Sentences with phrase «argue your point shows»

Not exact matches

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.
Some have argued that Comcast could point to the Netflix deal to show that it doesn't need further intervention.
I do like the fact that when arguing for rationalism you decide to be totally irrational and throw out extremes like Pink unicorns and magical Blue socks but it doesn't make your point, it's just showing that you're trying to yell the loudest to cloud the issue.
You said «I do like the fact that when arguing for rationalism you decide to be totally irrational and throw out extremes like Pink unicorns and magical Blue socks but it doesn't make your point, it's just showing that you're trying to yell the loudest to cloud the issue.
The point is that contemporary scholarship, as we shall argue below, has been completely successful in explaining pericope after pericope on the basis of the needs and concerns of the early Church, and that over and over again pericopes which have been hitherto accepted as historical reminiscence have been shown to be something quite different.
John Sailhamer has argued that one of the central points of the Pentateuch is to show that the law was ineffective, obsolete, and not what God had wanted for His people at all.
instead of complaining in generalities that show no signs of intelligence, how bout you argue against an actual point he makes in the article.
If you are going to try and argue that Van Persie showed more at 23 than Morata has, then I'm done - there is no point discussing this any further.
steel showed by our boys, great fightback but wenger has thrown away the league, no point arguing for and against — its done we have talked ramsey a million times, the lack of cazorla replacement, giroud - just save it.
If they manage neither, it will be difficult to argue this side hasn't been weakened — and Klopp's stubbornness, which has gotten him into trouble in the past, will be pointed to as a cause given he will be the one who chose to sanction the Coutinho sale when the club had previously shown the will to hold on to him.
You can argue that at 35 his lack of pace may let him down, you can argue he has shown psychological weakness in the past, you can argue the last veteran defender we bought has been a unreserved flop — and they're all valid points.
Pointing to studies showing that the media influences suicidal behavior, Iverson argues that media coverage reporting a causal relationship between contact sports, CTE, and suicide could actually be contributing to psychological distress in former athletes.
Paladino told me on CapTon last night that his internals show him within about 9 or 10 percentage points of Cuomo, which is also in keeping with the SurveyUSA findings and — one could argue — where Marist might be, too, if Lazio wasn't in the running on the Conservative Party line.
In speaking engagements, and increasingly on television, he prosecuted his strategy to subvert the status quo by donning a suit and, in perfect and impossible - to - argue - against rhetoric, spouted the sort of radical ideology — pointing out the causal chain between U.S. foreign policy and terrorism — that would have landed anyone else in talk - show purgatory.
Facing numerous analyses showing his signature jobs programs misallocated resources and put few New Yorkers to work, Gov. Andrew Cuomo argued today that any such assessments are only a matter of political point of view.
But what the No campaign has shown us, I believe, is that arguing for one's case with vigour and conviction, as David Cameron, George Osborne, Sayeeda Warsi and the Conservative machine as a whole (at least for the final couple of months of the campaign) has done - serving as able understudies to Matthew Elliot's splendid overarching campaign, which magnificently secured a majority of Labour MPs (underlining the point that most of Labour are our opponents, not our enemy)- can shift opinion.
Lohmann points out that to show that an offset project does what it claims — actually reduce emissions — «you have to argue that there will be lower emissions than would have been the case without the project.
The Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research argues that seven in ten Americans want to eliminate restrictions on public funding of embryonic stem cell research, while the Conference of Catholic Bishops points to a poll showing six in ten oppose such funding altogether.
But, I show you all this to elucidate the point that despite all the semantics and nuances people argue over: calories apply to the human body and before you worry about anything else, you need to sort out your energy balance because
But, I show you all this to elucidate the point that despite all the semantics and nuances people argue over: calories apply to the human body and before you worry about anything else, you need to sort out your energy balance because regardless of how «healthy», organic, or gluten - free, a food is — if you eat more than your body needs, you're going to gain weight.
I would argue that the show's real turning point came in season four when Larry was...
Critics like Edelstein argued that the movies didn't show enough violence or the terror of the Games, which ended up dulling Collins's points.
This makes his larger point all the more noteworthy: Osborne argues that despite DCPS's progress, the charter sector has still shown stronger performance.
Also, while some might point to the fact that both programs show signs of helping lift achievement in traditional public schools a bit by increasing competition between schools, I don't think anyone would argue that we should sacrifice the achievement of students using vouchers in order to help others.
You can't argue with the success he's had or the amazing loyalty his authors show towards the company, but it does seem that at some point it might become a limiting factor to their continued growth.
He pointed to recent U.S. research showing that couples who argue over finances several times a week are 30 per cent more likely to divorce than those who only have money squabbles less than once a month.
At this point, many are arguing for a sub - 1.0 ER, but my calculations still show that a 1/2 point additional return improvement more than over-compensates for the higher ER.
To make her point, Dr. Hurley showed San Francisco Animal Welfare Commission members slides of messy cereal box aisles in a supermarket to «show» what happens when you put too many animals / cereal boxes on a shelf while arguing that, we have to «respect our animals just like we respect our cereal.»
The presentation is so minimalist in its appearance to a point that you could argue if it has any to begin with as you are immediately thrust into the game as there are no menus or options and all of the control schemes are located in the separate manual, while the lack of a pause menu is quite strange and unorthodox to say the least, although the presentation is somewhat redeemed by the use of clear and concise diagrams showing how to perform certain actions when new gameplay elements are introduced and some may say that with exception of the pause menu; the lack of menus perhaps helps the pacing of the game.
After seeing a brand new Rise of The tomb Raider demo, I argue the point that Microsoft showed the wrong stage demo at E3 2015.
The show may lack a theme, but it does have a point of view, the kind that gets one thinking and arguing back.
By this point, too, the show has been arguing for artists from the West Coast or Asia itself, such as Lee Mullican and Natvar Bhavsar.
There has to be a better way of elucidating one's curatorial aspirations — a point argued in the publication Tema Celeste nearly two decades ago where I raised the question: «What is a Group Show
Yet, while Made in L.A. appeared as diverse and sprawling as the city whose art it presented, it might also be argued that the bulk of the work on view extended four familiar (and familial) lineages of Los Angeles art that were well represented in «PST»: hard - edge abstraction (represented here in paintings by Brian Sharp and Alex Olson and painterly objects by Lisa Williamson and Brenna Youngblood), found - object assemblage (in the work of Liz Glynn, Ry Rocklen, Henry Taylor, and Erika Vogt, among others), eclectic performance practices (including live pieces by Math Bass, Kenyatta A. C. Hinkle, and Ashley Hunt, as well as the collective Slanguage's array of community - based works at LAXART), and film and video projects that pointed, more or less, to the looming shadow of Hollywood (e.g., Miljohn Ruperto's Seven and Five, 2012, which includes multiple remakes of a 1961 episode of the TV show Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Dan Finsel's The Space Between You and Me, 2012, for which the artist restaged Farrah Fawcett and Keith Edmier's decade - old roll in the clay).
Many curators — and art - goers — would argue that the point of a show like the Biennial isn't to please art insiders in the first place, and that the debate that arises is itself what makes it so American.
He then continued on for four more sentences, arguing that the «trend is quite close to the significance level» and pointing out that statistical significance is more likely to show up when one examines longer time periods rather than shorter ones.
My own reason for arguing any point on Climate Etc. is not to persuade the skeptics, who have persuaded me that they are beyond persuasion, but merely to put my own views on record in a setting where there are sufficiently strongly held opposing views as to show that my view is at least not vacuously true but requires more thought in order to accept it.
I still run into people who argue that satellite data shows no warming, at which point I have to go into my monologue about the corrections to Christy's data.
So to argue for the insignificance of the thermosphere to radiative balance it is not sufficient to point to its small mass and number of molecules — one must accompany this with physics showing for instance the mean free path of photons between interactions with air molecules to be sufficiently long that the thermosphere will not significantly affect outgoing flux.
Now one might argue the point that they don't show bikes or walking as alternatives to the private auto, both of which have even lower CO2 emissions per passenger mile.
If one wants to argue that human CO2 is not causing the increases then one must show that some sort of feedback system exists that regulates the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere (i.e. the natural sources / sinks adapt dynamically to ensure that the CO2 level stays at some «set point» which could change over time).
The point is not to argue that the Court's reasoning and conclusions are incorrect, but to shed light on the ways in which arbitral tribunals have actually «used» EU law, and to show that the Court's understanding (with which most commentators sympathize) that investment arbitration poses a threat to the autonomy of EU law is somewhat inflated.
While the matter will likely culminate in a Constitutional show - down at the Supreme Court at some point, Pro-Link GLOBAL believes the administration will first attempt to argue the merits of its case at the Circuit and District Courts before risking a permanent setback at the high court.
You could argue that the real star of the show at Samsung's recent Unpacked event in Berlin was the Galaxy Camera — an Android 4.1 - powered point - and - shoot with one of the largest screens around, backed up by powerful editing and sharing features from Samsung.
I think what Lincoln showed for sure and what Franklin Roosevelt had as well was the ability to listen to different points of view, to let your advisors argue with you and question your assumptions, whether it's with a small or large group.
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