Sentences with phrase «legislate so»

Although Parliament was not precluded in civil matters from adopting retrospective provisions, it can not legislate so as to interfere with the courts» handling of disputes before them:
It's the latter that has prompted the UK government to legislate so that patrons in libraries can download digital editions to their ebook readers without libraries infringing copyright.
It's the religious who try to legislate so that everyone has to share their morality, take away natural human rights, and go around telling people that they are sinners and need to change their wicked ways, thus destroying cultures and traditions and lives.
Fair enough, I mean, you make a valid point that one of the biggest things about the democractic party is trying to legislate so many different things when there are certain aspects of my life that the government should have 0 say over.
WHAT SHOULD YOU KNOW is that my check is smaller because our leaders could not be united in legislating so that the middle class working class keeps more of what they make in 2013.
The effect, then, is that the Government can no longer use its power under clause 9 to implement a withdrawal agreement unless Parliament has first legislated so as to signal its approval of such an agreement.

Not exact matches

«It is frustrating, and it is such a waste of time that [trolls] are doing this, someone needs to legislate and bring things up to speed so this does not affect innovation,» Fantaay says.
Yet legislating against noisemakers rarely satisfied our growing desire for quietness, so products and technologies emerged to meet the demand of increasingly sensitive consumers.
Although the religious communities of Judaism and Christianity can not legislate this minimal human morality (indeed, when they attempt to do so they most often retard its social impact, especially in a democratic setting), they can provide it with an overall ontological context, a continuing vision of its original grounds and its ultimate horizon.
The problem, mique, is that the Christians (and some other religions) believe that your actions or lack of action (e.g., not properly worshiping their deity) can anger their god and bring his collective punishment upon everyone, so they think it's their civic duty to help you see the light and to legislate their ideas so that all must follow their ways (of course, history shows they can't even agree among themselves what those ways are).
It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
He is stating we resist others imposing beliefs, but do NOT try (at least so far) to legislate away Christianity
Abortions leave a lot of obvious physical evidence, so maybe they would legislate hospitals releasing medical records to check for signs of abortion.
Part of the confusion of Cobb's position stems from the fact that the extensive continuum, conceived of as a set of relations underlying past, present, and future, is part actual and part potential — actual in as far as it is constituted by actual entities enjoying actual relationships legislating what are real potentialities governing the relationships of future occasions; and merely potential in so far as these relationships are viewed as factors determining what forms of definiteness are, and are not, possible as factors in future fact.
So they're just trying to convert the nonbelievers and legislate their god's rules for the good of everybody — don't you see?
So sorry gays you will never be able to legislate acceptance or force it on normal people.
@David Johnson «It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so, and will follow it by suppressing opposition, subverting all education to seize early the minds of the young, and by killing, locking up, or driving underground all heretics.»
However, you do not get to legislate your religios opinions into secular law, and so Roe v. Wade shall stand the test of time.
He sees politics as «the master art» which must direct «the rest of the sciences», including economics, and «since, again, it legislates as to what we are to abstain from, the end of science must include those of the others, so that this end must be the good for man.»
So sun, why do christians in this country try to legislate bigotry?
«It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so, and will follow it by suppressing opposition, subverting all education to seize early the minds of the young, and by killing, locking up, or driving underground all heretics.»
What we're seeing when we look at these people in Genesis is so unfamiliar that it helps to jump ahead in the Bible to the 10 commandments, which legislates for the patriarchal household, and think about why the final commandment is so hard to apply directly today.
See, the big difference between your view on Obama and the TRUTH of Obama is that he knows he CA N'T legislate religious views into law; you know, that pesky civil rights thing that you hste so much.
You can't legislate belief, and when you try to do so you get into some pretty ugly waters pretty quick (after all, can anyone truly say that the enforced atheism of Soviet Russia was better for its citizens than the enforced Catholicism of Dark Ages Europe?).
If Cameron, in particular, is so keen on religious liberty, whatever happened to his promise to legislate to protect it?
I could say just as easily «well, Christians havent tried to make Christianity the official state religion, so they arent legislating anything»
All of this is an attempt to legislate excessive violence out of a sport founded on it 150 years ago — Spencer Hall on that is the best football thing you'll read all year so far — but if this is the game we're going to watch, we might as well know what the rules say.
Stop legislating the fun out of the game, stop changing the game from what has helped make it so successful.
Whilst Congress could legislate to restrict the President's freedom to act in matters of trade, it will not do so — not, at least, in the short run.
Other issues of support for fuller PR than AV, or legislating for AV before a referendum so it would be the system if the government collapsed before the referendum were much more difficult.
Parliament is free to legislate on privacy whenever they want to, and the judges have repeatedly dropped hints in judgments that maybe parliament should do so.
Cuomo said plastic bags are a statewide problem, which is why he created a task force that will be co-chaired by members of the Senate and Assembly «so that the recommendation can be quickly legislated
«I will ask the Senate and the Assembly to appoint Co-Chairs with me so that the recommendation can be quickly legislated.
«But this government legislated to put in place an absolute lock so that governments can not pass powers without asking people first in a referendum.»
Bear in mind that the bill does not in any way affect the rules of a university, so even if it were cited, that would not be an argument for (or against) the bill's being an attempt to legislate pronoun use which is what this question is about.
So I can announce today that we will now legislate to give the police new powers to require foreign nationals to hand over their passports, and make them declare their nationality in court.
However, it is for parliament to legislate for that change and it has thus far failed to do so, leaving those who help a terminally ill or incurably suffering loved one to die facing life imprisonment, and taking away autonomy and choice for people at end of life.
The Governments have agreed that the referendum should have a clear legal base; be legislated for by the Scottish Parliament; be conducted so as to command the confidence of parliaments, government and people; and deliver a fair test and decisive expression of the views of people in Scotland and a result that everyone will respect...
«So the only way it can happen is if all the parties agree to work together, rationally, reasonably, sensibly on trying to deliver what I think the British public would see as, not a priority, but a perfectly sensible reform that we have people legislating in the House of Lords who are elected by right.»
Although the SENCO regulation in 2008 legislated that all SENCOs must be qualified teachers and those appointed since 2008 must undertake the award — the quality assurance processes is still not robust and so is not being systematically implemented across the country.
The state may legislate improvements this year, and if so, Ohio would score better on NACSA's 2015 policy assessment.
It takes so much time to initiate, legislate and settle in.
Initially legislated as a pedagogical tool to address lagging Hispanic performance, its early proponents argued that students with limited English proficiency (LEP) would benefit from deferring the transition to English so they could concentrate on core curricular skills in subjects such as mathematics and science.
Section 31406 of Senate Bill 1813 (known as MAP - 21), calls for «Mandatory Event Data Recorders» to be installed in all new automobiles and legislates for civil penalties to be imposed against individuals for failing to do so
Now, though, we can expect it to hit another gear, with so many European governments having announced plans to legislate for a mandatory hybridised motoring future.
They legislated away costs by assuming them away, and then each year Congress would restore the funding so that there wouldn't be a firestorm when doctors stopped taking Medicare.
This situation does not need to be legislated, but perhaps condo renters need to be better informed, and investors / landlords need to manage their mortgages and expenses better, so as not to have to charge obscene rents and increases to condo renters, just to break even.
So at the end of the day you can, you know, don't legislate — educate, you know you're not going to help the problem by banning dogs or restricting dogs too, you know, not leave their property or wear a muzzle, all that's just going to end up backfiring.
So it's always better to educate than to legislate.
This is usually how it goes: politician wannabe gets campaign contributions from private sector guy, gets into office, legislates in favor of private sector guy, private sector guy contributes more, politician guy takes vacation in Italy (or goes for a hike on the Appalachian trail)... gets re-elected, the word gets out that he «plays,» more private sector guys contribute to his campaign, voters are pleased to see the name of their representative in print, like the new wardrobe, the new hairstyle, believe all change is good and re-elect the politician again... politician feels the power, creates agency to watch over private sector guy, agency takes fact - finding trip to France... raises taxes on private sector guy, writes legislation that taxes private sector guy if his plant emits CO2 while producing widgets... voters are in awe and re-elect the politician... private sector guy whines, politician makes him ambassador to Taiwan, limits how much the new private guy taking his place can earn, and taxes all widgets so new private guy will make more environmentally friendly ones... voters swoon, pay more for widgets, lose job in widget factory, hate private guy, re-elect their pol... politician buries $ 5 billion aid to Taiwan in next appropriation bill...... kind of makes a case for term limits, doesn't it.
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