What's more, by protecting rich people who harass or abuse others, NDAs can put countless
ordinary people at risk — you'll never find out your new boss is a harasser if all his victims are prohibited from talking about it.
Not exact matches
Yolanda Foster, Amnesty International's Sri Lanka expert, said: «Blurring the distinction between civilians and combatants means that thousands of
ordinary people, desperate to flee the conflict area, are
at greater
risk of reprisals and getting caught in the crossfire.»
Not that this board cares, but the hypothesis that society needs demons in the forest and the other that
ordinary people are generally poor
at estimating
risk say nothing about whether or not there is actually danger.
Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin spoke last week
at the University of Toronto's Access to Civil Justice for Middle Income Canadians Colloquium about how
ordinary people risk being priced out of the justice system.