Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

267 Sentences With "more critically"

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

An opportunity to look at ourselves more critically was lost.
More critically, though, it makes the warehouse worker's plight visceral.
Slowly, but surely, I started looking at the Bible more critically.
Or might it force us to think more critically about them?
Even more critically, it is testing the key $38 support level.
Some U.S. schools are teaching students to view pornography more critically.
We have a lot more — many more critically important issues to discuss.
So I slowed things down and started thinking more critically about my matching.
Or, looked at more critically, WWDC is when the company plays catch-up.
Even more critically, they need to be adaptable to our intensely diverse society.
They also worried Murdoch would use his media to cover Facebook more critically.
The first thing is to look more critically at the technology you use.
More critically for Google, its new policy chief is deeply familiar with Europe.
Perhaps more critically, generous government sales subsidies are unlikely to survive much growth.
Sergeant Brown now examines the tensions across the country more critically, he said.
Perhaps more critically, MS-13 is a decentralized organization with no clear hierarchy.
The Water Footprint challenged people and companies to think more critically about water usage.
But this whole process has made me think much more critically about clothing purchases.
But more critically, its animating cause wasn't acute or ephemeral like an unjust war.
More critically, the Assembly of Experts is tasked with selecting Iran's next supreme leader.
Nowhere is change more critically needed than in our nations approach to cyber security.
But it is perhaps more critically a depiction of a multi-pronged national crisis.
Perhaps more critically, however, is the response from our trade competitors across the globe.
More critically, trade agreements matter because trade as a whole matters to economic growth.
Perhaps even more critically, it gave us something about Mondays to look forward to.
So like I said before, you know we hope to show it in a fun and entertaining way, and invite people to think about the world a little bit more critically, still with an open mind, but think about things more critically.
Think more critically about — not just gathering feedback, but ongoing feedback loops to really understand.
What's clear, however, is that Canada's colonial past is being looked at more critically today.
More critically, that project was creating a separate operating system for the device, unique from Android.
Hokusai stands out in the film's version of Edo for his ability to think more critically.
But more critically, Trump and his administration have aggressively rolled back and fought against LGBT rights.
My awareness of my own position makes me more critically consider how I'm engaging with people.
As ever, it's worth trying to think a bit more critically about what's going on here.
In particular, mathematics students become more skeptical in their reasoning — they begin to think more critically.
She questioned why reporters were not more critically questioning Omar, Ocasio-Cortez and other progressive lawmakers.
What are the qualifications or, more critically, the qualities we should look for in a nominee?
More critically, they are turning a blind eye to vulnerable populations who are hurt by inaction.
More critically, it will do nothing to help stop firearms from getting into the wrong hands.
I feel like I've started to see signs of people taking things a little more critically.
"The effort of writing out your feelings can help you think more critically about them," he says.
Nor will the clamour to appraise medicines more critically go away, which is good news for consumers.
Even more critically, there are some key areas where innovation and new services are still sorely needed.
More critically, it said, without the extension, billions of dollars in infrastructure and development projects could stall.
Ms. Bell said she wants to help readers engage more critically with the news through her art.
Mr. Hoffman appears regularly on Fox News, sometimes speaking supportively and sometimes more critically of Mr. Trump.
Usually, somewhere between the ages of five and seven kids begin to think a little more critically.
But perhaps even more critically, I want to act this story out around a table with some friends.
I think that folks are looking at problems more critically and thinking that something needs to be done.
More critically, Wall Street was waiting for the profit margins, which have been moving downward in recent years.
The poll's findings showed sharp divisions along partisan lines, with Democrats responding more critically of Trump than Republicans.
I hope it encourages people to look more critically at how we socialize ourselves into narrow gender roles.
And more critically, can he deliver a commanding performance that reassures Democrats as he surges toward the nomination?
For the contemporary viewer, press++ encourages us to think more critically about who touches the media we consume.
Even more critically, Biden kept Warren from walking offstage with the "Warren crushes Biden" storyline that some anticipated.
Even more critically, they strive to make a difference by engaging youth voice and insight into their work.
More critically, Albany must find ways to protect our students by granting them some form of legal status.
More critically, we'll see if that direction is able to outmatch the equally ambitious drone project hatched at Amazon.
I'm sure you see things a bit more critically because you built it, but what's surprised you the most?
But in the aftermath #MeToo, we're all looking at the way women are treated in every industry more critically.
Is it an indictment of Memphis' wing rotation, which doesn't currently have Chandler Parsons or, more critically, Tony Allen?
"With my running days behind me, I had the space to think more critically about all that," she says.
Richemont has been shedding underperforming fashion brands and, perhaps even more critically, taken several leaps ahead in digital retail.
When the authorities questioned Mr. Reinosa more critically about his claims, the deputy confessed to lying, the captain said.
"More critically for the NFL, the fall off in favorables occurred among important audiences," a Winston Group analysis reads.
When the authorities questioned Mr. Reinosa more critically about his claims, the deputy confessed to lying, the captain said.
More critically for his chances, exit polls suggested Biden was building the broad coalition needed for a presidential nominee.
I wish I had been able to think more critically about how my work impacted the rest of my life.
But you can warn people to be smarter and think more critically about the stuff they're (apparently) being exposed to.
The Meridian shampoo packet sheds light on the little that detainees have access to, and — more critically — what they don't.
More critically, those shutdowns have made it harder to feed low-income students who rely on schools for subsidized meals.
These students should be qualified to perform duties that allow attending physicians the time to treat more critically ill patients.
Meanwhile the United States is anxious to preserve full and free navigation for commercial shipping and, more critically, its warships.
Thinking of terrorism as a tactic helps us think more critically about these groups and how to deal with them.
Our Magazine looks at a new approach being tried in some U.S. schools: teaching students to view porn more critically.
Seeing the price clearly might cause some taxpayers to look more critically at conflicts that offer little benefit to America.
Tom, New York: Facebook and YouTube are rightfully being examined more critically today by both the general public and legislators.
"This artifact helps us think more critically about the relationship between race and performance in early cinema," Field tells UChicago.
More critically, the countersuit is an attempt to prevent Proper Media from continuing to exercise any further control over Snopes.
Being more critically-thinking humans might save us, but that's a system that's lot harder to debug than an AI algorithm.
"If Renault weren't pushing this quite so hard, ironically people would be looking at him a lot more critically," he said.
More critically, Mswipe CEO and founder Manish Patel believes the country is "ripe for disruption" because it has so few terminals.
But more critically, entrenched insider advantages have eroded our ability to choose effective leaders, and hampered our ability to compete globally.
This concentration is made even more critically dependent on U.S. financial institutions when considered against U.S. TBTF institutions involvement in CCPs.
Having formed identities around being expert travel reviewers, Super Contributors may "write more critically to appear more professional," Dr. Gretzel said.
As the young people evaluated the leadership more critically, they realized how the ruling Republican Party mirrored the old Communist Party.
More critically, the state did not meet its responsibility to act with respect and dignity in the treatment of human life.
You can use the "power of suggestion," and make your mantra more along the lines of, Tonight I'll be more critically aware.
It made me think more critically — what does it mean that other people have been teaching me not to like these books?
Their presence and how they speak are maybe viewed more critically than men, or assessed in ways people don't realize they're doing.
More critically, the fact that America is an inherently good country, that is 'exceptional,' justifies America's own military actions around the world.
Ridesharing companies and their political advocates exploited a gray area in the regulations and —  perhaps more critically —  a gray area in jurisdictions.
Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), have spoken more critically of Israel writ large and Netanyahu's policies in particular.
Why have they squandered their national energies on hating their neighbors, instead of thinking a little more critically about their own behavior?
But [it came] at the expense of pushing me to examine my life, my actions, and my feelings a bit more critically.
But perhaps even more critically, this kind of digital protectionism is unfair to the international community and to the people of China.
How hard this hits Google depends on the fine and, more critically for the company, what Vestager demands of its search engine.
Ads in VR are tricky, partly because of formatting challenges, but more critically because they risk upsetting users coming to the incipient form.
Instead, it's a call for all viewers to think more critically about what we're consuming and to question and change problematic social norms.
But in the process, it kind of became my research, to interview them and think more critically than I was about this stuff.
A fall to 21 pence would hurt Gazprom's margins but more critically would make it unprofitable for U.S. supplies to cross the Atlantic.
Let's all think just a bit more critically before we rush to share, retweet and applaud something because it softens rough edges, folks.
" He adds, "Leaving this show, I hope that our visitors are able to look a little more critically at both contemporary and historical art.
They also get a copy of the film, which producers are hoping will help buyers think more critically about the culture they're consumed by.
More critically, it would set a dangerous precedent, allowing governments to reach data across borders without regard to the sovereign interests of other states.
While Mr. Mandela is still revered in the West, his legacy is regarded more critically in South Africa, especially by some young black people.
At minimum, the plan calls for the support of several district attorneys, and, more critically, the State Department of Health, which answers to Gov.
More critically, those descriptions don't explicitly demonstrate how candidates made big things happen — how they led projects, boosted sales or saved the company money.
Recognizing racism today, rather, is essential to expanding upon the movements of the past, creating the awareness needed to notice injustice more critically and comprehensively.
Her strange dystopian dream-worlds—full of anger, violence, coercion and exclusion—demand that the viewer think more critically about the future of new technologies.
He said more than 500,000 respirators are being sent this week to some of the more critically impacted areas, such as New York and Seattle.
Our magazine looks at a new approach in use in some after-school programs in the U.S.: teaching young people to view pornography more critically.
Whether it's the fashion or the foliage, there's something about choosing a nail polish in the fall that makes us think more critically about undertones.
More critically, the authors also ignored volumes of data and thousands of hours of testing collected and analyzed in 2016 at government labs in Colorado.
For the first time since the explosion of Middle Eastern-backed firms, Silicon Valley began looking more critically at the bagmen bearing billion-dollar checks.
The film definitely inspired many people to think more critically about the food they were eating, but in the end did it hurt more than help?
Jingle All The Way is one of the more critically panned Christmas films to date, but it does capture the chaos of the holiday shopping season.
"violence of a predatory and consumerist economic system" that threatens all of creation—nowhere more critically than in the supernova of life that is the Amazon
Budget-minded executives at publishers like Hearst and Condé Nast are looking more critically at requests for six-figure photo shoots and $5-a-word writers.
In Las Vegas, Girma and his small team (he wouldn't say how big) are focused squarely on converting drivers and, more critically, Vegas revelers into users.
As the coronavirus pandemic expands, they have been re-examining those plans, hoping they will be useful if hospitals have more critically ill patients than ventilators.
Of course, there are many well-documented reasons for the Times, and other publications covering Facebook, to write more critically about the world's largest social network.
If Google can convince the automotive industry — and, perhaps more critically, automotive regulators — that this is a safer approach, then that better positions its business interest.
Thank you for participating in "What's Going On in This Graph?" which is intended to help you think more critically about graphs and the underlying data.
Science shows that learning a second language can help you solve problems more critically, focus more intensely, and even keep your brain sharp as you age.
Modern military forces enjoy better armor and medical care than any other army in history, so more critically injured soldiers are surviving and coming home as amputees.
More critically for Republicans, the small minority of voters most susceptible to changing their minds still haven't arrived at a verdict about Trump's effect on their lives.
Technologists presented us with artificial intelligence, and in the end it made us look differently, and more critically, at the kind of intelligence that only people have.
Unfortunately, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who has long sided with prosecutors and rejected efforts to look more critically at forensic sciences, let the commission expire last year.
Cutting immunization programs would result in more childhood illness Even more critically, the cuts will undermine our ability to control nature's most deadly threat: an influenza pandemic.
And, perhaps even more critically, it coincides with the first Sunday of a new NFL season and the largest captive audience available for ads since the Olympics.
Still, I would imagine that a more critical museum divorced from such an authoritative organization would more critically address the links between breeding programs and their results.
While software isn't the area that Apple is known for, it's becoming more critically attached to the futures of Apple's flagship device, the iPhone, write analysts at Stifel.
But once it seemed like he might be a real candidate, Fox, which is something of a standard-bearer for the Republican establishment, started covering Trump more critically.
The Dot, which was like someone cut off the top of an Echo and sold it for a fraction of the price, has been much more critically accepted.
A new notifications tab will alert visitors when a requested gift has been discontinued, or more critically, when a baby monitor, crib or other item has been recalled.
"We're most vulnerable in retaliation on agriculture, because that's the one area where exports are more critically important than almost any segment of the American economy," he said.
I set out to help my students read news more critically, and I feel that these games have shifted the way my students approach online content every day.
While not expressly a new set of sanctions, the advisory will cause international shippers, and more critically, their insurers, to pay closer attention to North Korea's evasion methods.
"I think that experience now is starting to kick in where now I can really try to think more critically and be more strategic for my clients," she said.
More critically, of course, Europe, but especially Germany, has been ground zero for the tsunami of refugees pouring out of the Middle East and that Trump has now banned.
Perhaps even more critically, this deal signals a shift in our national security and trade policy that lays a framework for future negotiations to address other problems with China.
More critically, Mr. Cruz argued in the interview, history is bending his way: Young voters, for example, have become more likely to support restrictions on abortion in recent years.
But Musk is the head of a publicly traded company, and, more critically, he reached a $2500 million settlement with the SEC over his tweeting just this past September.
Last weekend he paid tribute to them on "Saturday Night Live" and hours later visited some of the more critically injured at the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada.
Without lifeboats for those on the brink of extinction, our children might grow up in a world completely devoid of rhinoceroses, tigers, orangutans, and many more critically endangered species.
Amending such outdated anticompetitive restrictions would allow BMI (and, more critically, our member songwriters, composers and publishers) to be in sync with the model the marketplace is already following.
I didn't feel bullied the two times I got dressed up, and I've written more critically about baseball player-on-player bullshit than any former player/analyst I know.
But as I grew closer to voting age, I started thinking more critically: What are the implications of someone having a massive platform and not making use of it?
For us, it's been really important to help strategize and co-invest with students who are thinking more critically about where their labor and their work is being used.
People close to the campaign predict he will come in first or second — and more critically, above the 15 percent threshold needed to accrue delegates — in every congressional district.
More critically, it must turn once-hostile areas of the country in Ms. Le Pen's favor and attract new kinds of voters — professionals and the upper and middle classes.
The coveted Best Picture slot tends to go to less splashy, more critically acclaimed films, but this new category allows the public fervor around films to be recognized on stage.
Is that something that if he were not working at CNN you would have covered more critically or do you think you did the job that you would normally do?
Though he didn't entirely whitewash the American defeat, which he called "damned humiliating," Pyle's artful narrative lent purpose and dignity to events that perhaps should have been probed more critically.
The coronavirus pandemic has ground daily life to a halt, tanked the stock market and begun to overwhelm the medical infrastructure with more critically ill patients than hospitals can handle.
Our research suggests that the solution to politically charged misinformation should involve devoting resources to the spread of accurate information and to training or encouraging people to think more critically.
I think as people, we have to start thinking a little bit more critically about what's our role in Big Tech because what Big Tech wants from us is our data.
Perhaps more critically, Fove also announced that the headset would be losing integration with Valve's Lighthouse system which powers positional tracking on the HTC Vive in favor of its own system.
More critically, the app is also not currently ranking for searches like "filter photos" or "filter live photos," where rivals like EyeEm, Instagram, PicLab, Aviary, Prisma and MSQRD can be found.
By any measure this report is consistent with an exceedingly healthy labor backdrop and, I think more critically, it's a number that will embolden the Fed to raise rates in March.
More critically for the law, Alito has written some of the court's most substantial and controversial, opinions, from the 21964 Lilly Ledbetter pay-discrimination case to last term's labor union dispute.
More critically, the software shipped with a flaw that, when exploited, could allow an intruder to bypass the lock screen and access a user's contacts, CNN Business and Ars Technica reported.
A chance to turn a conversation about 'stalled smartphone innovation' on its head by encouraging consumers to think more critically about the costs involved in pumping out the next shiny thing.
Perhaps nowhere is that expansion more evident than in Denmark, where thanks to years of rising demand, there are many more critically-praised series and movies being made than ever before.
More critically, the absence of such enterprises largely limits employment to a tiny number of local businesses and to government posts or jobs at publicly funded institutions, like the clinic and schools.
Disclosing classified conclusions is against the law -- but, more critically, doing so when those conclusions are not fully vetted could also prompt reactions from Pyongyang that only make the situation more volatile.
Even more critically, if Johnson does, miraculously, come back with a new Brexit deal (or somehow tries to rebrand May's deal), it will give Parliament very, very little time to consider alternatives.
Ryan Stanton, a Kentucky physician who was featured in an HHS testimonial, told The Daily Beast that he felt pressured to speak more critically of the health law than he wanted to.
I think that's what we've also been trying to do — we've been trying to put infographics on photo and video verification, for example, and trying to push people to think more critically.
It's a primary that could end up saying more about who leads this state — and more critically, from a national perspective, the composition of its congressional delegation — than what happens in November.
The long-run cost of Amazon's retreat will include not just thousands of good jobs but more critically, the forgone agglomeration benefits — the innovative employers that will not locate in New York.
Secondly, and much more critically, allowing the Pride flag to be flown beneath Old Glory sends a powerful message to those who see it that we stand for equality -- all manner of equality.
She's tried to draw a clearer line between her persona and herself, cutting back on revealing personal streams, eschewing flashy public debates, and thinking more critically about how her work will be understood.
By the 2000s, however, local people in some of the world's increasingly water-stressed regions were looking more critically at big water users, and Coca-Cola found itself a target of public ire.
More critically, Trump's anti-trade stances, which include promises to roll back the Trans-Pacific Partnership, to impose steep tariffs and to penalize U.S. companies that move operations to Mexico, concern many economists.
The principle challenges confronting us are not only to understand how a brain gets damaged, but more critically to discover ways to improve the function of the brain parts that have escaped damage.
He suggested that often these organizations took 360-degree images that could've been taken with a regular camera, and that to create the best viewing experience, it was important to think more critically.
It made me think more critically of the space I had before me and taught me to minimize my belongings to just the necessities — and even then, I could have owned even less.
Perhaps more critically, Republicans seem to have forgotten that flipping henchmen on their bosses is the basic means by which law enforcement has broken up mob families and criminal conspiracies since time immemorial.
It's a revelatory examination of the gulfs separating those who might identify as "allies" from those they believe they are allied with, and an invitation to think more critically about whiteness, blackness, and privilege.
But this gathering was no protest; the group entered through the front doors, filed into a conference room, and joined a roundtable discussion about Instagram's treatment of artists — and perhaps more critically, their art.
We often view and speak about ourselves far more critically than we would to other people, and a new video by The Scene called "Best Friends Get Brutally Honest About Their Bodies" proves that.
More critically, entrepreneurs and former colleagues say he has political savvy — a quality that may explain why he was chosen to navigate a multibillion dollar fund inside the Byzantine world of Google parent Alphabet.
More critically, however, in the past sixteen months X has lost a fair number of talented execs, including technical lead Mary Lou Jepsen and key operations experts Megan Smith, Claire Johnson and Chris O'Neill.
While the latter part of the '220s proved more critically inconsistent for the director, he had defined the moment before the decade even began, in 303, with the eerily prescient Do the Right Thing.
The passage of the bill is widely seen as a major legislative loss for Silicon Valley, and perhaps the first in an era where the industry is being viewed much more critically by lawmakers.
More critically, Katyal said, it is common for Supreme Court lawyers not to mention litigation they have pending before the court when writing an opinion piece about a nominee or speaking to a reporter.
The streaming boom has led to huge international demand for shows like "The Rain," above, from the tiny country, where there are many more critically praised series and movies being made than ever before.
Laptop computers have not been replaced by tablets and phones, but users are upgrading their laptop less often and looking more critically at what today's laptops can deliver in terms of bang for your buck.
Lovecraft's writing has been examined more critically in recent years, and the arguments over his legacy have been a sort of microcosm for the larger conversations about race and representation in sci-fi and horror.
The same goes for Thinx (it's a shame about the poor leadership culture, though.) Tech companies should think more critically about why they're creating female-focused products and what service they actually perform for women.
Engaged in repetition and the recording of action, Kazem's piece connects to more critically-engaged content, like Ahmed Mater's lightboxes, which depict a bird's-eye view of Mecca, the holiest site in the Muslim world.
First of all, like pretty much the rest of the world, I believe the deal is working and, more critically, I believe that keeping it in place is very much in our national security interests.
More critically, they deserve the time and space to deal with the unspeakable grief and sorrow they now endure, as well as every ounce of support that can be mustered to help them through it.
Having to pay with cash made me consider my spending habits a little more, because the tangible act of handing over real physical money made me think more critically about the purchase than just swiping.
Clinton's response in the debate was notably different from how the Obama administration talks about premium rate increases — it might signal how a new, Democratic president can speak more critically about the health care law.
A simple practice called the "believing game" and the "doubting game," from Professor Peter Elbow's "Writing Without Teachers," can help students to challenge their own preconceptions and to think more critically about what they read.
More critically, in its eight years, the Obama EPA never reversed the Bush EPA interpretation that the Clean Air Act does not require that CO20073 emissions must be included in the periodic Section 111 review.
More critically, it can control core functions of the vehicle — like changing in-car temperature and adjusting steering, braking, and other key mechanical features — all from the center system and via voice, thanks to Google Assistant.
We still don't know when exactly their product is coming or how much it will cost, but we more critically have no idea how much of the company's efforts will skew toward enterprise versus traditional consumers.
You can actually sometimes create a story and a context that people can relate to that allows them to follow you to a place that gets them to look at something more critically, and more closely.
"Azoya was the perfect solution for us and I guess more critically, they had the experience in terms of the marketing support for that market," Hooper said, emphasizing the importance of access to local know-how.
And, we help them pull back the curtain to see how campaigns are run and fought, so they can think more critically about what they see and read in the media leading up to Election Day.
We need human intelligence to decide how and when to use machine intelligence, and the more sophisticated the uses we make of machine intelligence, the more critically we need human intelligence to ensure it's deployed sensibly and safely.
But part of the solution here is surely having a more critically engaged culture in the first place, and that means treating people as humans rather than gods or aliens, or jumping to the conclusion that they're monsters.
This is the type of individual that needs to be encouraged to enter military programs that can lead to victory in an operation like Locked Shields, or more critically on a real-life cyber battlefield of the future.
"Plastic pollution is a global issue, and we hope our efforts will motivate guests, customers, and indeed, ourselves to think more critically about our use of plastic," said Hyatt president and CEO Mark Hoplamazian in Tuesday's press release.
"As I write this, more than 500,000 respirators are on the way from our South Dakota plant to two of the more critically impacted areas, New York and Seattle, with arrivals expected starting tomorrow," Roman posted on LinkedIn.
This test has been shown to predict the likelihood of recurrence for women with certain types of breast cancer, and more critically has been shown to identify which women with breast cancer benefit from chemotherapy, and which do not.
More critically is the pipeline, there is pipeline wage pressure and we know that because there is severely diminished wage slack at this point and that lends itself to continued increases in wages over the balance of the year.
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Eurogroup chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem rejected calls for banking union regulations to be loosened after weeks of falling bank shares, saying new European bail-in rules had caused investors to look "more critically" at risks born by banks.
Although rooted in our oldest legends, they hold less appeal to adults in the twenty-first century than Le Guin's more critically celebrated works—her visionary novels exploring the mutability of gender and the glittering nightmare of market capitalism.
While Lange and Sarandon were locks for nominations practically the second Feud was first announced, Big Little Lies ended up being the more critically beloved and more discussed series, with Kidman's restrained performance in particular earning heaps of praise.
"This report is consistent with an exceedingly healthy labor backdrop and, I think more critically, it's a number that will embolden the Fed to raise rates in March," said Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at RBC Capital Markets in New York.
But, more critically, acquaintances in Washington's world of public policy and politics, where he wants to eventually work, told him that a foreign degree "connotes a willingness to try things outside one's comfort zone" and would work in his favor.
Analyzing scores from the aggregator site Metacritic, the researchers at Annenberg found that critical reception for male- and female-directed films was virtually identical; but that films directed by women of color were more critically lauded than any other group.
Not only those writers who celebrate it ecstatically, like Walt Whitman, who made his life's work one long ode to our young nation, or Nathaniel Hawthorne, or Toni Morrison, or E. L. Doctorow, who have picked more critically through its past.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads ISIS's November 13 massacre at an Eagles of Death Metal concert in Paris' Bataclan theater, which left 89 people dead and 99 more critically injured, was part of one of the worst terrorist attacks in French history.
The very nature of the London market, whereby the seller gets to choose which warrants to deliver to the buyer and, even more critically, at which location, will always mean the system is biased in favour of the producer over the consumer.
"World Without Mind" joins books such as "Move Fast and Break Things" by Jonathan Taplin, published earlier this year, and Tim Wu's excellent "The Master Switch", from 2010, in arguing that regulators need to look at these world-changing companies more critically.
The very nature of the London market, whereby the seller gets to choose which warrants to deliver to the buyer and, even more critically, at which location, will always mean the system is biased in favor of the producer over the consumer.
Manson's grotesque crimes and the frenzy of attention they invited made it easier for Americans to scapegoat the violence of radicals, instead of looking more critically at the insidious and consequential use of American forces and police power internationally and at home.
If critics have spent the past year wondering what's to come in the wake of commercial dance music's stateside explosion, and, perhaps more critically, the hyperbolic youth culture that accompanies it, Generationwhy both reiterates the question and offers a possible answer to it.
That said, as I've grown older I have been trying to think more critically about my beliefs, and to ask myself whether I hold certain views because I've been exposed to them my whole life, or whether I truly believe in them.
Perhaps more critically, at a time when reports of violence and harassment directed at black, Latino, and immigrant students have spiked, when three-in-four transgender students report feeling unsafe in school, the department has narrowed the focus away from systemic issues.
But the uproar over surprise medical bills (almost always incurred at hospitals) and the spate of new stories about hospitals suing patients with unpaid bills should force presidential candidates to look more critically at this pivotal sector of the health care ecosystem.
Now, if the argument was that his campaign had to be engaged with differently and more critically because it was within the Democratic Party primary process, that's a fairer argument and one that Sanders himself would have probably agreed with most of his political career.
"I believe our nation's top diplomat must be forthright, and more critically his past sentiments did not reflect our nation's values and are not acceptable for our nation's top diplomat," Menendez said Wednesday at a discussion at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
And even more critically, the persecution of Christians and the rise of religious intolerance are often lead indicators of regions and countries tipping into chaos—the outcomes of which have been everything from ethnic cleansings and genocides to mass forced migration and sprawling humanitarian crises.
"The submission to the EMA is a major step toward our goal of delivering it to more critically ill cancer patients around the world," said Vas Narasimhan, Novartis's drug development chief who will take over as chief executive from Joe Jimenez on Feb. 1.
Though some of the sounds and styles overlapped, big beat was like the poppier antithesis to the intellectualism of the more critically beloved IDM, and a response to the self-importance of purist DJs who were dominating the UK dance scene in the mid-90s.
Had this video not shown what many wanted to see, it might have been treated more critically on the front end, rather than represented as a great, exclusive ABC News "get" that was shown to millions of its evening news and morning news viewers.
According to the conventional wisdom, the basic conservative religious agenda is simply to preserve so-called traditional values—and, perhaps more critically, to restore a sense of pride and privilege to a part of the American population that feels that its status is slipping.
The human cost, danger, and small business pinch of "free" delivery, the mire of fake reviews, the privacy invasions of Ring video doorbells or Alexa/Echo devices, even the impact of Cyber Monday cardboard: we're all starting to think more critically about Amazon's all-consuming reach.
To make matters worse, although there are enough pediatric donor livers to transplant all children in this country who need liver transplants, current OPTN policy dictates that these pediatric livers first be offered to adults locally rather than to sicker, more critically ill children further away.
The commercial dominance of Bryan and his peers — artists like Jason Aldean, Blake Shelton and Florida Georgia Line — has often led Nashville's more critically acclaimed Americana wing, which includes artists like Sturgill Simpson, Jason Isbell and Kacey Musgraves, to distance themselves from identifying with country altogether.
By contrast, in the year in which third parties are gaining increasing acceptance, running as the Green Party candidate not only will keep his ideas alive in the media, more critically, it will give his ardent supporters a place to call home and to rally for.
"We are going to have to get better at detecting deepfakes, and academics and researchers are going to have to think more critically about how to better safeguard their technological advances so that they do not get weaponized and used in unintended and harmful ways," Farid said.
I was heavily into all of that stuff, but it wasn't helping me in the same way it was helping everyone else—though it did help me start thinking more critically about happiness and peace and made me push harder to find out what methods would work for me.
The research, while not affiliated with Facebook in any way, suggests the company's approach to fighting the potency of fake news on its platform could be effective in helping boost users' ability to more critically weigh content they are being exposed to via Facebook's algorithmically driven News Feed.
WASHINGTON — One day after President Emmanuel Macron of France and President Trump showered each other with praise, the French president spoke more critically of his host's foreign policy, trade and environmental decisions in a speech to Congress that amounted to an implicit rebuke of Mr. Trump's "America First" approach.
"(We) again call on Pyongyang to cease with the provocative rhetoric, cease with the threats and quite frankly, more critically, cease with the provocative behaviour, the actual conduct, that has led to yet another round of international sanctions," U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby told a regular briefing.
They came after a winter in which El Niño storms fell short of what meteorologists projected — particularly in the southern part of the state — but still partly filled parched reservoirs in Northern California and, more critically, partly replenished the mountain snowpacks that provide water into the spring and summer.
And while it's a known fact that there are more men in leadership positions than there are women, Chamorro-Premuzic argues that instead of scrutinizing the reasons why women aren't able to get ahead, we should be looking more critically at the lack of career obstacles for men.
He'd released more critically acclaimed albums in a year than some artists do in their entire careers, built a cult fan base into a mainstream one, and found himself being heaped with praise for his self-lacerating music and innovative run as the year drew to a close.
But more critically, Verizon is overlooking the fact that there's already a ton of video to get elsewhere and is maybe banking too heavily on the idea that young viewers will download another video app unless the content is worthwhile, which as we already said is just meh.
The success of this opened-up fight can't just be about the health of the couple-form, but about the extent to which it can shake couple-formness off, and, more critically, spread to others the attention, accomodation, and material resources it is accustomed to giving only to each other.
While part of the goal was to improve traditional search functionality and deliver more relevant results, perhaps even more critically, they wanted a tool to help users surface the subjects that interest them without having to explicitly state it in the search box, Nick Caldwell, VP of engineering at Reddit explained.
More critically, there is a crying need to provide some kind of smart hub inside our homes so that we can easily see, connect and manage all the potential connected devices and services in our homes: From smartphones, PCs and tablets, to TVs, lights, HVAC controls and even smart cars.
"We certainly do take those kinds of threats seriously ... and again call on Pyongyang to cease with the provocative rhetoric, cease with the threats and quite frankly, more critically, cease with the provocative behavior, the actual conduct, that has led to yet another round of international sanctions," State Department spokesman John Kirby said.
The Prada Group, which reported 2018 revenue of 3.14 billion euros ($3.4 billion), has been more critically acclaimed than commercially successful, with a yo-yoing share price and rumors of a possible sale to the French groups LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton or Kering, though recent results showed signs of a turnaround.
The press call, ostensibly held as a briefing on Facebook's efforts to improve its content moderation practices, became a bid for damage control after the report drew attention to the roles of Zuckerberg and, more critically, Sandberg — a bestselling author who was once seen as a potential Cabinet member for Hillary Clinton.
You won&apost convince everyone — some people just aren&apost willing to believe the happy news that we all do better when we all do better — but the odds are good that you&aposll help someone think more critically the next time a scary piece of anti-minimum-wage fiction crosses their feed.
But perhaps the reason it stuck—aside from the immense popularity of Star Wars—is that the character was as much Fisher's creation as George Lucas's; in the six years she spent playing her, Fisher likely thought more critically and deeply about who Leia needed to be than any of the original trilogy's credited writers.
So it is even more critically important that the electors "acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice" consider character, realizing that charisma and force of personality can influence voters to make regrettable choices in the heat of passion.
But the artist and former professional dancer Alexandra Bachzetsis encourages us to think more critically and proactively about those codes in her performances, which reframe and reinterpret movements sourced from wrestling moves and Hollywood cinema to Greek dance traditions and historical representations of love and conflict, particularly as they pertain to and shape women's behavior.
" Even more critically, the company believes that such a move would also have safety implications: "Sourcing a new supplier increases the risk of poor part quality leading to possible quality issues that  would impact the safety of our vehicles and the final product… We cannot risk our customers' lives due to a defect from a supplier.
Surmounting the transformational challenges posed by this Fourth Industrial Revolution will require not merely resources and creativity from both the public and private sectors but also, and more critically, a level of concerted national political will that may be made all the more difficult to achieve by the very attributes of the digital revolution rushing toward us.
Even more critically, biomass powers the growth of our most powerful natural "carbon capture" technology—the American forestland, which in addition to filtering 25 percent of our drinking water, preserving critical wildlife habitat, and protecting the cultural and economic foundation of hundreds of communities and 85033 million jobs, also offsets 13 percent of total U.S. CO2 emissions each year.
Since the veil fell on the epidemic of sexual misconduct in the industry — starting with the unraveling of Harvey Weinstein last fall and most recently with accusations of misconduct leveled at Les Moonves, the C.E.O. of CBS — I've been thinking ever more critically about the entertainment I choose to consume, mindfully putting my money, my time and my enthusiasm where my mouth is.
"The moral responsibility is twofold and comes from our ability through our action to reduce risk of human suffering — specifically elders (the most vulnerable) — and to also reduce risk that otherwise healthy among us would have to use scarce resources (hospital personnel, attention, equipment) that would be more critically useful for others," Wolfe told Business Insider in an email on Thursday.
But using as a barometer the British Film Institute's Sight and Sound magazine — which famously polls hundreds of critics once every 10 years, asking them to name the best films ever made — we see that Malick's film is now regarded as one of the best films ever made, and is incidentally more critically acclaimed than The Deer Hunter, which picked up that year's Best Picture award.
Our curriculum ignored black history in Colombia, the Dominican Republic and the U.S. La raza is supposed to welcome all Latinos — white, brown, black — but our teachers never taught us to think of ourselves as people of color because it would have led to conversations about racism and colorism within la raza, and therefore challenge us to think more critically about our identity and our community.
One answer is to oppose the Trump administration's policy changes and demand that these protections remain, but even more critically, we need to update the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) so that megabanks are only given credit when they make loans to individuals who are low and moderate income and require so-called non-banking institutions, like Detroit-based Quicken Loans to also comply with the same rules.
More critically, the applications and use cases for AR are simply not as compelling as gaming is for VR. Yes, there are some serious, industrial use cases that have some self-evident value under AR: guiding technicians in the assembly and repair of complex machines, assisting surgeons during operations, alerting pilots and drivers to navigation cues and objects in front of the vehicles and many other complex, mission-critical applications.
More critically, in all 50 states, there are elections down-ballot, ranging from must-win state house and senate elections to district attorneys, school board, county clerks, tax collector, judges, justices of the peace, and library boards (to name just a few of the many other positions that might be on your ballot.) And too often, folks who do show up at the polls fail to cast their votes for positions outside the top two or three, in part because they feel they don't know enough to make a choice.
Now, Justices Neil GorsuchNeil GorsuchThe 7 big Supreme Court cases to watch in 2020 Removal of DACA recipients has begun: It didn't take a crystal ball to see DACA would not end well Left presses 2020 Democrats to retake the courts from Trump MORE and Brett KavanaughBrett Michael KavanaughThe 21625 big Supreme Court cases to watch in 2900 220006 forecast: A House switch, a slimmer Senate for GOP — and a bigger win for Trump Left presses 2202 Democrats to retake the courts from Trump MORE sit on the highest court in the land and, perhaps more critically, there are dozens who hold their same views sitting on lower courts making decisions about everything from health care to elections to redistricting to the immigration system.

No results under this filter, show 267 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.