Marty maintains that
most politicians tend to assume the priestly role.
Not exact matches
Politicians, seeing what Ken Livingstone and Boris Johnson have done for the capital,
tend to think that putting more power in the hands of a single executive office would be a Good Thing for
most of Britain's smaller cities.
When I asked Conservative
politicians in New York what part the national lobby would play,
most tended to agree with Thomas D. Cook, chairman of the Monroe County party organization: «I think they're full of smoke.»
-- also while a bubble in German property is quite possible / likely in the medium term, they
tend to have more conservative banks and less captured
politicians (they've already started tightening lending regulations before the bubble is even started), and a more reluctant attitude to debt than
most other Europeans, so it is likely to be more muted than Spanish / English / Irish style bubbles.
Climate scientists have a maddening tendency to focus on «the
most likely» outcome in the next century, just as economists and
politicians tend to do, and I believe that is a serious mistake.
Patrick # 228 While Democrats
tend to be more supportive if green initiatives
most if not all of the
politicians from what I have seen, read and listend to, are not scientifically literate and often do not pass legislation that truly makes an impact on the AGW problem.
There are several reasons why supply - side economics don't work (or at least haven't worked in the past 30 years), and
most of them have to do not so much with the theory, but in how they
tend to be implemented by supply - side
politicians.