Sentences with phrase «for less scrutiny»

The Center for Freedom and Prosperity was once funded by the Charles Koch Foundation and has actively lobbied for more liberalized tax laws, and for less scrutiny towards offshore tax havens.

Not exact matches

As judicatory funding came under close scrutiny in the late»70s and early»80s, campus ministry staff and programs were good targets for cuts: clearly, it takes less staff time to refer and network than it does to design and implement creative ministry.
Needless to say, terms like «religious identity» or «subjective experience» are no less open to critical scrutiny for their suggestions of a fixed referential meaning than the split between public and private realms of experience that they come to signify.
The same kind of scrutiny has been given to St. Francis and St. Clare, though for much less reason.
All food manufacturers have a duty of care to their consumers and must ensure their products are free from foreign bodies, but luxury goods must stand up to the heightened scrutiny of the discerning elite, for whom nothing less than perfection is acceptable.
A number of Chelsea's first team stars have come in for some serious scrutiny recently for their less than impressive start to the campaign, with Hazard and Costa being the chief culprits.
But MPs will vote on the proposals on 15 July, less than two weeks after they were published, and this timetable leaves the government open to the charge that it is seeking to move with undue haste, and without allowing sufficient time for proper scrutiny.
A judge who since Sheldon Silver's arrest has come under scrutiny for the sky - high damages that juries in her court have awarded to Weitz & Luxenberg clients recently slashed a record $ 190 million asbestos - poisoning payout to less than $ 30 million.
It's unusual for campaign finance reports to get this level of scrutiny and even less common for them to end with criminal charges.
When a Government chooses to insert into primary legislation powers to make statutory instruments, one of the consequences of that choice — whether or not it is the reason for the choice — is that those matters that will thereby fall to be dealt with in secondary legislation will receive far less scrutiny than those matters that are addressed on the face of the Bill.
Boxing and American football are under scrutiny because of head injuries causing long - term damage to the brain, but the situation is much less clear for football where heading is extremely common, but head injuries are less so.
Products sold in stores can also have problems (we have uncovered many), but this is less likely, probably because there is an extra layer of scrutiny by stores when deciding what they will carry, and the consequences of selling a bad product may be greater, for example, for a national retail chain, than a small web business.
Given what we know about clinical nutrition, that sometimes a startling mix of foods can be used to help people in certain disease states — more ice cream and gravy for someone undergoing cancer treatment, less protein and fewer vegetables for someone with kidney disease — and since dividing your risk among a wide variety of different foods can help hedge your health bets, the idea that there are universally good or bad foods doesn't hold up well under scrutiny.
It also should suffer far less scrutiny than a theatrical release would demand, as what would be too manipulative and predictable to justify spending money for on the big screen seems like a well - acted and somewhat touching romance when looking at it on the small screen, provided you're into that sort of thing.
The lists have come under scrutiny recently for under - representing authors of color (see the Book Riot «s «LibraryReads So White, or Why Librarians Need to Do Better»), for featuring established authors over less - known (see Becky Spratford's RA for All post), and large publishing houses over indie presses.
I don't dismiss this idea, but as much as I love to see a male writer who can theorize in those terms, I think there are other, less ambitious factors that may explain the gulf between male authors getting attention for bad sex scenes and female authors escaping scrutiny.
That's cool, but what superficially looks like a great deal for creators is less so under a little scrutiny.
Many of the volume puppy producers have abandoned AKC — meaning less revenue for AKC and also removing them from any scrutiny by AKC.
I also suspect that those contrarians involved in their own branches of research might protest a little less loudly if they realised that it is quite within the bounds of possibility that demands be made for all THEIR original data and analysis software to come under public scrutiny.
This may have the undesirable effect of subjecting material in the latter part of an [Summary for Policymakers] to less scrutiny than that in the early part... (p. 293)
Likewise, we would be less interested in such dodgy dealings if it weren't for the mainstream media's tendency to decry Exxon funding as corrupting of the scientific method while deeming Munich Re's pronouncements — let alone the pronouncements of those they sponsor — as above scrutiny.
If A (k)-- B (k) is bounded to be less than a value, say «M», for the time period under scrutiny, then we can bound S1 (k) as S1 (k) < = M / d.
The Chicken Fat for Biofuel Debate Heats Up Green Your Two - Cycle Scooter / Moped with G - Oil Green Motor Oil Climate Change, Meat - Eating Meat - Eating Warrants Same Scrutiny as Driving and Flying Cows and Climate Change UN Expert Says Eat Less Red Meat to Reduce CO2 Emissions
SeaChange also donates money to the Tides Foundation, which behaves less like a philanthropic organization than a legal front for laundering donations that might otherwise draw scrutiny.
It recommends that the industrial world chomp on 10 % less meat to limit greenhouse gas emissions, whilst enhancing human health, going on to say, «For the world's higher - income populations, greenhouse - gas emissions from meat - eating warrant the same scrutiny as do those from driving and flying.»
Whereas audit used to be considered a core skill for a career in accountancy, factors such as increased audit thresholds and greater scrutiny from regulators are making it a less...
Whereas audit used to be considered a core skill for a career in accountancy, factors such as increased audit thresholds and greater scrutiny from regulators are making it a less attractive career path for high - quality candidates.
[11] Indeed, there are less - intense and more - intense variants of Wednesbury, [12] so - called super-Wednesbury review reserved for matters of high policy [13] and so - called sub-Wednesbury review requiring «anxious scrutiny» of decisions having an impact on important rights.
It's a safe assumption a policy worth $ 1 million will get more scrutiny than one of a lesser amount simply because it represents a greater risk for the insurance company.
The opening paragraphs of both editorials, which appeared in the Times less than three weeks apart in July and August, accuse the federal government of not paying enough attention to background check providers and call for more scrutiny of the entire industry:
Mediation is more confidential than divorce litigation and leaves less room for public scrutiny.
Less scrutiny for private REITs One advantage of private REITs is that there are fewer constituencies to answer to, whereas public REITs must inform a variety of «publics,» including governmental regulators, of their activities.
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