Sentences with phrase «deference at»

There was that post on the impacts of climate change in the Arctic, the one by the officer from the Navy's climate change task force, and the «green dragon» stuff in which she really showed no deference at all to the psuedoscientific nonsense.
However, when he returned to Egypt with God's word of liberation, he was instantly received with respect and deference at court.

Not exact matches

Ashley Anderson, a postdoctoral fellow in the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University, stated that «When people encounter an unfamiliar issue like nanotechnology, they often rely on an existing value such as religiosity or deference to science to form a judgment.»
Doesn't the judge have to at least give deference to the negotiated merger price, rather than just setting his own?
The standard of review for questions of procedure is (at para 70) «correctness with some deference to the Board's choice of procedure».
Such terms as «justice,» «peace,» «reform,» and «deference» belong at this level.
Or, most recently, you might have heard the rumor from Bryan Fischer, from Mike Hucakbee or a friend on Facebook, saying that God abandoned the children at Sandy Hook because, though children have every right to pray in public schools, those schools can not sponsor prayer events out of deference to religious freedom.
At the beginning of Advent it is as well to say that the truth concerning the Virgin Birth of Christ does matter, and the truth concerning the physical resurrection of Christ as well, and that with all deference to the Archbishop of York and the Bishop of Durham.
The Church ought, for example, long ago to have abolished genuflection before the Blessed Sacrament in Japan in favour of a deep bow, in deference to Japanese feelings, or to have ceased using spittle at baptism, as has now been done.
At all events, intrusion of the state should be minimized, not expanded, and deference to dissent should be seen as a requirement of justice, even when it impedes the state and its purposes.
Those of you who followed «vaginagate» — in which I was asked to remove the word «vagina» from my upcoming book in deference to Christian bookstore standards — will know that I'm not at all surprised by this story.
Wherever there is mere conventional attendance at or deference to the church; wherever there is self - seeking and clamor for prestige and power among either laity or clergy; wherever our service is becoming ingrown rather than outwardlooking; wherever, in short, there is conformity to the world instead of the proclamation and daily witness to the gospel that transforms the world, there Christ is dishonored and his lordship flouted.
In fact, in deference to Proverbs 31:23, I literally praised him as such at the city gate!
Haddad recognized Hawkins's deference to the scholarship of Miroslav Volf, whose textbooks are also used at ABTS.
When Munson singled to right, White was wisely held at third in deference to Ken Griffey's formidable throwing arm.
Out of deference to Astori, perhaps the greatest lesson we should draw from Saturday night's matches is just how thrilling this game, which he loved and lived for, can be at its very best.
They are just newly promoted team at the this season and falling in the relegation area and placing just behind at the QPR (26) and -24 goals deference's.
Chevron deference would be to Trump's advantage at the moment, as he controls the regulators.
For those who continue to be obsessed by the size of my government, let me, with due deference to the chairperson of the Economic Management Team, my brilliant Vice President, cite from his speech, two days ago, at Legon, at the opening of the New Year School:
President Trump abandoned a strategy of showing deference to the special counsel examining Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election, lashing out at what he characterized as a partisan investigation and alarming Republicans who feared he might seek to shut it down.
Power can buy friendships, or at least deference.
«There are some very valid reasons why there is a deference to members in their home districts,» de Blasio, who represented Park Slope for eight years in the City Council, said at an unrelated press conference after the vote.
But even he showed deference to the IDC's swelling influence, saying his party «respects» the group — which the WFP has often lashed out at in the past — but «could not disagree more with their decision to caucus with Republicans.»
«Agencies are permitted to change their mind, regularly do so, and at least in theory receive the same deference from courts that they do when making rules from scratch,» wrote Nathan Richardson, a visiting fellow at the conservation group Resources for the Future, in a recent blog post.
Ann Carlson, a professor of environmental law at the University of California, Los Angeles, says a repudiation of Chevron deference «would mark a sea change in administrative and environmental law,» where the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and other implementing agencies often must interpret ambiguous statutory provisions, she wrote on Legal Planet, a U.C.L.A. blog.
Lazarus pointed to Brett Kavanaugh, a conservative judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, as an example of a jurist who «is not ready to give EPA a lot of deference if they're taking language which was crafted at one time and trying to push it at the edges to deal with a problem of another time, like climate change.»
At the time of writing, the International Olympic Committee looks likely to continue to require all women athletes to «verify» their gender by their genes, though the IOC may decide to grant exemptions to track and field athletes, in deference to the IAAF's objections.
When he first arrived at the house, he bypassed the work of Hubert de Givenchy almost from the get go and, despite rumbling criticism at the time for his lack of deference, transformed the brand into a modern day powerhouse.
Whereas at Saint Laurent the problem wasn't so much a lack of deference to the work of Mr. Yves Saint Laurent — Silmane made very little attempt to bring any of his codes into the show.
pace with peace Loosely, be at peace, with due deference to, by leave of or no offense to.
Jolie's scrupulous avoidance to melodrama is admirable, though she takes directorial restraint to an extreme — perhaps in deference to the stoical Zamperini, who died in July at the age of 97.
There's great humour, knowledge and deference to the source material, and more than 250 little plastic people to unlock if you're that into it — yet at the same time, it's wrapped in a playstyle that's really starting to crack and fray at the edges.
Less deference to craft and more «Look at her body now!»
There is some humor in their dynamic; Ramsay presents Joe's mama's - boy deference by having him arrive at her house while Psycho is playing on television, hinting that there's a bit of Norman Bates's mania in his devotion (he even jokes about stabbing her in the shower).
To the extent the speech laid out policy positions, or at least bright lines, it did so through a series of «I believe» statements and a device that differentiated between an active federal government and deference to states (i.e., making things «optional»).
In deference to that I want to take a pause from the facts and figures that build the body of evidence that compels us forward — with which you are no doubt more familiar than I at this point — and step back from the complex policy issues that occupy our debate, to focus on the foundational values that support what we do and why we do it.
Inside Higher Ed, July 2, 2012 «This gubernatorial concern about board appointments is a significant departure from an era when there was more deference to institutions about who they wanted on boards, said Richard Chait, a professor at Harvard's Graduate School of Education who studies university governance.»
Some educators harbor worrisome values: moral relativism, atheism, doubts about the superiority of democracy, undue deference to the «pluribus» at the expense of the «unum,» discomfort with patriotism, cynicism toward established cultural conventions and civic institutions.
The teacher's union, UTLA, is asking members to protest at the meeting, and two anti-charter resolutions are under consideration, although in deference to the board's need to spend more time on other issues while the superintendent search continues, they were postponed until the board's January meeting.
From our perspective, decisions such as the one at issue here miss the fact that public education is evolving and should be driven by a commitment to meet the needs of students and families and not by deference to a bureaucratic structure that often seems better for the adults in the system than for the most vulnerable children.
Cross-posted at Education Week In my last blog post, I discussed the deference and reverence once afforded educators by elected leaders regarding how to best run the American public education system and how all of that has come to an end.
At the very worst one can read «books» written by ten year - olds (or eighty year - olds) in which grammar and punctuation are alien; the content amusing (in deference to the authors, I will not use a stronger word).
[8] Research published at the University of Oxford characterizes Buffett's investment methodology as falling within «founder centrism» — defined by a deference to managers with a founder's mindset, an ethical disposition towards the shareholder collective, and an intense focus on exponential value creation.
A submissive pup does not struggle at all, and may try to lick you in deference.
Maile has welcomed 41 fosters and at least 8 other permanent residents to our home with grace and deference.
Fixed 5 - 10 year console cycles, uninterupted by most advances in hardware technology, are an antiquated notion and at this point only still present out of tradition and deference to an old consumeristic model.
In deference to her husband, she withdrew from the art world in the 1960s, only emerging in 1973 when a solo show of her art was held at the Elaine Benson Gallery in Bridgehampton, New York.
there is a simple but very solid explanation (with deference to SM) of the Marcott fraud here http://theinconvenientskeptic.com/2013/03/introducing-the-marcott-9/ maybe stick * (pun intended) to Gleick type investigations you are very good at that but Atmospheric physics zero refer to Lindzen maybe
The IPCC is given deference when it comes to climate change opinion at all Northwest Washingon D.C. cocktail parties (which means also by the U.S. federal government) and other governments around the world.
... I am quite satisfied that the review process was fair and equitable, although I do believe excessive deference was paid to this one particular reviewer at the beginning of the process.
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