Sentences with phrase «out foreign entities»

The newborn's immune system also has a lot of work to do sorting out foreign entities outside the womb — fighting off the bad germs, welcoming good bacteria, etc..

Not exact matches

Google arguably missed out on the rise of the internet in China because it didn't tailor its product enough to how Chinese consumers were using the internet and instead were seen as a less relevant, foreign entity.
The Treasury department is also supporting a bill to modernize reviews carried out by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, an inter-agency government committee that evaluates sales of US businesses to foreign entities to determine the impact on national seForeign Investment in the United States, an inter-agency government committee that evaluates sales of US businesses to foreign entities to determine the impact on national seforeign entities to determine the impact on national security.
I also hope that both sides from the federal government, Democrats and Republicans commit themselves to reviewing this past election and make sure that no foreign entity tampered with the electorate because that is frightening for everyone and there has been accusations of it in the reporting, I don't know the credibility of any of the accusations but we want to sure that nobody tampered with our elections and we should be sure of that and we should use this time to find that out.
And then, I noticed, when people find out they have some type of critter of foreign uh — entity inside of their — their digestive tract, they want to knock it out right away.
I wrote this off as due to the parent company being a foreign entity (out of Canada).
There is one entity, the Delaware LLC, which happens to be registered with the Californian authorities as a foreign (out - of - state) LLC doing business in California.
Guide to Doing Business in Florida: A Legal Guide for Out - of - State and Foreign Businesses, Author, «Corporations, LLCs and Partnership Entities,» 2013 and 2016
Foley Hoag has once again secured a victory for Venezuela in claims arising out of a coal supply agreement between Nova Scotia Power Inc. (NSPI), a Canadian power company, and Guasare Coal International (now Carbozulia International), the foreign marketing arm of a mixed foreign Venezuelan entity mining coal in Zulia, Venezuela.
The legislation raises a plethora of issues and significantly alters the security landscape: It gives the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) powers beyond intelligence gathering (to actively target threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and foreign entities.
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