Sentences with phrase «like better rules»

«We might like some help to transition, we might like better rules of the game in terms of taxation and in terms of copyright, but we don't want the government to make us into coal mines in Britain and support us in perpetuity.»
Most policies do not provide coverage for damage caused by termites, squirrels, mice, rats and even raccoons, but, like any good rule there are always exceptions.
Like all good rules, the whole «one - page and one page only» stricture is made to be broken.

Not exact matches

To decide which minor tasks you can off - load, like paperwork, apply the rule one more time: If someone can do a job 80 % as well as you can, delegate.
We instead hope band - aid solutions — like feel - good, but toothless fair - trade rules — solve the problem while allowing us to carry on in the lifestyle to which we are accustomed.
At other moments in history — like three months ago, for example — the «big deal» in Trump's remarks might have been confirmation that he intends to overhaul (sorry, «tweak») the trade rules that are the foundation of Canada's economic well - being.
The 30 % rule is a good guideline, but spending even less will leave you with more flexibility for other spending — like on vacations, or saving for retirement.
If you work from home and have family constantly barging into your office, you could instate a similar rule, even with a good old fashioned door hanger, like the kind you leave for hotel housekeeping.
«That set of rules and those thought processes are so ingrained in society today that it's hard to communicate exactly what the vision is, and I think «Reinventing Organizations» does a better job than any other book on communicating that vision and communicating that this is not just a hypothetical like, «Oh, wouldn't it be cool if we did this,»» Bunch said.
Mission statements are also like strategy in that they are best done in smaller groups — preferably one using the seven plus or minus two rule.
But Berkshire's book value, like all companies, is in part a product of accounting rules, and perhaps not the best indicator of the company's performance.
A good rule of thumb is to treat everyone at a potential new employer like the CEO — you never know who you're talking to!
Rules, just like anything else, are open to interpretation (well, most of them).
It seems like good Android phones are now the rule rather than the exception, with underwhelming devices — at least from the marquee players — getting harder to find.
And in the course of working with numerous consultants, business owners, startups and even Fortune 500s, I've come to realize something startling: Most of us know what good copy looks like, and what it reads like, but when we put something down, we don't know how to follow the rules.
Of course, you can give as much as you like, but if you want to take a tax deduction, it's a good idea to know the rules.
I know it sounds like a granular topic for such a sweeping statement, but strong rules well written and closely observed really are the answer we've all be waiting for.
So here's a way for the Dreamers to be protected, President Trump to be responsive to public opinion and for the Department of Justice to devote its resources to better causes (like keeping AR - 15s out of the hands of crazy people)-- end the appeals and allow the court rulings to stand.
While I truly want to be with you on the hands - off - free - market argument, I just have to believe that these rules are in place for good reasons... like making sure your sweet Granny don't get fleeced by a huckster.
As a general rule, banks prefer to see borrowers with personal credit scores over 680, they like to see a good number of years in business, and generally don't like to lend to restaurants (they perceive them as higher risk).
Other «backstops,» Hauptman said, could be a court - granted preliminary injunction, as well as a string of bills offering «technical» fixes to the rule, «like what we've seen in the Dodd - Frank context... to chip away and open a loophole in the rule
Other «backstops,» Hauptman said, could be a court granting a preliminary injunction, as well as a string of bills offering «technical» fixes to the rule, «like what we've seen in the Dodd - Frank context... to chip away and open a loophole in the rule
But this story is not about Facebook's rules being broken, or the apps that seek to discern a more algorithmically predictable «you» through inane clickbait quizzes about which philosopher or dog breed you like best.
As part of the new rules, tech companies like Facebook will be required to add more privacy controls and better explain how and why it collects user data.
The now - endangered fiduciary rule is based on a simple — and seemingly unarguable — principle: that in giving advice to clients with retirement funds, stockbrokers, registered investment advisers and insurance agents must act in the best interests of their clients... It simply doesn't seem like a good business practice for Wall Street to tell its client - investors, «We put your interests second, after our firm's, but it's close.»
Treating employees like adults and trusting them to get their work done without burdensome rules is a good idea.
When someone like Rick Rule says he sees another bull market developing in resources, it would probably be a good idea to listen.
The monetary policy debate over whether rule - like behavior is preferable to pure discretion dates back at least to Henry Simons in 1936.1 More recently, in their Nobel Prize - winning work, Finn Kydland and Ed Prescott demonstrated that a credible commitment by policymakers to behave in a systematic rule - like manner leads to better outcomes than discretion.2 Since then, numerous papers using a variety of models have investigated the benefits of rule - like behavior in monetary policy and found that there are indeed significant benefits.
So, more regulation will continue like Healthcare Reform Act as well as DOL fiduciary rules
FN: With exposure in the mass media, including traditional news outlets and comedy shows like John Oliver's Last Week Tonight, tell us how the Rule has made consumers more aware of the importance of financial advisers acting in their best interests.
I particularly like the Rule of 20 which looks like a good market timer, a rarity.
Road rules are suggestions at best, right of way is an ongoing negotiation, and some taxi drivers seem like they are out for blood.
Furthermore, the Fed would like to adhere to the so - called «Taylor Rule» (in spite of Professor Taylor's protestations that it is misinterpreting and misusing his concept), a mathematical construct that purports to make monetary policy more «scientific» by establishing an arithmetic rule for varying the administered interest rate according to the variance of «actual from target inflation» (note that «inflation» refers to the change in a price index in this case, not the phenomenon of inflation of the money supply as such), as well as the variance of economic output from «potential output» (i.e, the so - called «output gap» is incorporated in the formula as weRule» (in spite of Professor Taylor's protestations that it is misinterpreting and misusing his concept), a mathematical construct that purports to make monetary policy more «scientific» by establishing an arithmetic rule for varying the administered interest rate according to the variance of «actual from target inflation» (note that «inflation» refers to the change in a price index in this case, not the phenomenon of inflation of the money supply as such), as well as the variance of economic output from «potential output» (i.e, the so - called «output gap» is incorporated in the formula as werule for varying the administered interest rate according to the variance of «actual from target inflation» (note that «inflation» refers to the change in a price index in this case, not the phenomenon of inflation of the money supply as such), as well as the variance of economic output from «potential output» (i.e, the so - called «output gap» is incorporated in the formula as well).
Erlend: Yeah of course and when you do them on a daily basis, you using the power of compounding as well, so yes, you get trained, you get like a bit rule about it and I found the same in my life it is like sort of habits, like in grading habits into my life that are positive and when I started doing it, I kind of found that oh shit like if I am the way, wait a minute, if I want to do all these habits, I will not have any time for any of the negative stuff that's kind of.
Then again, services like CarAmigo can expand all over the European Union as well, yet Belgian government officials have created their own set of rules without waiting for the EU's decision.
Think of the «rules» or what is right and wrong, like a parent who sets guidelines for their child to keep them safe, and when they step out of those guidelines a good parent disciplines the child.
As is well known, under Muslim rule the Jews of Spain enjoyed a bloom the like of which the Jews did not enjoy anywhere else until almost our time.
Like others I do not take well to rules some of the time.
Unless a healing balm like that found in the restorative drama of Christianity is brought to the persons and societies that have suffered these wounds, then rights, the rule of law, and any hope for just punishment may well be doomed.
Although disliking Jews go further back, such as their exile, one of the reasons is that the Pope made a rule that Christians can't loan money (but accepting a loan is ok) so Jews end up taking the job and so long as things are going well, people probably like jews because they received money (though they probably didn't like paying them back with interest).
To be a TRUE Catholic in good standing and able to receive the sacraments, you must adhere to ALL of their rules, like them or not.
So, you got to keep the game moving... no «excessive celebration» or «unsportsman - like» conduct, I am all in agreement with as well, as long as the rules are not being applied unfairly but across the board.
If wisdom is to be ours, it must grow in us slowly like a tree — a tree of life — and at the end of the long growing we have its ripe fruit, sweet to the taste, which is the knowledge of good and evil — the kind of knowledge by which a king may rule well, and any of us may govern our lives well.
Well I'm sorry, if you want to live under the Father's roof you have to follow the Father's rules; just like your mortal father's house.
rather than seeing these as an imposed set of rules, we can see these as a benediction, empowering us to be better... a bit like visions, rules can make failures of us, where as with a benediction we are not bound, but free to become more human.
If we actuall had a Congress who cared about the People they swore to serve and did not take vacations 1 week for every 2 they work (new Boehner rule when he became Speaker), actually did work and created bills that were other than ending abortion rights or killing Medicare, stopped opposing ending the fraud Bush wars that raise our debt by more than a trillion a month (and Republicans then blame Obama for the rising debt from their wars), and acted like humans we would already be well into recovery.
At the other end of the spectrum, one might treat phrases like «equal protection» and «free speech» as an invitation to judges to fashion whatever rules best serve the general values that the phrases suggest: equality, free expression, and so forth.
But as to whether his own nonreligious stance is compatible with SR, he says, «They try their best to make me feel welcome, but the ground rules aren't really designed to bring nontheists like me into the discussion.
Any truth to be gleaned from the bible will be done by studying the prevailing themes like love, charity, and the golden rule and applying them to our God given consciences and living well.
Just like in the times of Christ just because the majority may have rule or power and can out - shout us or be the only ones heard doesn't neccessarily mean they are right or good or capable of demanding we all live and think and believe as they all do.
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