Sentences with phrase «fair debate»

«We strongly feel that the bitcoin community deserves a free and fair debate on the subject: there should be zero censorship around BIP 101 discussions in any forum, including online discussion boards such as BitcoinTalk, / r / Bitcoin, or anywhere else.
The report found that Corbyn was subject to repeated ridicule and vilification that «went well beyond the normal limits of fair debate and disagreement in a democracy».
The fair debate is this: Who should pay for it and where should the expense live — on the income statement, or as a gift from shareholders after they have been paid their dividend?
In his open - letter, Mr. Butler said that ``... I am no longer surrounded by those who stand for democracy and fair debate
Colin... Also note and observe... how your goal in using the scientific terminology was not to proceed with a fair debate, but rather to embarrass your opponent and make him look foolish.
Anyways I do nt think there's a point in having a fair debate here anymore.
It's a fair debate, but I don't think it's unquestionable.
«They don't even get a fair hearing, a fair debate, a fair vote on the floor of the legislature,» Kolb said.
It would be far more convincing if he said clearly what he thought, then insisted he would make sure there was a fair debate in the party afterwards.
Click here to RSVP and our Fair Debates Organizer Carl Gibson will contact you about how to get involved!
«The people of our City deserve a full and fair debate of the issues impacting our future and the Campaign Finance Board, financed by taxpayer dollars, must not be allowed to arbitrarily restrict how that debate proceeds or who should be allowed to participate,» he said in a statement.
«It explores and challenges different ideas and it's a fair debate that presents two different ways of living.»
Perhaps because of my experiences as a British student and, knowing of the strong objections of British geophysics grandees like Sir Harold Jeffreys (not to mention Leslie Moore), I had assumed that there was a fair debate between advocates and rejectionists on both sides of the Atlantic, with the advantage on both sides given to the rejectionists until the data on the oceans turned the tide in the 1960s.
As for Latin, there is a fair debate about whether it's just convenient shorthand or whether it is intended to cover inadequate reasoning.
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