Sentences with phrase «egregious error which»

He goes on to cite a specific time when the Fed made perhaps its most egregious error which led to some of the greatest profit opportunities of his career:

Not exact matches

(2) The error in their thinking which had seemed to justify this sectarian practice was an egregious misconception of the meaning of baptism.»
It was the means by which the church was separating itself from egregious error.
In which case, the app should be called out for this egregious sports blog error
YOUR FALSE ACCUSATION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS This is an egregious error, a product of always a «constant vilification without checking your facts» in which attacking colleagues often supersedes getting it right.
The brand apologized for that egregious error, but it has yet to comment on the lungi controversy, according to Fast Company, which said it had reached out to Zara but that it had so far «declined to comment.»
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.»
«Wikipedia's acid rain entry receives near - daily edits, some of which result in egregious errors and a distortion of consensus science,» he said.
Are you making the same assertions every time Mann gets another paper published which makes the same simple, and now egregious, errors?
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.»
Indeed, you left a closed Climate Science discussion forum (of which we were both Members) in a huff because you could not cope with my pointing out your egregious scientific errors.
But Keaton says that crime lab scandals fall into two categories: those involving fraud or other egregious misconduct, which are few and far between but suggest a complete breakdown in the integrity of a lab; and those based on human error, which are far more common but much easier to identify and correct.
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