Sentences with phrase «little real damage»

The Ontario law allows judges to quickly dispose of SLAPP suits if they infringe on free expression rights while causing little real damage to the target of the expression, and are motivated by a desire by the person launching the lawsuit to silence critics.

Not exact matches

With estimates of the revenue - maximizing rate in the 60s or low 70s, such tax hikes would leave little room to tax the wealthy for anything else, and it could create real economic damage in the process.
But through this came out with no real damage, his planned fight was set back a little and has a law suit giving him a big fat cheque from uncle Conor.
I hope I'm wrong but this could be the most damaging win when it comes to transfers... winning 1 game, after about 20 minutes of really good play, is of little consequence in the grand scheme of things... only those with the most selfish of intentions would suggest otherwise... the only reason we're even in this predicament, where were celebrating our first victory of 2018 against a bottom half squad who is managed by possibly the only individual more antiquated than our manager, is because of Wenger's ridiculous mishandling of his contract last year combined with his mishandling of the contracts of our top players this year; a fact that he himself admitted to... so before you get too excited about the possibilities of our current roster don't forget what has happened over the last several years and pray to the gods of football that real quality reinforcements like Auba are on the way, which could have happened years ago for less money and we might have been holding a trophy of some significance, or this brief respite will be followed by the usual mediocrity and stagnation
The stress on the mother (both real or perceived) has little to do with the damage her son already received.
The spending limits, they argue, will do little to rein in the national debt because they don't apply to mandatory spending — but are doing real damage to the nation's security and ability to fund innovative science.
i come on pretty strong, as i do in real life, but i want you all to know that everything from hanging on to little insecurities to outright body hate is damaging not only to you, but to others.
The best thing about this movie is something that is impossible to prove, and that is the suggestion that former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliague resigned because he knew that damage from concussions was a very real thing, and that his feet were about to be put to the fire for what was done on his watch, so he stepped down and put human jellyfish Roger Goodell (jellyfish need very little oxygen for brain function, you see) in his place.
And a group of modern viewers keen on the alienating dark side of tech paranoia and its drastic, often damaging, fallout as depicted on Black Mirror might take, for example, the first story in the anthology, «Real Life» (directed by Ronald D. Moore of Battlestar Galactica and Outlander), and feel a little underwhelmed when it concludes.
When parent groups are looked at as «that nice little mom's club,» real damage occurs.
The real damage has been done by those who refuse to fight for the little guys; the real damage has been done by the parties who seem to think that publishers can do no wrong and that Amazon can do no right.
A missed payment may make your credit score drop just a little bit, but an account in collection does real damage to your credit history.
A pot boiling over is hardly a covered loss, mostly because there is no real loss — it's a little water and a little steam that generally damages nothing at all.
Collision detection is a little spotty to begin with, and no real damage shows up on your car when you wreck.
I think that Australia's response has unfortunately been alarmist rather than exploratory, and that the anti-emissions policies adopted by Western countries have been very damaging for little or no benefit, a waste of resources when there are many real issues to be tackled.
«Well I'm sitting like a rose between two thorns here and I have to take practical decisions - erm - the climate's always been changing - er - Peter mentioned the Arctic and I think in the Holocene the Arctic melted completely and you can see there were beaches there - when Greenland was occupied, you know, people growing crops - we then had a little ice age, we had a middle age warming - the climate's been going up and down - but the real question which I think everyone's trying to address is - is this influenced by manmade activity in recent years and James is actually correct - the climate has not changed - the temperature has not changed in the last seventeen years and what I think we've got to be careful of is that there is almost certainly - bound to be - some influence by manmade activity but I think we've just got to be rational (audience laughter)- rational people - and make sure the measures that we take to counter it don't actually cause more damage - and I think we're about to get -»
Regardless of whether or not the policy is satire, you'll need to show proof that the flying saucer — and the little green men who poked and prodded you — were, in fact, real in order to collect your damages.
A pot boiling over is hardly a covered loss, mostly because there is no real loss — it's a little water and a little steam that generally damages nothing at all.
«If you get a little water damage in a conventional office, a business can probably still operate with little impact, but physicians may have to stop seeing patients, and it could even affect their regulatory compliance,» explains Claude Hooton, president of San Diego — based PMB Real Estate Services.
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