Sentences with phrase «clearly accelerated the change»

The reasons for the turn of fate are many, and most predate the 2006 Democratic takeover of Congress and President Bush's sagging popularity, although both factors clearly accelerated the change.

Not exact matches

They clearly did invalidate the old models over the next few years as credit misallocation accelerated, along with the depth and direction of now - unprecedented imbalances and highly self - reinforcing price changes in commodities, real estate, stock markets, and other variables — what George Soros might have cited as extreme cases of reflexivity.
While the accelerated pace of social change and the fact that we are living in a nuclear age are clearly phenomena of which no one is unaware, the same can not be said of the crucial shift in the information environment.
The impact of technology on culture — accelerating cultural change at a dizzying pace — clearly demonstrates that we would be far wiser to guide the powerful forces of change, than to try to legislate, or hold them hostage.
You can clearly see the drop and then spike back up again for the manual (over the two fastest runs it was consistently about 0.3 sec from the drop to the beginning of the rise back up), whereas the PDK actually surges and accelerates slightly harder as it changes, then drops back down to its previous level of G, but never below it.
5) Regional variations suggest dynamics that overpower any CO2 effect — and yet the CO2 effect, plus other GHGe, plus land use changes, plus deforestation, and cement use, and and and clearly suggests dynamic drivers that overpower natural regional variations — by either mitigating them or accelerating them and at times evening them out.
There was an interesting study in Nature Geoscience last Sunday showing pretty clearly that the accelerating flow of the Jacobshavn glacier in recent years was most likely driven by an influx of warm deep seawater, and that shift was likely due to changes in pressure and wind patterns over the North Atlantic Ocean.
Getting this context clearly understood as the premise for policy discussion is important now if progress is to be made in shaping the future in ways that avoid potential political pitfalls as the impacts of climate change accelerate.
Hi Shelley, Clearly, increasing temperatures will not accelerate the hydrologic cycle — but your argument that «climate has always changed» is spurious.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z