Sentences with phrase «whose voices matter»

When they ask the right questions and heed the old saying about why we have two ears and one mouth, principals are elevating the conversation — and reminding everyone in their school whose voices matter the most.
90 % of those whose voices matter will rather see Arsene Wenger remain as the manager for eternity regardless of whether our ability to win titles becomes limited or not.

Not exact matches

The danger lies, rather, in taking social standards as the voice of God, «absolutizing the relative,» and condemning all whose opinion differs in moot matters.
Nutritionist Marion Nestle, whose voice we always listen for on these matters, warns that this study still does not prove that eating chocolate causes better health outcomes, only that it's been associated with them.
But while fast food customers can vote with their dollars, our nation's school children, particularly those whose lower economic status forces them to rely on federal school meals, lack any voice in the matter.
The second, from The Evening Standard, highlights the worries of voters whose worried post-Brexit that their voice actually mattered.
Crowell also performed two songs with friend and former bandmate Emmylou Harris, whose soaring voice was as beautiful as ever no matter what she said about having a cold.
It was a combination of going to people whose work I admire, writers whom I knew liked the Beatles, or who were at least interested in and / or knowledgeable about music, while others were shots in the dark — writers who have great voices, styles, insights, whether the subject matter was going to trigger them or not.
However, the algorithms determining «whose voice really matters» are very different in the climate science — if viewed as a conventional scientific discipline — and in the IPCC.
Berger J.A. expressed concern that the traditional justification for denying intervener applications in criminal matters — that other voices can distort an appeal — is gratuitously invoked to deny apposite interventions by a party who could assist that court but whose submissions may also happen to prove useful to the defendant in the case.
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