Some have
suggested extreme measures to stop the flow.
Not exact matches
Despite my admitted stumble in the half - cycle since 2009, it's perplexing that the equity market is at the second greatest valuation
extreme in the history of the United States, on what are objectively the most durably reliable valuation
measures available, but it has somehow become an affront to
suggest that this will not end well.
A way to
measure extremes Recent studies have
suggested that relatively salty portions of the oceans are getting saltier, and areas where water is relatively fresh are getting fresher.
According to Meng, the results
suggest that if we are to reduce climate losses on manufacturing output, adaptation
measures should not focus solely on reducing the sensitivity of workers to
extreme heat, but also that of factory machines.
However, combined
measuring stations around the world
suggest there has been a global trend towards more frequent and intense hot
extremes since the 1950s, as well as more heavy precipitation events.
Despite my admitted stumble in the half - cycle since 2009, it's perplexing that the equity market is at the second greatest valuation
extreme in the history of the United States, on what are objectively the most durably reliable valuation
measures available, but it has somehow become an affront to
suggest that this will not end well.
Yet this tag doesn't just apply to those who assert the whole concept is a fraud — such as President Trump, who has
suggested it might be a ploy by the Chinese to hamstring the U.S. economy — but even to scholars like Danish author Bjorn Lomborg, who believes in climate change but thinks its impact is being deliberately exaggerated to scare the public into backing
extreme and ineffective
measures.
This impatience manifests as frustration at the perceived lack of achievement, or in the suggestion that Indigenous people must somehow be at fault because of the persistence of the disadvantage (the lack of progress being blamed on «waste» and perceived lack of accountability of Indigenous organizations), [63] a growing intolerance to commitments being made at the highest levels to concrete
measures to redress such disadvantage, and in more
extreme cases, a return to discredited views which
suggest that the only way to improve the situation of Indigenous peoples is for them to assimilate into mainstream society.