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205 Sentences With "understates"

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

And that actually understates the progress of the labor market.
That number probably understates the actual degree of political influence.
It is likely, though, that any survey understates the reality.
But even this understates the strength of the labor market.
At high growth rates especially, this measure understates actual churn.
But this analysis actually understates the challenge for Hillary Clinton.
In some of the mission's members, "confident" understates the attitude.
To say that the founders were unpretentious understates the matter.
HE WAS SAYING EVERYTHING UNDERSTATES THE ACTUAL STRENGTH OF THE ECONOMY.
The closest answer, "more than 5 million," understates the number killed.
Some would argue that this understates the power of the position.
However, Heller understates the main issue: the brutal persistence of racism.
And that actually understates the bet Bennett and Novel are making.
The list of Nobel prize-winners actually understates the university's past glories.
Indeed, looking just at phone trades understates the continuing importance of dealers.
That understates the urgency facing Britain as the March 29th deadline approaches.
Yet such a calculation understates the probable impact of higher interest rates.
Every criticism of Trump's recent comments understates how tragically wrong they are.
To say that the Egg House was no-frills radically understates things.
Second, the argument understates the radicalism of what Sanders and Warren propose.
This seriously understates the responsibility, power, and moral authority of the office.
My only quibble is that he actually understates the urgency for removal.
This sounds bad — and is bad — but it sharply understates the case.
Once again, this argument greatly understates Trump's role in shaping his own presidency.
"I think the biggest thing is, it understates his compensation," Mr. Cox said.
But by focusing on millennial burnout, Petersen understates the scope of the problem.
To say this token of allied solidarity constitutes a welcome development understates matters.
"Our timing was right, and the product has provided real value," Levine understates.
But Mr. Chyn argues that this experiment substantially understates the importance of neighborhoods.
But that vastly understates his wealth, said the person close to Mr. Xiao.
Amazon has said Mr. Sanders understates how much the company pays warehouse workers.
That statistic still understates the military gap between the United States and China.
But even that measure understates the extent that the polls misjudged Mr. Trump's strength.
But it arguably understates the magnitude of the problem the environmental movement now confronts.
The scale of these price moves understates the dangers of such a destabilising act.
Although it is often called China's Amazon, the comparison vastly understates its true significance.
This chart shows how dramatic the turnaround was — and, if anything, understates the case.
To say past statements have come back to zing the Trump team understates the matter.
On the other hand, since it's only measuring Facebook usage, it probably understates the case.
"I think Chase understates it because of who he is, having that last name," Earnhardt said.
And even this understates the centrality of racial resentment to Republican Party primaries in the Northeast.
The official rate is 33%, which probably understates reality, and food prices are rising even faster.
Mr Brown's take, that "Poland is not exactly a hotbed of climate activism," understates the problem.
The cliché about TV going from three channels a generation ago to hundreds actually understates it.
It should be noted that this dollar figure understates the true cost of Title III litigation.
It is also possible that the new data understates real changes in the nature of work.
Thomas's work is revealing, though he understates O'Connor's historic contribution to the rights of L.G.B.T. Americans.
Given this historical record, it is highly likely that Ms Ostapenko's Elo score understates her future potential.
As such, the $2.4 billion figure is a conservative estimate that likely understates the actual economic damage.
Last month's slowdown in job gains, however, probably understates the labor market's health as layoffs remain low.
But your article understates the powerful logic in favor of maintaining the current bipartisan consensus against both.
This likely understates the administrative growth as NCES began grouping administrative employees with "other" employees after 2628.
Even that understates the competitive threat given the superior operational efficiency and flexibility of modern combined-cycle plants.
If anything, this chart understates just how regressive the total ultimate impact of the Republican plan could be.
The rate also understates the true picture, partly because of the way India counts the number of employed.
Western experts contend that the country's consumer price index broadly understates the effects of ever-rising housing costs.
But this understates the case, because these data don't include "in kind" benefits like health care and education.
This figure probably understates the shift given that traditional funds, like Point22007, have adopted a partly quantitative approach.
That figure understates the total, Ms. Stevens said, since many expats use American bank accounts for their benefits.
But two retired admirals under whom Mr. Zinke served say his account understates the damage that it did.
WORKER SHORTAGES Last month's slowdown in job gains, however, probably understates the labor market's health as layoffs remain low.
"The NPR understates the overwhelming power and credibility of existing U.S. military forces (both conventional and nuclear)," Reif said.
In fact the Big Mac gauge probably understates the general rise in prices and the slide in the currency.
With the labor market near full employment, the anticipated slowdown in growth likely understates the health of the economy.
Using median earnings as a measure understates how much variability there is in graduates' incomes, especially at the top.
But this actually understates the gap between the America that elected Trump and the America he'll have to govern.
With the labor market near full employment, the data showing slowing growth likely understates the health of the economy.
The official estimate of 4,647 troops in Iraq understates the actual number of American military personnel in the country.
And that statistic understates the gap, because college graduates are also much more likely to have full-time jobs.
Critics say Trump's laser-focus on allies' spending understates the broader importance of key allies, particularly countries like Norway.
But that understates inefficiencies, executives privately concede - as well as the cost of protracted bickering over whose technology becomes standard.
That understates the long-term costs for Boeing, argues Marc Szepan, a former executive at Lufthansa, now at Oxford University.
But that understates the value to those firms of Sky's distribution platform, argues Claire Enders of Enders Analysis in London.
It also understates the impact that Americans can have in Cuba when allowed to visit and engage with Cuban citizens.
Mr. Abrams, 69, is described politely in foreign policy circles as a "controversial" figure, but that deeply understates the case.
"Turkey locks up dissidents" (November 229th) seriously understates the extent of the problem Turkey faces from the Gulenist terror organisation, FETO.
While the overall numbers remain small, the data probably understates the trend because it does not include procedures performed by gynecologists.
But the argument that Sanders has fundamentally lost his political appeal understates the differences between him and the emerging Democratic field.
Here her most salient vocal quality is a clarity that never thins out her commitment or understates her joy and pain.
But a frame-by-frame analysis actually understates how disingenuous it is for Sanders to try to tie himself to Obama.
While his characters are going through their everyday lives, one feels the despair – which Bollinger always understates – coursing through their bodies.
However, in providing examples of other centralized health care systems, it understates a harmful aspect: reduction in the availability of care.
I think he exaggerates the degree of popular support for his agenda and, by extension, understates the difficulty of accomplishing it.
Actually, "shifting positions" understates the case—in each instance, Fox showed videos of Trump making a bombastic claim, then reversing his position.
And the increase in the rig count understates the extra new production because drilling and fracking operations have become much more efficient.
Harris often understates the extent to which religious ideas can be props or justifications for behaviors that are motivated by nonreligious grievances.
This understates the problem, as Trump tends to announce people for senior jobs and then withdraws them before he formally nominates them.
Cornyn suggested last week that Congress go "back to the drawing board" on immigration; if anything, that understates the lack of agreement.
"The Brazen Age" understates this familiar truth, but its myriad dramatizations save the truth from having to be stated much at all.
To say that there are rogue guards in these prisons grossly understates the crisis situation that exists throughout New York's prison system.
Gavi, the vaccine fund, has saved 10 million lives since it was created in 2000, but that stat actually understates its impact.
Clinton has not given specifics on corporate taxes and probably understates the cost of her proposal to eliminate tuition at public colleges.
That's almost a show and a half a day, and it understates the true total, because it doesn't cover myriad specialty sites.
China's measured liberalization understates its degree of market reform because it doesn't account for the additional economic freedom in special enterprise zones.
With job growth averaging 178,000 per month in the first quarter, the anticipated slowdown in GDP likely understates the health of the economy.
Even this figure understates their political impact since super PAC spending was focused on the most competitive races, especially the Senate and presidency.
It can work the other way, too: Some economists cite evidence that China also understates its growth during booms to smooth its results.
But that description understates both the breadth of Ms. DeVos's political interests and the influence she wields as part of her powerful family.
However, various studies, including one from McKinsey in 2009, estimated that the ad revenue collected vastly understates the total economic value to consumers.
With job growth averaging 21.8,26.2 per month in the first quarter, the anticipated slowdown in GDP likely understates the health of the economy.
Our stated rationale for discouraging smoking — to prevent harm caused by secondhand smoke — greatly understates the amount of harm that these actions prevent.
"We believe that the net sales in the 4th quarter understates actual physician and patient demand," Regeneron spokeswoman Arleen Goldenberg said in an email.
And even this understates the change in projections, because it's not just the future that isn't what it used to be, but the past.
But even that amount likely understates the size of its red ink, because it leaves out things like depreciation and amortization of capital expenditures.
"Friday's 157k jobs headline significantly understates the strength of the July employment report," Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs, said in a note.
Every indicator is up: Jackson is shooting 2016 percent overall, a notch above with his career rate of 43.5, but that understates the improvement.
And economists agree that substantially understates remittances, since it only counts two of the ways migrants can send money home (we'll get to that later).
So, if anything, even the Reagan/Bush comparisons understates Justin Trudeau's family legacy: His father was both a towering historical figure and a cultural icon.
Mr Gordon understates how IT has transformed people's lives and he has little to say about the extent to which artificial intelligence will intensify this.
But that understates Sky's investments in tech beyond the satellite kind, and its diversification under Jeremy Darroch, its boss, and James Murdoch, its former chairman.
This hundred-per-cent difference in incomes actually understates the degree to which our policies and payment systems have given short shrift to incremental care.
Counting last week's blast, 27 Russians have been killed in combat in Syria, according to official statistics, which Kremlin critics say understates the true figure.
Boeing's position that following the established emergency checklist should have been sufficient understates the complexity of responding to a crisis in real time, pilots said.
The Board believes that the price reflected in the Proposal understates the Company's true value and is not in the best interests of our shareholders.
That understates the problem because a staggering number of prime-age black men are not—2000% compared in 2014 with 17% of whites (see chart 1).
She makes them sound contemporary and newly contemplative; she understates the dimensions that can seem religiose or portentous; she shows both wry humor and deep poignancy.
Now, what I think many economists are suggesting is that this kind of analysis understates the losses when much of that trade is in intermediate goods.
The index also understates a large number of lesser trends, including the shrinking size of meal portions in restaurants and changing fashions in clothing, they say.
And maybe working on that part of ourselves or trying to rest in that struggle is valuable in a way that our market-dominant culture understates.
Furthermore, that book value was based mainly on valuations from 2003 and so also "significantly understates the market value of the company's assets," the trio said.
Of course that comparison understates his success: Buchanan didn't lead national polling consistently for months, or beat his closest rival by 20 points in the Granite State.
If anything, measuring the flood of tech dollars pouring into Washington, DC, law firms, lobbying outfits, and think tanks radically understates Big Tech's influence inside the Beltway.
Mayer's statement, which vastly understates the impact of the hack and her involvement in everything that followed, refers to "26 specifically targeted users" in the 2014 breach.
And that understates her advantage: she has so far won endorsements from 220 of the 712 "superdelegates" whose votes will count at the party's convention in July.
That relatively small financial figure dramatically understates our dependence on rare earths because we also import billions of dollars worth of electronic products that contain rare earths.
"Looking at the annual difference in growth rates between the [White House] and CBO kind of understates how bonkers the [White House's] growth assumptions are," he wrote.
But he understates the challenge of getting people to accept the ethical implications of the accidents that will inevitably occur, even if there are far fewer of them.
And even that obvious reality understates matters, as the unreliability of solar energy creates a need for backup conventional capacity so as to avoid shortages, as discussed above.
"The board believes that the price reflected in the proposal understates the company's true value and is not in the best interests of our shareholders," the letter said.
The five-year time horizon used here — 1992-1997 — understates the strength of that expansion, because the economy was in an all-out boom from 1998 to 2000.
In Fitch's view, the level of overdue petroleum subsidies (158% of equity at end-1H15) materially understates the bank's impaired assets (5303% of total loans at end-1H15).
The checks are used to approximate gun sales, although the number, reported by the F.B.I.'s National Instant Criminal Background Check System, almost certainly understates the actual total.
The federal poverty rate for a family of four is $24,600 -- and the formula for the official poverty rate understates the difficulty of surviving at that income level.
Prosecutions are commonly for a single seizure but Samuel Wasser, a biologist at University of Washington in Seattle, said this understates the scale and complexity of the illegal trade.
We spend $86 billion a year, and that probably understates the figure, on IT. ... Those are orders of magnitude higher than anything you would see in the private sector.
To accomplish this sleight of hand, her proposal dramatically understates its cost, overstates its savings, inflates the revenue, and pretends that an employer payroll tax increase is something else.
VICE News' count of school districts is derived from interviews with state education departments, school board associations, research organizations, and news reports, but it almost certainly understates the trend.
Though prog could be pretentious and overstuffed, the conventional wisdom about the genre dramatically understates how popular it was in the 1970s—and how interesting and ambitious it still is.
"In any event, at a minimum, the [FCC's proposal] vastly understates the level of work, and associated costs, that would be necessary to implement its Set-Top Box Mandate," it writes.
While that may be true in part, the current and former U.S. officials said, it is overly simplistic and understates how Islamic State's influence has spread beyond the territory it controls.
But, if anything, that lag in salary data probably understates the chief executives' pay for each patient day, because he or she would likely have gotten a raise the following year.
Obama relied on memoranda and proclamations for some of his most disputed executive actions, so just counting his executive orders understates his efforts to take action without Congress passing a bill.
The SLS has had around $14bn of taxpayers' money since it was authorised in 2011—and that understates the true cost, since the SLS incorporates technology from old, abandoned rocket projects.
Yes, Twitter responses are obviously selection bias incarnate — but looking at the opprobrium aimed at social media from all sides today, I'd think that if anything it understates the current collective wisdom.
That understates the power the technology delivers because the electric motors that drive the wheels produce tremendous amounts of torque — though Paccar and Toyota officials didn't have the final torque numbers available.
At that rate, according to the new official statistics, 245 parents have been separated from children — but that dramatically understates how many families have been separated, because so have 1,500 non-parents.
Those tariffs have collected approximately $4.5 billion so far, the group wrote in a brief with the top court, a figure that "significantly understates the irreparable and ongoing harm" to their businesses.
When he announces to each new arrival, "Welcome to the Thompson, I'm Gary, hotel ambassador," he may be that rarity in this age of title inflation: someone who understates his own importance.
Beyond that, the Islamic State remains in the eastern half of Syria, and Defense Department officials caution that suggestions the group has been completely routed understates the Islamic State presence in Syria.
The financial disclosure probably understates Mr. Ross's net worth because it does not place a value on the underlying assets held by many of the investment funds in which he has stakes.
While Trump's description of the American economy as a mess is basically fantasy, many experts think that the most recent reported jobless rate of 4.8 percent of the workforce understates labour market distress.
Even this understates the tightness, because structural demand is increasing due to exports of liquefied natural gas and the growing number of gas-fired power plants entering service to replace old coal units.
With Katherine Michelmore, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Michigan, I have analyzed data held by the Michigan Consortium for Educational Research and found that this measure substantially understates the achievement gap.
And the drawing actually understates how bad things will be, because it's simply too zoomed out to illustrate how many different Israeli settlements there are and how much they'd screw up Palestinian development.
Bad loans as a share of their total portfolio remains low, at less than 2.5 percent, but economists believe the figure understates the problem because banks often extend the payment dates for problem debt.
The chart at the top of this article actually understates the number of tobacco deaths, since it only considers the most direct causes of deaths and excludes secondhand smoking, perinatal conditions, and residential fires.
This is all a very long way (sorry, I get carried away on this topic) of saying that this video describes the threats of nuclear weapons well but, if anything, significantly understates those threats.
The most complete statement of the conservative research program on this is found in David Neumark and William Wascher's 2010 book Minimum Wages, which argues that a narrow focus on disemployment understates the costs.
"Saying that POMR was revolutionary almost understates it," Dr. Charles Safran, the chief of the division of clinical informatics at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, told The Economist in 21991.
The CDC said it is likely that the 640,000 cases of bug-borne illnesses grossly understates the actual number of cases around the U.S. because many other cases are never diagnosed or treated properly.
"We believe [our estimate] understates the true incidence of death due to medical error because the studies cited rely on errors extractable in documented health records and include only inpatient deaths," Makary and Daniel write.
You may think this summary understates the significance of the settlement if you read the FTC and Facebook's description of the agreement, because both of those entities are painting this as a very big deal.
There are also reasonable arguments that the exercise of economic modeling itself understates the harm created by things like species extinction, wrecking the viability of indigenous people's traditional lifestyles, and rendering small island nations uninhabitable.
"The board believes that the price reflected in the proposal understates the company's true value and is not in the best interests of our shareholders," Tribune CEO Justin Dearborn wrote in a letter to Gannett.
The defense budget figure for last year, 954.35 billion yuan ($138.4 billion), likely understates its investment, according to diplomats, though the number is closely watched around the region and in Washington for clues to China's intentions.
Once you understand what manufacturing now looks like, you come to see that the way it is represented in official statistics understates its health, and that the sector's apparent decline in the rich world is overstated.
Ahead of the November election, Republican candidates have criticized President Barack Obama and leading Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton for posing climate change as a top national security issue, saying the assertion understates the threat of terrorism.
The budgeted headline deficit of KWD9.7bn understates Kuwait's structural fiscal balance, as it treats KWD1bn worth of transfers to the RFFG as an expense, and excludes an estimated KWD7bn of investment income (mostly in the RFFG).
A spokeswoman for Senator Orrin G. Hatch, the Utah Republican who leads the Finance Committee, said the joint committee's analysis understates the actual economic growth and is not based on the current version of the bill.
Experts, however, are now questioning whether this standard assumption understates the actual percentage who become ill, saying the finding was made nearly a decade ago in a vastly different setting: a sparsely populated island in Micronesia.
The media often contextualize Trump's comments by merely pointing out that they are "unprecedented" or that they "shock experts," but this practice, rooted in otherwise admirable professional norms, so understates matters that it misleads the public.
Last month's slowdown in job gains, however, probably understates the health of the labor market as measures such as weekly applications for unemployment benefits and the Institute for Supply Management's services employment gauge have suggested underlying strength.
Kiefer's own acknowledgment that there is no turning back understates the fact that not since Paul Klee has a painter broached so powerfully the topic of his own disappointment at striving, hopelessly, for poetry in the physical.
Public records requests by The New York Times identified at least 8,700 cases in which licenses were taken away or put at risk of suspension in recent years, although that tally almost certainly understates the true number.
And in this era of concern about "the 1 percent," the play understates Hamilton's deep commitment to elitism, while ignoring the downsides of the conservative, British-influenced political and economic system he wanted to put in place.
This likely understates the number of hate crimes in the US. When the US Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) surveyed large segments of the population between 2004 and 2015, it concluded that there are 250,000 hate crimes annually.
According to a recent report by the U.S. Treasury the average time for processing licenses last year increased from 85033 to 88 business days – a statistics that significantly understates the problems since half of the submissions remained unprocessed.
In fact this understates the speed with which the new approach has been adopted, says Alexa Swift of Mercy Corps, an NGO, because the other 90% includes things that cannot be converted to cash, such as mental-health counselling.
Casting all these people as "winners" who play down the legitimate concerns of "losers" understates their legitimate economic worries, as well as the extent to which openness is dominant among under-45s in general, not just among the elites.
With the labor market near full employment, the data likely understates the health of the economy - GDP also tends to be weaker in the first quarter because of calculation issues the government has acknowledged and is trying to resolve.
Some economists argue that the official unemployment figure -- 7.5 million in December -- understates the true state of the job market because it only counts people who are out of a job and have looked for work in the past four weeks.
Some economists argue that the official unemployment figure -- 20083 million in December -- understates the true state of the job market because it only counts people who are out of a job and have looked for work in the past four weeks.
"We believe that the recently announced tender offer process for NH shares understates the intrinsic and economic value of the company," said Mark Hoplamazian, Hyatt President and Chief Executive Officer, in the signed letter released to the Spanish stock exchange regulator.
This top line wage growth figure actually understates true wage growth this year because it is a pretax measure, meaning it does not account for the tax cuts that are putting about $2,000 back into the pockets of ordinary families.
But even that understates the challenge facing Mr. Trump's campaign: It's not at all obvious where he has his best chance of breaking through, making it harder for him to concentrate his efforts over the last days of the campaign.
Note, also, that this actually understates how much the typical person will benefit, because it's a mean, not a median: this is just the total amount of unemployment money paid out, divided by the number of people getting benefits per week.
"The increase of average hourly earnings at a 2.5 percent rate on a year ago basis likely understates the true pace of wage and compensation growth due to a tight labor market," said Joe Brusuelas, chief U.S. economist at RSM.
The tone and content of Trump's responses to a horrific day were familiar from his campaign trail rhetoric, which tapped into a sense among many voters that the US response to terrorism is plagued by weakness, political correctness and understates the scale of the threat.
"The overall number of hate groups likely understates the real level of hate in America, because a growing number of extremists, particularly those who identify with the alt-right, operate mainly online and may not be formally affiliated with a hate group," researchers wrote.
Rubio released an analysis Thursday arguing that the Urban study understates the benefits new parents would receive from the plan, since the study did not take into account the fact that the paid-leave benefits would be transferrable between spouses in two-parent households.
Since 2628, according to a Department of Justice tally, the retooled FCA has allowed the federal government to claw back $28503 billion wrongfully billed to taxpayers, an astonishing haul that actually understates the law's effect, because it omits both criminal penalties and the FCA's deterrent effect.
It has been noted that this is the first Hollywood movie in a long time with a mostly Asian and Asian-American cast, and if anything this observation understates the diversity of the performers onscreen, in terms of both their origins and their pop-cultural affiliations.
The sympathetic Navy Times, which had tracked the prosecution's many missteps, reported Gallagher as guilty "only of appearing in an inappropriate photograph"—linguistic malpractice that vastly understates the criminality of his behavior; undignified "trophy" photos aren't just a U.S. military crime, but a crime in international law.
"We appreciate the EPA's timeliness in releasing these volumes and its support for growing biodiesel use under the RFS, but this proposal significantly understates the amount of biodiesel this industry can sustainably deliver to the market," said Anne Steckel, vice president of federal affairs at the biodiesel group.
One caveat: The map likely understates the amount of addiction treatment that is available in some parts of the US. For one, physicians can gain the ability to prescribe buprenorphine through a special waiver, but those kinds of practices wouldn't appear in a map solely dedicated to drug addiction treatment facilities.
Simply counting members of white nationalist groups understates the actual threat: Recent white supremacist mass killers — like the one who attacked a black church in Charleston, a synagogue in Pittsburgh, and a heavily Latino group of Walmart patrons in El Paso — have not been card-carrying members white supremacist groups.
The opioid epidemic, by state As alarming as it may be, even the death toll arguably understates the depth of the crisis — because opioid misuse and addiction can lead to many more problems than death, from hindering social functioning to posing a huge financial strain since the drugs can be so costly.
While the authors didn't know who had enrolled in DACA, they think the analysis likely understates the effects of the program—they looked at people who were potentially eligible, and the number of enrollees is likely smaller, so the reduction in depression levels among those actually enrolled could be even bigger than what they found.
Their imprint on the economy is enormous: Companies owned by private equity firms accounted for 8.8 million jobs in the United States in 2018, and 5 percent of G.D.P. But if anything, that understates the scale of the financialization of American business, and the ways that management tactics of buyout kings have become the norm.
Hesse himself understates the impact of this significantly, writing that "some of the pictures look especially creepy," and he theorizes that's because we have a very good idea of what animal faces especially should look like, anything that features eyes in particular (like my own example above, with the source material provided unwittingly by my colleague) turns out especially horrifying.
Letter To the Editor: Re "Outrage Over Sentencing in Rape Case at Stanford" (news article, June 7): The decision to sentence a former Stanford University student, Brock Turner, to six months in jail for three felony counts of sexual assault, lest prison have a "severe impact" on his future, is a prima facie example of the way our culture understates and devalues the horror of sexual violence.
It also probably understates the case, since it doesn't include companies like Apple, which hasn't yet withdrawn its projections but did tell investors last month that it wasn't going to hit the numbers it previously projected; or the New York Times, which told investors that its ad numbers were being hurt but that it thought — for now, at least — the rest of its projections were okay.
"Even with its description of the increasing impacts that lie ahead, the IPCC understates a key risk: that self-reinforcing feedback loops could push the climate system into chaos before we have time to tame our energy system, and the other sources of climate pollution," Mario Molina, who shared the Nobel prize in chemistry in 1995 for his work on depletion of the ozone layer, told The Guardian.
She's a 27-year-old mother of five from Stoughton Mass who's currently paying the bills with Little Big Town's 29 CMA honoree "Girl Crush" and McGraw's 212 country smash "Humble & Kind"—parental advice that sounds humbler and kinder (and wiser) (even catchier) the way McKenna understates it on her tenth album and second with serious distribution, where it's one of seven straight winners that precede three not-bad-at-alls.
"This estimate likely understates the reductions in insurance coverage that would actually occur under the Graham-Cassidy legislation, particularly toward the beginning and end of the seven-year period, because it does not account for the challenges states will face in setting up new programs on the bill's proposed timeline, the possibility that uncertainty about the program's future will cause market turmoil toward the end of the seven-year period, or the bill's Medicaid per capita cap and other non-expansion-related Medicaid provisions," the authors wrote.

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