Everyone knows real estate is a «relationship business,» but unfortunately, the phrase is overused and
often unsubstantiated.
Spy tech is often marketed to local law enforcement agencies with claims (
often unsubstantiated) of enabling crime reduction without the need to expand police department personnel.
Not exact matches
Such
unsubstantiated assertions
often highlight that his father was born into a Muslim family in Kenya, and that Obama received some instruction in the religion at the Indonesian public school he attended as a child.
Often she simply mouths RMM Executive Director Richard Witt's
unsubstantiated propaganda, word for word (she was doing this on WAMC last year).
Despite these concerns, advertisements for herbal remedies
often make exaggerated and
unsubstantiated claims.
The claims made by proponents of juice fasting, which you have enumerated above, are indeed largely
unsubstantiated, or not founded in fact; however, juice fasting is highly beneficial for completely different reasons than those
often given by its proponents.
As a result of this team's hard work, members
often see inaccurate, unfair, or
unsubstantiated reporting corrected on their credit reports.
Although debt settlement companies market their services by touting their past successes,
often their claims are
unsubstantiated.
Stone's theory is supported by innuendo and
unsubstantiated assertions which are
often in many arguments erroneously called «facts».
He cites unscientific rubbish (e.g. papers in Energy & Environment), uses outdated data, makes
unsubstantiated and
often demonstrably incorrect claims (e.g. about volcanoes producing more C02 than humans), uses various talking points that have been debunked long ago e.g. no warming for 10 years, NASA now claims the 30's were hotter — stuff that should be obviously wrong to anyone with a bit of scientific literacy.
You are right that no judge would accept the
unsubstantiated claims Benchers so
often use to justify their decisions.