Trump would have been forced to pick
more consensus choices.
Not exact matches
But something much
more interesting struck me about many of my peers»
choices: There seemed to be an overwhelming
consensus on shorting bitcoin and, as a contrarian, this uniform cynicism obviously piqued my interest.
These political
choices can be explained not only by its willingness to preserve its founding principles, but also,
more practically, to maintain its underlying electoral
consensus.
But commissioners could not reach a policy
consensus on two other divisive issues in state public education — Michigan's expansive charter school landscape, and the state's generous schools - of -
choice law, under which
more than 120,000 students attend a public school outside of district boundaries.
The
consensus was that the independent editor's job is to offer suggestions and other information that enables the self - publishing writer to make good
choices more confidently.
Following up on my piece exploring the bipartisan
consensus — hidden by polarized Republican - Democrat battles — on moving to smarter,
more sustainable energy
choices, I thought it worth posting the short Q&A here.
What Andrew needs to do is find people like, for example, James Annan, Gerald North and others (Eli is prepared to be corrected on the
choice of protagonists) who form the
more conservative wing of the IPCC
consensus, to debate the radical wing, the Hansenites as it were.
One of the most commonly identified alleged weaknesses of the PNAS paper is the
choice of friends / enemies dichotomy, instead of several categories ranging from outright denial of a warming trend to
more nuanced objections to attribution all the way to full embrace of the IPCC
consensus.
In the 1980s, many law schools, less confident in the traditional
consensus, modified their programs to provide students with
more choice.
For example, one study found that characteristics elicited from chatting, such as educational status and occupation, predicted «yes» decisions at small events (15 - 25 people), whereas «yes» decisions at larger events were predicted by height and weight.5 People at larger events are also
more likely to form a
consensus about which participants are most appealing, 6 supporting the idea that we dumb - down our decisions as
choices increase.