Sentences with phrase «much less scrutiny»

Not exact matches

The «value - add» of going private isn't so much less disclosure as it is less short - term scrutiny by bank analysts and hedge fund managers,
Ironically, this last point is largely why many others are avoiding the public markets — they don't want the public market scrutiny on their businesses, much less have to reveal anything they're doing behind close doors.
Cable companies Comcast (cmcsa) and Charter Communications (chtr) that are starting to offer wireless service themselves wouldn't draw much antitrust scrutiny if they bought Sprint, but now «appear less interested in outright ownership,» Niknam added.
Galloway said companies like Uber — with a valuation of $ 70 billion according to recent company press releases — would likely be worth much less if subjected to the scrutiny of the public market.
And even if it were the case that in the past we spent less time defending and discussing specific dogmas, there seems to me to be a much more plausible explanation than «no one really used to care about dogma», which is this: it's not that we didn't care about dogma, but rather that the truths of faith have come under unprecedented scrutiny and attack in the modern period, not least fromdissenters within the Church, so it has become essential that we do talk about what we actually believe.
The same kind of scrutiny has been given to St. Francis and St. Clare, though for much less reason.
I'm guessing it would be mostly women who would do that; women seek divorce much more than men do, fewer women don't have custody (2.4 million out of 8.6 million single moms, but that's approaching the number of single dads, 2.6 million) and they seem to face less public scrutiny or at least less outrage than cheating men do.
Boxing and American football are under scrutiny because of head injuries causing long - term damage to the brain, but the situation is much less clear for football where heading is extremely common, but head injuries are less so.
All of the trademarks of his work are evident in this very first screenplay — witty banter laced with profanity, reversals, reveals, a loopy plot that doesn't make much sense if you hold it up to any kind of scrutiny but it's so fun you never will, a Christmas - time setting — less tightly controlled and mannered in his later scripts, but still there.
Katie Harrison would like to see schools becoming more autonomous: «We need to improve school autonomy by allowing teachers much greater freedom with what and how they teach, with less scrutiny
I don't dismiss this idea, but as much as I love to see a male writer who can theorize in those terms, I think there are other, less ambitious factors that may explain the gulf between male authors getting attention for bad sex scenes and female authors escaping scrutiny.
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