But, I have been
arguing the point in... Continue reading →
We have
argued this point in detail because with our view of the nature of the synoptic tradition we must necessarily move with great care.
Hans Reinders carefully
argues this point in The Future of the Disabled in a Liberal Society.
Hughes of MBH has not tried to
argue the point in any MBH responses to our criticism to date.
The second example had only one side presenting a very clearly
argued point in the peer - reviewed literature.
Nicholas Parker of the Cleantech Group
argues this point in a presentation given yesterday at the Entrepreneurial Energy Expo at Babson College.
I can, I hope,
argue these points in a lot more depth, but it is not in the scope of this topic, if there is a thread on another blog etc..
Our skilled family arbitrators and parenting arrangements lawyers recently
argued this point in BC Supreme Court.
Not exact matches
Ideology aside, Demographia has a
point when it
argues that Dallas beats Toronto also because more people
in the Texas city can afford to buy a home.
When I ask which boy could be the next Lionel Messi — Barcelona's superstar, and some would
argue the best footballer
in history — a staff member
points to a lanky 11 - year - old
in neon - orange cleats, darting across the field.
But the startup community
points to the already tough climate for funding, and
argues the need to find a workable model for equity crowd funding is urgent
in Canada, as the U.S. is already moving ahead.
Anyadiegwu
argued that while she's grown the company tremendously on her own — to the
point where she sees $ 50,000 a month
in revenue — she needs a shark's help to scale up and build a larger online platform.
In the other corner sit mainstream business economists, who argue that Carney, in a rare occurrence, missed the poin
In the other corner sit mainstream business economists, who
argue that Carney,
in a rare occurrence, missed the poin
in a rare occurrence, missed the
point.
Many
argue China's US$ 2 trillion
in foreign reserves would protect it from any crisis, but Chovanec
points out there have only been two times
in modern history when a country accumulated such large reserves — America
in the»20s and Japan
in the»80s.
Few could
argue that Americans are a slightly rounder society at this
point in time.
The deputies
argued that the inquiry should be limited to the moment they fired, when they were reacting to a gun
pointed in their direction.
Though some experts
argue that employee tenures at the top are decreasing, she
points to U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics, which find that managers stay with a firm an average of 6.1 years (up from 5.3 years
in 1983), as proof that the jury is still out.
That's a fair
point —
argued eloquently
in this essay by Wall Street Journal correspondent Greg Ip.
The Times «attorney also
argued that Trump's proximity to the nation's highest office, and the fact that Trump's past treatment of women has become a major talking
point in the election, mean that the article
in question addresses «an issue of national importance.»
Prior to the market correction, which has reduced Tesla's 2018 gain to about 3 % ahead of earnings, there was no real major dip, so you could
argue that the staggering losses and the capital obliteration — over $ 1 billion per quarter at his
point — are, well, somehow rationally priced
in.
Bitcoin loyalists
argue that Ethereum's fatal tradeoff is that it's not as secure, and they
point to the DAO hack as Exhibit A. Even
in the Bitcoin community, though, there's some envy for the flexibility of Buterin's creation.
In The Tipping
Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, Malcolm Gladwell
argues that for us to understand why some products succeed, we must think of each as part of an epidemic.
With more than $ 1.2 billion backing it and Intel at its side, Cloudera claims the most widely adopted Hadoop technology
in the world — although Hortonworks (which got $ 50 million from Hewlett - Packard (HPQ) over the summer) and MapR Technologies would probably
argue the
point.
In court documents filed with the Northern California District Court on Thursday, Uber argued that the class - action part of the suit should be dropped because the 160,000 drivers, «have little or nothing in common, other than their use of the Uber App in California at some point over the past six years.&raqu
In court documents filed with the Northern California District Court on Thursday, Uber
argued that the class - action part of the suit should be dropped because the 160,000 drivers, «have little or nothing
in common, other than their use of the Uber App in California at some point over the past six years.&raqu
in common, other than their use of the Uber App
in California at some point over the past six years.&raqu
in California at some
point over the past six years.»
The tipping
point came
in 1917, when President Wilson made the decision to enter World War I. Suffragettes
argued that the effort to «make the world safe for democracy» (Wilson's words) ought to begin at home by extending the franchise.
Ahead of earnings, there's been no real dip, so you could
argue that the staggering losses and the capital obliteration — over $ 1 billion per quarter at his
point — are, well, somehow rationally priced
in.
So the emerging dynamic is: Conservative asks question, Morneau
argues fairness, Conservative
points out something else
in the world that obviously isn't fair, Morneau doesn't have an answer.
But his bullishness is typical of how tech investors view Tesla: they
argue that growth is all that matters and expect the company to at some
point achieve a monopoly position
in an industry that's among the world's most competitive.
In addition, the massive demand refutes the
point that other automakers have made that no one wants electric cars, he
argued.
Law professor Eugene Volokh, who blogs about free speech issues at the Washington Post, has made the same
point in the past to
argue that Google's (GOOG) choice of search results are a form of free speech.
Additionally, Tchir
argues that European investors have shown a proclivity to rush into trades leading to what he calls «periods of violent indigestion,»
pointing to the big swing
in German bund yields seen early last year following the European Central Bank's announcement of more QE as a prime example.
This, Klosterman
argues, is how it has always been (for a while we were certain the Earth was flat until that was proven incorrect), and from that starting
point, he attempts to explore which ideas or truths we believe today may be seen as woefully incorrect 100 years
in the future.
The Blinger plugs
in to any electrical outlet at the
point of sale and requires no additional integration with the existing POS system — a rejoinder to critics who
argue mobile payment infrastructure is too costly and complex to achieve widespread penetration.
«The combined finances
in the federal and provincial spheres are very near the tipping
point,»
argued the Canadian Federation of Independent Business
in a recent report.
The proposal has generated a great deal of often vitriolic debate over the future of the wheat board, and the C.D. Howe Institute recently weighed
in with a report
arguing that global grain markets have changed significantly over the past few decades, to the
point that the CWB is more often than not a price taker.
«Going from completely Schedule 1 classification to medical, then adult - use retail alone was a big step,»
argues Ben Curren, CEO of Green Bits, a
point - of - sale provider operating
in five states.
Over at WaPo, wherein I
argue that a) when we hit the next recession, many policy makers will
point to our higher - than - average debt / GDP ratio as evidence that we have too little fiscal space to engage
in offset fiscal stimulus, and b) those policy makers will be wrong.
While some segments of the KMT
pointed to the event as a last - minute external factor that swung many voters
in DPP's direction
in many competitive races, analysts and DPP supporters
argue that the video probably only had marginal impact on the electoral outcome.
Those
arguing that the new law will have little impact on spam miss the
point: the law is shifting privacy expectations
in how our information is collected and used.
Australian Senator Eric Abetz
argues the country's embassy
in Israel should be moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and took part
in a recent television debate to push his
point.
Zuckerberg was asked by US lawmakers last week what kind of regulation he would and wouldn't like to see laid upon Internet companies — and he made a
point of
arguing for privacy carve outs to avoid falling behind, of all things, competitors
in China.
It's a
point that puts him
in contrast with PIMCO's Bill Gross, who recently
argued that «the age of inflation is upon us.»
They
point to an article that you wrote
in March, I think, of 2012
in Policy Options, where you basically said, dirty oil, the tar sands it's called, dirty oil and the future of our country, where you
argue that the development of the, as you use the word, tar sands, it's become a political term, by the way, as you know, is basically not necessarily good for the country,
in fact it takes jobs away
in the manufacturing sector of Ontario.
In a recent article in National Review, the conservative news magazine founded by William F. Buckley in 1955, columnist Kevin D. Williamson takes a hardline stance, arguing that Trump's 15 percent tax is «about 15 points too high.&raqu
In a recent article
in National Review, the conservative news magazine founded by William F. Buckley in 1955, columnist Kevin D. Williamson takes a hardline stance, arguing that Trump's 15 percent tax is «about 15 points too high.&raqu
in National Review, the conservative news magazine founded by William F. Buckley
in 1955, columnist Kevin D. Williamson takes a hardline stance, arguing that Trump's 15 percent tax is «about 15 points too high.&raqu
in 1955, columnist Kevin D. Williamson takes a hardline stance,
arguing that Trump's 15 percent tax is «about 15
points too high.»
«I'd
argue it's more on the psychological side of things, whereby people see a new major policy
pointed at the housing market and take a bit of a step back, temporarily reassess where they are
in the marketplace before perhaps moving back into the market.»
In fairness, Nick of Sure Dividend uses the Sharpe Ratio and research by Kenneth French to
argue on the side of dividend stocks and makes some good
points.
Not only would it be starting ahead of schedule, he
argues, but even at the market lows of a year ago the stock valuations were never as low as they typically get at turning
points in secular market trends.
My recollection is by this
point in the book he'd had to substitute a proxy scaled market, and
argue for the applicability of the measures over short time scales, so this suggests to me a major re-jig of my portfolio would be premature.
In addition, pure - play broadcasters are valued from 6 - 9x EV / EBITDA and one could
argue that MEG deserves a valuation closer towards the mid
point or higher for its peers when factoring the disposal of newspapers and accounting for the high quality locations of its key stations.
Reaching a
Point of Absurdity: Illegal immigration has been embedded
in American society for so long «that we have forgotten its intrinsic contradictions,»
argues Victor Davis Hanson.