Sentences with phrase «egregious change»

The most egregious change is forcing the icons to stay visible on the home screen by eliminating the app drawer.
There will be initial outcry about it, but it's not anywhere close to an egregious change.
But Chase is going to know that they are losing the account because of their egregious change in terms, absolutely.
To my mind the most egregious changes have come in the Tier Point earning section and there's really not much upside there for anyone who reads Traveling For Miles (I don't expect many full - fare flyers read this little blog!).

Not exact matches

Efforts to promote such changes in the guise of human rights are correctly condemned as egregious instances of «cultural imperialism» by which elites of certain rich nations, not least of the United States, attempt to impose their values on the rest of the world.
Our submission also cites egregious examples from Victoria's meat regulator PrimeSafe, the huge impact of knee - jerk changes to regulation of raw milk on small - scale dairy farms (many of whom have now gone out of business), and the complicated business of ensuring appropriate labeling of GMO and imported ingredients while not creating an extra burden for small - scale producers who sell directly to the public.
Replay review confirms the targeting and because of the «egregious mistake» clause in the replay rulebook (as in, replay review can change anything that was very wrong), the interception is negated.
Changing things unsettles everybody, so it takes something really egregious, like Brown v. Board of Education overturning Plessy v. Furgeson only after it became obvious that separate was never equal.
It talks about how fat loss works, what the most commonly egregious behaviors are that lead to caloric overconsumption, and how to change them, one by one, such that you eventually dial in on a bare effective minimum dose.
[22] An egregious example is of teachers changing student test scores in the highly publicized cheating scandals in Atlanta and New York.
called the research change an «egregious dilution» of serious science, accusing his Republican counterparts of trying to escape empirical data that might not back up their school - choice philosophy.
That's a great quote, and I agree, it becomes a question of continuing to participate despite egregious differences between your own and the institution's ethos, that developed as the institution (and perhaps yourself) changed.
In her comprehensive and detailed examination of the complex and dynamic nature of the African continent, Professor Maathai offers both «hard - headed hope» and «realistic options» for change and improvement, and analyses the most egregious «bottlenecks to development in Africa» occurring at the international, national, and individual levels — cultural upheaval, environmental degradation, and enduring poverty, among others.
To my satisfaction, the Times published my letter to the editor on this (responding to the «Eco-tecture» issue of the Magazine); to my dismay, they retained my criticism of one particularly egregious sentence (Mark Svenvold's «By installing a solar - hydrogen system, almost any house, it seems, could go seriously green — and without a whiff of the sacrifice or changes in lifestyle that sometimes come from the more puritanical quarters of the environmental movement») while removing my broader complaint about their coverage (which regularly implies that even a «whiff» of sacrifice is indeed puritanical, by definition).
I intend both to «follow the money» (flowing primarily from special interests opposed to regulation or taxation of greenhouse gas emissions) and to «follow the science» (by exposing the most egregious flaws in the «evidence» against the attribution of contemporary climate change primarily to human causes).
In perhaps the biggest backpedaling, The Sunday Times of London, which led the media pack in charging that IPCC reports were full of egregious (and probably intentional) errors, retracted its central claim — namely, that the IPCC statement that up to 40 percent of the Amazonian rainforest could be vulnerable to climate change was «unsubstantiated.»
In a particularly egregious episode, the American Enterprise Institute, which is partially funded by Exxon Mobil, offered a $ 10,000 bounty for any papers that could cast doubt on the 2007 United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report.
Developing countries, some of which are already embroiled in military conflict, may be drawn into larger and more protracted disputes over water, energy supplies or food, all of which may disrupt economic growth at a time when developing countries are beset by more egregious manifestations of climate change.
In justice, Marcott has tried to corrent the most egregious press coverage, for example at Discover blogs where he said exactly what I have said about it: It is impossible to speak of relative rates of change when comparing two records whose time resolution differs by 5 orders of magnitude.
Since the IPCC seems unwilling to change even the most egregious errors in AR4 this means that any subsequent comments will be ignored.
But most importantly, the impact of the agreement is clear — governments have signaled an end to the fossil fuel era by committing for the first time to cut GHG emissions and avoid the most egregious impacts of climate change.
In this installment, we describe a particularly egregious fault that exists in at least one of the prominent models used by the federal government to determine the SCC: The projections of future sea - level rise (a leading driver of future climate change - related damages) from the model are much higher than even the worst - case mainstream scientific thinking on the matter.
By the end of this jaunty, likeable, fact - rich journey through the history of the «global warming» the viewer will be left in no doubt that climate change is one of the most egregious political and scientific hoaxes in history.
Yet, despite having «semi-protected» status to prevent anonymous changes, Wikipedia's acid rain entry receives near - daily edits, some of which result in egregious errors and a distortion of consensus science.»
The other egregious error is to argue that because climate has changed continually in the past, one shouldn't worry about it in the future.
The changes have the potential to affect not just the employers committing the most egregious violations of the Act but those who commit less serious contraventions as well.
A campaign finance violation is not a ground to remove an elected official from office, no matter how egregious, on its own, even if one could prove that the campaign finance violation probably caused the outcome of an election to change.
Let's start with the most important point first: A campaign finance violation is not a ground to remove an elected official from office, no matter how egregious, on its own, even if one could prove that the campaign finance violation probably caused the outcome of an election to change.
The Committee noted the «egregious» impact that these changes could have had on the Applicant's entitlement to benefits.
Perfection during these changing times is unlikely, but documented and relied upon procedures should keep companies safe from the most egregious infractions.
There is nothing egregious about its changes, and many of the first party apps like the People app, Calendar, Browser and others, are tastefully built upon the stock Android experience.
One of the most egregious examples of this is that to change certain settings you need to use the Settings app, while others require you to use the traditional Control Panel.
This act is a simple, important change that would help deter patent trolls from bringing egregious lawsuits upon businesses and innovators.
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