Sentences with phrase «stubborn unwillingness»

Firstly, the stubborn unwillingness to add Apple Homekit support is a major fail.
«Not to sound like a broken record, but it has become bitterly clear that MoMA's stubborn unwillingness to integrate more women into these galleries is not only a failure of the imagination and a moral emergency; it amounts to apartheid.
«Not to sound like a broken record, but it has become bitterly clear that MoMA's stubborn unwillingness to integrate more women into these galleries is not only a failure of the imagination and a moral... read more... «Saltz asks: What's MoMA's problem with women?»
The art critic Jerry Saltz lambasted the Museum of Modern Art in New York for its «stubborn unwillingness» to integrate more women into its galleries after a 2006 rehang (three to eight per cent of the work on view was by women, according to his calculations).
It's time to relearn the lessons of the Great Society, when ambitious programs designed to promote justice and opportunity were undone by utopian formulations, unworkable implementation structures, and a stubborn unwillingness to acknowledge the limits of federal action in the American system.
Dark Horse is the anti-40-Year-Old Virgin, a pitch - dark comedy about an emotionally stunted middle - aged man whose immaturity and stubborn unwillingness to evolve aren't the least bit charming, but who remains strangely sympathetic all the same.
Conservatives, on the other hand, charge radicals with a stubborn unwillingness to acknowledge the evils of Marxist regimes.
He also seemed unaware that Ottawa's books were already headed into the red, thanks to a growing structural deficit that was created by his own cuts to the GST combined with a stubborn unwillingness to do anything about transfers to provinces and to individuals.

Not exact matches

This is one of the problems with favicons: some browsers are stubborn in their unwillingness to recognize them.
He notes that «Mr. Cessario could be very stubborn, relatively insensitive to the needs and wishes of others, leading to an overly aggressive approach at times, and an unwillingness to accept restrictions on his own freedom of thought or action.»
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