's use of television for propaganda.
Both detractors and supporters agree that it doesn't do enough, and it seems to me that both of those ideas miss the point to some degree.
Trump also appears to miss the point that Cody Wilson and Defense Distributed want to make plans for 3D-printed guns available to the public for free.
Those who worry, like Mrs Clinton, that these policies might not pass a Republican-dominated Congress miss the point, says Tom Steyer, an investor and liberal philanthropist.
If you look just at these outer layers and ignore the private songs at the heart of the whole thing it's easy to miss the point entirely.
As one character notes early, so you don't miss the point, Mia and Mel aren't just pals or co-workers, they're "life partners," besties since middle school.
But to criticize "Downton Abbey" (not even an abbey by the way -- where are the monks?) for glossing its way through history is to miss the point.
Save your breath, pedants, for arguing about how all the Gatsby-inspired 1920s parties we're about to be bombarded with completely miss the point of the book.
Those who see Trump's ignition of controversies as a distraction from the real work of governing miss the point -- his behavior is an intrinsic part of his method.
That kind of reaction may miss the point of her work, but DeVun believes it still helps to start a larger conversation about what we expect of mothers.
Just as it missed the punchline when it signed the "Roseanne" revival, so, too, will the network miss the point entirely in its cancellation of the popular show.
Some have accused the president of protectionism, but they miss the point of using leverage to change the environment for a more pro-growth oriented economy going forward.
His comments about water and fire miss the point, said Margaret S. Torn, an ecologist and biochemist who is a senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
For one reason or another, much of the foreign policy community and the commentariat continue to miss the point: American leadership is not only about exercising military power.
But treating Shepard's stage paradigms superficially can lead to characterizations that miss the point of how his figures got to be heartbroken or angry in the first place.
To complain that it isn't much fun might be to miss the point, or to repeat Frankie's fundamental mistake, which is to expect pleasure to coexist with grief.
"I was born on the same date as the Republic of Texas," he reminds the crowd at his own birthday party in 1915, lest we miss the point.
Volatility makes it dangerous for merchants to use bitcoin, unless they instantly exchange it for national currencies after every transaction, which seems to miss the point of a currency.
You can argue over the degree to which either console produces "true" or "native" 4K, with Microsoft holding the technical edge, but I think such discussions miss the point.
And because that's the only thing we're focusing on, we miss the point, and we miss all these other ways in which automation is having negative effects on us.
Still Trump tweeted Saturday afternoon as the protests in Washington, DC, and elsewhere were underway, with a message that seemed to completely miss the point of the weekend's events.
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But that is to miss the point about Brecht's boldly anti-bourgeois study in alienation that attracts even as it repels: You look on appalled and in admiration, too.
The authors of these memes must imagine that there is some kind of idealized happy medium between Clinton's body and Swift's body, but therein they, themselves, miss the point.
It's very hard to get an audience not to look where they want to look, and they have so many options to look around and therefore miss the point completely.
Yet still, I think to deny Snape's humanity — to shrink away from the complexity of the darkness he represents — is to miss the point of the Harry Potter series altogether.
To the Editor: Re "Flint Kids Were Not 'Poisoned,'" by Hernán Gómez and Kim Dietrich (Op-Ed, July 23): To parse wording about "poisoned" is to miss the point entirely.
It seemed to miss the point, at least the point as I saw it: to loosen the parental grip so that students can develop an educational framework of their own.
Lest anybody miss the point, the governor's staff circulated "key takeaways" and quotations from the speech, billing the address as a groundbreaking blueprint for moving forward in the Trump era.
And that, I think, is where Mr. Bundy and his followers miss the point: When land is held by the federal government they so despise, that land belongs to us all.
Read more: Instagram is starting to cut off its most addictive feature, and it could have huge consequences for teens' mental healthBut those criticisms miss the point of the bill, Hardcastle said.
Alarmist tracts that warn about how the Web endangers culture or coarsens civilization miss the point that the same was said in turn about theater, lyric poetry, the novel, film, and television.
But some say those characterizations miss the point of contemporary Europe's grievances, which are less militaristic than before the world wars and more rooted in fear of how immigration is changing societies.
"How many deaths will it take before Europe, Turkey and others focus their energy on providing humanitarian solutions rather than deterrence measures that clearly miss the point?" the group said in a statement.
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He published the book-length meditation "Bowie" in 2014, and wrote an essay for the Stone this week proposing that to see darkness and hopelessness in Bowie's songs is to miss the point.
Watching, it's hard to miss the point: If racism depends on skin color first and foremost, then images are the most powerful ways to shape public opinion both toward and away from prejudice.
Yet to consider the spread of hip cafes and bars around the world from the point of view of highly educated and highly mobile Londoners and New Yorkers is to miss the point.
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The real issue is that articles calling these asteroids "potentially dangerous" miss the point: The asteroids that caused the Chelyabinsk or Michigan events weren't labeled "potentially hazardous" because they weren't tracked at all.
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Roger Cohen PARIS — It is tempting to say that the relationship between President Emmanuel Macron of France and President Trump is the unlikeliest of friendships, but that would be to miss the point.
"It's a detail that seems to miss the point of the exercise, which is to erect a wall between the activities of a philanthropist and the political interests of the donor," he said.
As has been discussed at length elsewhere on the internet, the tastes of enthusiastic young girls, for instance, are often derided by mainstream arbiters of culture, which miss the point of music entirely.
When people say that Trump can't do anything about defamation law at the federal level, I think they miss the point that there is a lot of support for a federal anti-SLAPP law.
But, both pre-consenting to sex before you start drinking and giving blanket consent on an app miss the point, says Susan Brison, PhD, a professor of philosophy at Dartmouth who studies sexual violence.
But Mitchell and those echoing his argument miss the point entirely, continuing to ironically insist that the essence of compromise is doing whatever the Speaker of the House or minority leader tell members to.
But when law is only important as a weapon to uphold order, there are times when the fetishization of legal processes will seem to either miss the point or be actively bad for society.
He's not wrong, but concluded most obvious changes would "cause many 'in-between' players to miss the point of the games," which is an awfully presumptuous way of looking at what people get from them.
There is understandable frustration and outrage that testing has been slow and often inaccessible in the US. But lack of testing has led some to miss the point of what tests can — and cannot — do.
She cut their hair and never saw them again, and usually during the shape-up she'd whisper the source of her name and they'd all miss the point and ask the source of her power.
Wheeler struggled in his long-awaited return — he surrendered five runs over four innings in the Mets' 7-2 loss to the Miami Marlins — but to focus on the result is to miss the point.
It's absolutely possible to walk someone right up to the point and have them miss it, and we know that because we saw someone miss the point during our show, right in front of us.
Read these stories next: Dear Men: So You Say You Want To Be An Ally... Why We Miss The Point When We Call Masculinity "Toxic" We Need To Talk About How Toxic Masculinity Is Killing America
The people who say, oh things would have been much better if you didn't overthrow Saddam miss the point that today's Middle East does not flow totally and unchangeably from the decision to overthrow Saddam alone.
First was the release of Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak, a sequel to the classic Homeworld series that, initially, seemed like it might miss the point by taking the space-based games and setting them on the ground.
Dismissing her as shiny pop frivolity, as manufactured bombast, as too much anything, is to miss the point—and the implications of doing so are way more loaded and shortsighted than simply flaunting your superior music taste.
The list of head-poundingly dumb punchlines is too long to include here; it would also probably miss the point to do so because, in his defense, Em seems to revel in just how dumb they are.
It's been pointed out by people who miss the point that the convictions are not for the actual laugh, but for the disturbance made while she was being escorted out of the hearing by a police officer.
To describe his book as part biography and part memoir is to miss the point; it is instead a hunt through the crevices of one life in search of clues that might unlock the mysteries of another.
So I have that kind of relationship with both of these people, and it plays such a huge role in my life that to say that is just about sex would be to miss the point entirely.
And those who call for eliminating the limit because Congress is merely voting again to fund things already passed miss the point because most members of Congress never voted on those mandatory spending policies decades in the past.
"Those who try to distinguish between the explanatory power of stagnant wages and a declining industrial base on the one hand, and anxieties about the ascent of minority groups on the other, miss the point," Cherlin has written.
" Throughout his career, wherever he lit up the scoreboard, Anthony seemed to miss the point, unwilling to — as former President Barack Obama said of Wade in a video tribute — "sometimes sacrifice your ego in pursuit of a title.
Focusing so much on the actions and styles of the movement against Spencer and the alt-right, instead of the actual cause and message that leftist and liberal movements are pushing for, seems to many to miss the point.
Watching 13th, it's hard to miss the point: If racism depends on skin color first and foremost, then images are the most powerful weapon there is when it comes to shaping public opinion both toward and away from prejudice.
In response to a New York Daily News article on Trump's possible narcissistic personality disorder that has been making the rounds on Twitter, Dr. Frances weighed in, saying that to speculate about Trump's mental health is to entirely miss the point.
I do think, though, that we live in a time when sensitivity is so high that we sometimes miss the point: that to be able to have open and honest conversations, we have to take political correctness down a few notches.
Such critiques miss the point: Jordan has made it clear he desires to be a capital "M" Movie Star, along the lines of Will Smith (who himself has always been transparent about his box-office aspirations), not a character actor.
"These teasing biographical gestures blur the line between reality and representation, but to see this movie as confessional would miss the point," Manohla Dargis wrote in her New York Times review, in which she designated the film a Critic's Pick.
To describe it as part biography and part memoir is to miss the point; it is instead a hunt through the crevices of one life in search of clues that might unlock the mysteries — intellectual, religious, political and psychological — of another.
" He notes that elites dismissing populism miss the point that they are the ruling political class being displaced and "the old cliché about democracy being the worst form of government except for all the others remains as true as ever.
But his response seemed to miss the point: I don't know how you would characterize the gang leaders who got 13-year-old kids hopped up on crack and sent them out onto the street to murder other African-American children.
Joe Elliott, "All the Young Dudes" To get all pedantic about this being a Mott the Hoople song instead of a "proper" Bowie song is to miss the point of this incredible cover, which features backing vocals from the London Community Gospel Choir.
Apparently, still thirsting for this type of work, and blinded by post-internet aesthetics, critics of this year's focused exhibition—which foregoes attempts at global activism in favor of a localized, pointed critique of the art world itself—tend to miss the point.
Solutions that propose alternative labeling requirements, such as through barcodes, entirely miss the point about why mandatory labeling of genetically engineered foods is particularly problematic: The information contained in the labels would convey the incorrect message that genetically engineered food is unsafe.
Duke's language sometimes echoes Ture's — Klansmen and black militants both refer to the police as "pigs" — but to see "BlacKkKlansman" as the story of an embattled man in the middle contending with extremists "on both sides" would be to miss the point entirely.
"To pose the question, in the wake of this horrific tragedy, as whether or not you need metal detectors is to miss the point," said Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, which has studied the issue.
But it's frustrating to see a pharmaceutical brand investing in technology that's actually pretty cool, only to completely miss the point of what migraine-sufferers really want and need from drug companies, which is more research about our disease and better, safer treatment options.
"Headlines suggesting that markets are worried about reports of a likely delay in US-China "Phase 256.47" deal to December rather than this month lack nuance, if not miss the point," Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank, wrote in a note.
Newell: One of the challenges with this type of subject matter is that you have to stay pretty close to it, so as not to miss the point, and in staying close to triggering subject matter it's possible our work will re-trigger someone.
"If you build an aircraft that can land anywhere and then say 'actually, oh wait it can't just land anywhere, no I need a big helipad and I need to build a bunch of structure and all that' — you miss the point," said Vander Lind.
To howl at this or any of the other liberties that Schnabel takes in "At Eternity's Gate," though, is to miss the point: The movie is a freely subjective portrait of van Gogh by another artist trying to see, paint and feel as he did.
The Leaf also ships with a microfiber cleaning cloth and special cleaning brush, which you'll be using a lot: the Carafe and the Globe are not dishwasher-safe, which seems to really miss the point of being rich enough to spend $400 on a tea machine.
My view is that contemporary IQ results are inseparable from both the past and present of racism in America, and to conduct this conversation without voices who are expert on that subject, and who hail from the affected communities, is to miss the point from the outset.
Since Johnson released his bombshell yesterday White and other UFC spokesmen have been quiet, though TJ Dillashaw, the bantamweight fighter whose desire to skip the line at flyweight and fight Johnson inspired all this mess in the first place, somehow managed to miss the point altogether.
In arguing that U.S. ethanol producers are upset by the recent decision by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to lower the number of gallons of biofuels refiners are required to use in 2016, William O'Keefe and Jane Van Ryan completely miss the point in their Dec.
If ever there was a sign for the way A-list artists and their handlers build hype around marketing trends, but sometimes miss the point, it came Wednesday morning when news broke that Timberlake would be opening up a NYC pop-up shop to sell a collection of merch.
Except that to read it here in typeface is to miss the point entirely, for as we've come to expect from this master of linear intricacy, the work's distinctive charge comes not from any referential meaning it might suggest but rather from the quality of the line itself.
While there's probably something enlightening to say about its pastiche of dance music, to intellectualize would be to miss the point a bit, because for all "903UL"'s cleverness, it also just absolutely fucks, and is easily the closest humanity got to achieving the power of flight all year.
Nevertheless, those who try to distinguish between the explanatory power of stagnant wages and a declining industrial base on the one hand, and anxieties about the ascent of minority groups on the other, miss the point: These are not two different factors but two sides of the same coin.
While it's true that the games have evolved their mechanics very little as the franchise has continued, such complaints largely miss the point; the simple logic games that make up the bulk of the courtroom action have never risen above mere competency, and frequently fall below it, even in the better entries.
To do so would be to miss the point, which is that the systems of patronage and corruption exemplified by Mr. Zuma are deeply embedded in government and in the A.N.C. The rot starts at the municipal level, where it seems to have become the norm to obtain state tenders through bribery.
Johns's absorption with "broken representations of the human physique" also runs throughout his career, starting at the very beginning, which suggests that those who see a division between his early formally innovative paintings and the work he began doing after 1981, when he said that he "dropped his reserve," miss the point.
After Trump's latest Twitter meltdown—where he launched a misogynist attack against Morning Joe co-host Mika Brzezinski—Preet Bharara, the US attorney that Trump fired in March after previously promises to keep him on, shared his take, which, as it turns out, is the pinnacle how a prominent Resistance leaders miss the point.
"I think the bears who persist in thinking that ESPN's declining subscribers will be the real story here are beginning to miss the point: Disney is a hit machine that's launching a new ESPN online subscription service while it attempts to buy some key Fox properties that will produce even more hits, " he explained.
For Trump's supporters, such critiques miss the point -- and fail to take into account successes like the passage of the biggest tax overhaul bill in decades, along with his fulfilled promises to build a conservative Supreme Court majority and pull out of international agreements like the Paris climate accord and the Iran nuclear deal.
Ultimately, supporters of the Treasury Department have argued that it is a pointless argument: The financial system would receive a large shock if the U.S. government failed to make bond payments or planned expenditures, and any strategy to pick one over the other would miss the point that it's a very bad idea to do either one.
I think decisions made after that decision were wrong, although I think the worst decision made after that was the 2011 decision to withdraw U.S. and coalition forces...The people who say, oh things would have been much better if you didn't overthrow Saddam miss the point that today's Middle East does not flow totally and unchangeably from the decision to overthrow Saddam alone.
"Office numbers are a false metric and completely miss the point that, as we saw in the primary, Mr. Trump is not a typical politician and attempts to measure the strength of his campaign by old world comparisons like these fail to reflect the enthusiasm and grass-roots support seen by the thousands of supporters and new voters he is attracting to his events and his campaign," said Jason Simmons, Trump's North Carolina state director.
Or, to put it another way, the ruling should put a stop to some, er, 'creative' interpretations of the rules around cookies that manage to completely miss the point of the law… ehem at here refreshing Curia press release page & noticed their own non-compliant #cookie notice – spot the irony on their cookie information page – looks like the Court are about to render their own site illegal wrt to pre-ticked boxes… a little embarrassing… #privacy #planet24 pic.twitter.
MORE STORIES FROM THE HILL: Clinton supporters who want to abolish Electoral College miss the point  From one millennial to another: If you can't salute the man, salute the rank Kris Kobach is serving on Donald Trump's transition team as an advisor on immigration policy; he is a notorious immigration hard-liner whose day job is to serve as the state of Kansas' Secretary of State, and was famously a driving force behind Arizona's restrictionist SB 1070 immigration enforcement law.

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