Not exact matches
In other words, if politics is reducible to technocratic
competence then there is
something benighted
about the clash of interests — out interests seem to be little more than idiosyncratic expressions of our rationally indefensible attachments.
«For me, my governorship, what politics is
about today, is a very simple formula: demonstrate government
competence and capacity, that government can actually work, that it can do
something, efficiently and effectively, that it's not gridlocked, and it's not incompetent.»
I like David Morse's one scene as a twitchy, traumatized CIA agent who knows
something about the origin of the disease, and James Badge Dale as a U.S. Special Forces captain whose gung - ho
competence is no match for the zombie hordes, and Daniella Kertesz as Segan, an Israeli soldier whose indefatigable spirit helps the hero save the day even after she's suffered unimaginable trauma.
It's outside of my sphere of
competence and it kind of stinks, but there's just
something about it in a «plain vanilla» kind of way that I just had to bite.
The local guide association, Giri Suta, have set prices for guided treks in the area, and you can choose between three levels of English
competence depending on whether you would like someone to explain in depth
about the local flora, fauna and culture, or you just need a path pointer, or
something in - between.
Note that this, just like with engineering, is less
about establishing
competence than it is
about giving them
something to lose.
Come to think of it — unless the reader is at least as competent as the writer, and knows
something about the writer, the reader wouldn't know if the blog serves to maintain or enhance the
competence of the writer).
For example, the B.C. Health Professions Act stipulates that while a Registration Committee can impose limits or conditions (or refuse to grant registration) where an applicant has committed an indictable offence (i.e.,
something more serious than a summary conviction offence), the Registration Committee must be «satisfied that the nature of the offence or the circumstances under which it was committed give rise to concerns
about the person's
competence or fitness to practise the designated health profession.»