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881 Sentences With "blind to"

How to use blind to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "blind to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "blind to". Mastering all the usages of "blind to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Blind drunk, a parent blind to the misery of her children, a politician blind to the needs of his constituents.
I was an exhausted young mother then, courageously blind to the dangers of the world and stubbornly blind to its beauties.
He is blind to the definition of a double-blind study, which he completely misinterpreted, and he is blind to the value of accurate scientific advice.
Febreze commercials have convinced me that you can go nose-blind to odors in your own home, and I won't allow myself to go nose-blind to my body.
Verizon isn't blind to what is happening out there, either.
He was not blind to the faults of American democracy.
The sky is a breathing beast that I'm blind to.
But David is stubbornly detached, blind to everything but flaws.
You think I was blind to what I was doing?
When she started her career, she was blind to sexism.
White New Yorkers, blind to the city's racism, were stunned.
Assange is either lying or willfully blind to the facts.
It baffles me that some people are blind to this.
Nor was he blind to the faults of the Nationalists.
That's a link this health care bill is blind to.
But deep learning is fundamentally blind to cause and effect.
And, strangely enough, also blind to the risk to stockholders.
I am not blind to the concerns over Mr. Yiannopoulos.
We aren't blind to what Raheel's body and autopsy say.
The lovers were blind to all things, except each other.
So that they're blind to what the actual content is.
Any federal action that is blind to these realities will fail.
In a way, this tiny device allows the blind to see.
Mr Xi appears blind to the word's more recently acquired sense.
And yet, he is not blind to the institutional advantages Mrs.
Most people, the messiah preaches, are blind to these everyday miracles.
A lot of industries are still blind to these new realities.
But the current Tory leadership is blind to all of this.
WILLIAMS: You know, this is why Republican are blind to Trump.
" He wasn't "blind to the fact that it was also funny.
He also said the firm was blind to gender and race.
That's not to say that we are blind to Clinton's record.
Perhaps they're blind to it because they're unwittingly participating in it.
North Korea's leaders — including Kim Jong Un — aren't blind to this.
In Weiss' telling, he alone was not blind to Soviet theft.
The immune system isn't totally blind to the threat, after all.
"We will never, ever be blind to it," Mr. Trump said.
Modern-day utopians are not blind to the lessons of history.
Unfortunately, in drafting the bill, they were blind to its costs.
But I am not blind to the complications of this place.
O'Leary believes that love should not make you blind to other realities.
Most genetic diseases are non-discriminating, blind to either race or class.
Has the art world been sort of blind to this slow creep?
But they're real people, and people in power are blind to them.
Of course, the fed is not blind to the plunge in markets.
Stop being tone deaf and blind to your own internalized colonial mentality.
The writers remain blind to the abuse and violence marginalized groups receive.
Heroin abuse is blind to race, gender, age, and socio-economic status.
"Blindspot" (NBC) - NBC can't be blind to this once-promising show's fizzle.
" He ended it with this: "artists can't be blind to the truth.
There's something about getting older that makes us blind to the past.
That's not just blind to history, it's dangerously shortsighted about the future.
I become blind to it all... A storm, a hurricane, a disaster.
But he hasn't, in part because he appears blind to its effects.
She is blind to what she and her political cohorts have done.
Millions of Trump's supporters aren't blind to the president's clownishness and ignorance.
This left officials blind to the domestic spread that was already occurring.
Mr. Israel is not blind to the problems of the third verse.
He's truly incapable of seeing himself, so blind to his own narcissism.
We're blind to the random luck that propelled us along the way.
Justice is supposed to be blind to the identity of a defendant.
Who imagined a Republican Party blind to increasing debt before Mr. Trump?
It is my own and yet it is blind to my dreams.
Whereas before, I was just blind to the truth of the matter.
You know, the provider still will, but they'll be blind to it.
It is innumerate, blind to statistics and to the costs of saccharine indulgence.
A lot of times we're so blind to what is glaring in us.
I don't think she's blind to the stories that she hears about Tom.
Even the most brilliant of economists can be blind to their own biases.
Too many people have been blind to a problem hidden in plain sight.
But I'd be surprised if they rang people up blind to be witnesses.
I think we're blind to gender, race, ethnicity, and we're looking very hard.
California's politicians are not blind to their state's problems, but they seem unpragmatic.
Marx was blind to the importance of entrepreneurs in creating something from nothing.
It's like they are nose-blind to the fact that they are ripe.
Zuckerberg was not blind to the skepticism with which many greeted his announcement.
Were you simply blind to the extreme bias of this anti-Clinton crusade?
But Natanine was desperate—and he was not blind to the changing times.
A politics that is blind to affirming life, but cares only about itself….
Those historically edgy, self center creatures, blind to all needs but their own.
If art historians have been blind to the black maid, artists haven't been.
But by fixating on the symptoms, we remain blind to the root causes.
India, he said, was blind to industrialization and, furthermore, believed in central planning.
Liberal parents often claim they're blind to race, that they don't see it.
The Justice Department is not blind to the serious flaws of these audits.
We cannot open our wings and fly unless we are blind to reality.
The parable is simple: Like lust, politics often is blind to looming dangers.
She draws attention to aspects of my own work that I'm blind to.
The employees were now blind to transactions taking place at their own bank.
They are blind to the concept of mutual gain; they see only abuse.
When presented with opportunities to save, our brain may be blind to them.
The company's employees aren't blind to this conundrum either, according to the engineer.
One consequence tends to be that we become blind to what is evident.
Meanwhile, Iranians are not blind to the extensive surveillance they are facing online.
Second, economists were not blind to the falling economic prospects of unskilled American workers.
The raj's administrators were blind to their role in socialising and as subterranean caravanserais.
Not blind to the distance we have traveled and the distance yet to go.
Security officials, he went on, are "blind to the impact" of what they do.
But I'm also not blind to a huge amount of humanity that was there.
Yet even with those controls, brands are still flying blind to a certain extent.
Advocates of overturning San Francisco's ban insist that they aren't blind to those problems.
Rosenstein and Mueller have become blind to the corrosive effect of this unfair justice.
But soldiers and airmen CNN spoke with are also not blind to the politics.
Mr. Trump is seemingly blind to the importance of restraint in nuclear decision making.
That any LGBT rights organization could be blind to these facts, and take steps
But the generation before them, my grandparents, seem blind to what they have unleashed.
Unfortunately, the Trump administration and the Republican-led Congress appear blind to these developments.
"They are blind to seeing the real repercussions," Mr. Dissanayake said of Facebook's leaders.
While Kodak's film business became obsolete, Kodak was not blind to the digital future.
I loved playing someone who was so transparent and yet so blind to herself.
So these people creating all our content are willfully blind to really vulnerable people.
I even asked my friends about my faults, because we're easily blind to them.
Why have I been blind to the possibilities of a beach variant of basketball!?
Something worth noting is that Trump himself is actually not blind to personal health issues.
You seem to imply that the intellectual class has been blind to this brewing chaos.
"They're blind to a lot of the injustices that happen everyday," Washingtonian Willie Madien said.
The Brexiteers at the conference were completely blind to the dangers of their millenarian dreams.
Sandberg says that too many male leaders are blind to disrespectful treatment of women, too.
Facebook's leadership cannot be accused of being blind to concerns about its content moderation failures.
We have an app that allows the blind to navigate using 3-D audio cues.
When deciding to join Coinbase, I was not blind to the challenges ahead of me.
They never look at the big picture and the public is blind to what matters.
Despite being highly intelligent, she seemed blind to the dynamic that was emotionally entrapping her.
Unsurprisingly, when evaluators are blind to candidates' gender, we see an increase in women's scores.
Neither FATF nor international financial institutions should be blind to what Iran has in mind.
Can Jacobowitz, as a class action outsider, see a truth insiders have become blind to?
So why are so many journalists and activists blind to implications of such an expansion?
We now see also that those elites are blind to plain and clear economic realities.
These male writers were largely blind to the systems of care that undergirded everything else.
I have been blind to the fear and danger that some women live with daily.
Yet the gatekeepers of our public discourse spent years being willfully blind to this reality.
There are enough reports, though, that suggest Apple is not blind to such a future.
Just as importantly, they made it blind to other factors, like appearance, surname, or hometown.
Some are blind to this side of America, but we were never allowed to be.
So they only refer to a certain paradigm and they're blind to the [other paradigms].
But we don&apost have to be blind to these behaviors or frustrated by them.
Without a human editor in the mix, your algorithmic recommendations are blind to risk and suffering.
Sparks couldn't see more than a foot inside, essentially blind to the risk beyond the doors.
That is the logical exit and I'm not blind to the responsibility to provide a return.
But don't expect Blind to do the same thing—at least not in the same way.
Mayer told Business Insider in 2013 that she's not a feminist: Instead, she's "blind to gender."
"I was actually quite blind to this as an investor and a business person," he says.
It's important to make clear that not everyone in Silicon Valley is blind to these issues.
Blind to other hazards, he smiles to the camera—and immediately falls down an open manhole.
But neither can we be blind to the direct correlation between drug abuse and H.I.V.-AIDS.
And sometimes the problem is so close to your face, you just become blind to it.
So this is just another Chinese challenge that we&aposve been in some sense blind to.
I fretted that perhaps I had lost my journalistic objectivity and become blind to their faults.
He was also not blind to the irony of Trump supporters buying themselves a way out.
She said governments were being "wilfully blind" to evidence that violence was at a record high.
And these women aren't blind to the Paige Pattersons, the Bill Hybels, and the Andy Savages.
The president seems blind to the unparalleled opportunities for innovation and growth that climate change represents.
On the other hand, sometimes there was important stuff happening that they were totally blind to.
The government is not blind to these problems, but Mr Altmaier's protectionism is the wrong medicine.
Why was Jessica drawn to — or blind to — Stalin's nominally left-wing brand of murderous tyranny?
The members of the FOMB are simply blind to the suffering they are causing our people.
When it comes to the environment, Democrats in Washington, D.C., are blind to their own hypocrisy.
Clinton can seem blind to how her financial decisions are viewed, some of her allies say.
And he wasn't blind to slavery, because Laboulaye was also the head of France's abolition society.
He has touched on them only obliquely, asserting that the F.B.I. is blind to partisan considerations.
This often leaves network operators, not to mention law enforcement agencies, blind to what's being communicated.
Service. I was among those who had been blind to the misery of my own people.
But editors aren't blind to the idea that too much Trump coverage can wear down readers.
Meritocracy is blind to the fact that some people face structural disadvantages and others do not.
He is as blind to that function of communication as human eyes are to infrared light.
None of this means that Islam, with core values of justice, should be totally blind to politics.
But perhaps most significantly, the external review process is blind to nuance, providing binary yes/no judgements.
Australia's leaders, he says, have been "blind to risks" that come with closer commercial ties with China.
People of color are aware of seeing themselves and can see when someone's been blind to color.
Do you feel people are blind to how they're hurting Inuit communities with anti-seal hunt dialogue?
Commenters would watch her videos, and then proceed to conclude that she didn't look blind to them.
France claims to be blind to racial and religious differences on the basis of the Republican ideal.
"How long have I been blind to the reality that Banana @laffytaffy is no more?" he wrote.
They say we are too focused on slices of the electorate and blind to more unifying issues.
It saved me from a toxic situation that I was blind to for a very long time.
Snyder's Superman is haunted by his own powers, while simultaneously blind to the harm those powers cause.
An overwhelming majority, 81 percent, say hiring at big companies should be blind to gender and race.
Jacobs, a woman who was always looking, could nevertheless be blind to the obvious, most notably race.
Lawmakers and investigators say authorities are increasingly blind to these plots because of extremists' use of encryption.
What if we lived in a world where consumers were blind to this surplus of corporate branding?
Yet, it seems that most Americans are willfully blind to either Trump's strengths or to his weaknesses.
So many Americans profess to be blind to race, which ensures only that it will remain salient.
But like others calling for change, she is not blind to the dangers new elections could pose.
Today's evangelicals have mostly abandoned those limitations, but we seem especially blind to other kinds of worldliness.
Her power relies on a class privilege that she can be blind to, though "Jack" is not.
The hatred David Koch inspires postmortem cannot be blind to what can be learned from his legacy.
Even great organizations may be blind to persistent intersectional bias that treats African-American women so differently.
Even if it costs them the presidency, they can no longer be blind to their constitutional responsibility.
Most users were blind to them; they treated the bots the same way they treated other users.
Lynch thinks we are frighteningly close to this point: blind to proof, no longer able to know.
I'm not blind to some of the things that we have to continue to improve, but optimistic.
But that would be politically difficult, as his critics argue that he is blind to Russian behavior.
Deterring conflict in the future would be impossible if strategists were blind to the competition, he maintained.
I think we start with this proposition first: Each of us is blind to our own privileges.
Feminism is often stereotyped as being anti-male, or blind to the unique challenges that men face.
We don't get to find out whether love is blind to, say, severe acne, but we do get to explore whether it's blind to the person you're engaged to revealing late in the game that they're bisexual or have $20,000 in student debt and no intentions of working.
And both sides can be blind to the special traps that the culture sets for their demographic counterparts.
And that is especially true for those blind to their own trauma at the hands of said abuser.
"Marketers are supposed to know the entire customer journey but huge chunks are blind to them," Josephson said.
Actually, we're working on the new 2017 remix of "Stars Are Blind" to drop this summer in Ibiza.
When I was younger, my desperation made me blind to caring about what I put into my system.
Or, to change ... If you don't, if you're blind to it, you're not going to get fit, right?
Our analysis measures how well universities perform compared with the average institution, and is blind to their prestige.
They should be our standard bearers, not those too morally weak and too blind to follow their lead.
Yet it was perhaps his own suffering that made him blind to the larger implications of his actions.
They're blind to their own relationship to government, and so they assume welfare is something "other" people get.
The idea that America is a country callously blind to the horrors of the black past is fiction.
" Back when he began experimenting with social media, Mr. Sabbat said: "I was blind to it, my influence.
Let's be clear, today's physicians and patients are not blind to the challenges of rising health care expenses.
Law enforcement officials have warned that investigators are increasingly blind to terrorists' and criminals' communications because of encryption.
I think Forrest has always been pretty dumb, selfish, and narcissistic, and blind to the needs of others.
In Butler's sly portrayal, Peggy's manipulative insistence on her woes leaves her blind to how she strikes others.
It's that particular behavior, habit or mind-set that is self-destructive but that we're completely blind to.
I was absent and blind to what was going on around me in the world, I admit it.
He was not the first to have trouble with ESTA, but the system seems blind to mitigating circumstances.
His focus on crime data made him blind to the human beings who were mistreated under his policies.
His focus on crime data made him blind to the human beings who were mistreated under his policies.
Nonetheless — in allowing the extremes in, we should not be blind to where their worst tendencies can lead.
It wasn't that they cared less what those faces were communicating; they were simply blind to the cues.
The efforts to keep the princesses safe are curiously haphazard — or, worse, arrogantly blind to the local situation.
Yet the dose-reduction proposal is aimed at this old problem, and seems blind to the current reality.
What's more, as he turns to catch up the fighter is blind to what is coming at him.
Ryan isn't blind to the issue, but as a political and ideological matter he can only see so far.
Growing up means becoming blind to the world — adults in the film are literally incapable of seeing It's tricks.
Otherwise, he just would have been completely blind to what was going on as he was narrating the experience.
So how can you make someone who is blind to the real world catch a ball they cannot see?
For one thing, the central government appears blind to the effect its hard line is having in Hong Kong.
I came out blind to the drama that unfolded and felt like I was walking into the Lion's den.
Companies know consumers try to take advantage of them, but some entrepreneurs choose to be wilfully blind to it.
Since customers schedule and interface with the body shops on their own, we're largely blind to the service pace.
Too many white evangelicals seem blind to that diversity, and sound like the chaplain corps of the Republican right.
Lyft is also partnering with the National Federation of the Blind  to help blind voters get to the polls.
As a family of liberal Democrats, we are not blind to the fact that this is the new normal.
Fringe environmental activists, however, remain blind to both the facts and to the painful consequences of their elitist agendas.
They become blind to their mistakes, and if they are stubborn, cling to a mistake forever without correcting it.
We can grow too cozy in insularity, and can become blind to people around us who are in need.
They also appreciate the FBI's counter argument that encryption has left authorities increasingly blind to criminal and terrorist plots.
He knew she was blind to the truth about her family, her enemy and the reason for their capture.
President Trump, blinded by Mr. Xi's flattery and blind to history, does nothing except cede more power to Beijing.
Despite being an avid computer games player, I'm not blind to this industry appalling capacity to generate meaningful stories.
The international media were often blind to the extent to which the odds were stacked against such an outcome.
When operators look at thousands of parts a day, they sometimes become "snow-blind" to defects, Mr. Mead said.
We make ourselves blind to most of the world so we can focus on one tiny corner of it.
The President, however, insisted the summit proceeded happily -- either blind to the obvious disagreements or willing to ignore them.
The group lists several reasons for why the law is blind to whether an employee profits from a conflict.
From a broken window blind to Meghan Markle&aposs wedding veil, CVS receipts have inspired some very popular memes.
That objective would seem a stretch for a company peddling shared workspaces, but Neumann seems blind to the hubris.
At the moment, that means a Republican has to be blind to all evidence that Trump broke the law.
German foreign policy experts are not blind to the obvious divide between ideologues and pragmatists in Mr. Trump's administration.
Some studies suggest that stem cells may help the nearly blind to see and could reverse signs of aging.
Given the scandalous nature of the work, it is conceivable that those around her were blind to the resemblance.
He was seen as just another New Jersey pol, either complicit in the bridge scheme or intentionally blind to it.
We're quicker to recognize information that confirms what we already know, which makes us blind to facts that discount it.
"We're not blind to secular pressures facing brick-and-mortar retail — especially department stores with large footprints," Altschwager told investors.
"Creators and podcasters are completely blind to what traffic their RSS feeds are getting on Luminary," Smith tells The Verge.
Investor Bert Dohmen said on CNBC Monday that you'd have to be "deaf, dumb and blind" to buy Apple stock.
And when we're so focused on one issue, we become blind to truly surprising things going on in the periphery.
Of course, we are not blind to the discord and disarray resulting from Iran's actions and attitude in the region.
They are blind to the fact that fascism first starts out as nativism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism/Islamophobia, and racist populism.
We can't say for certain, however, since there are no studies directly comparing the blind to people with normal eyesight.
Booksmart is also blind to the role that class and privilege play in the experiences and choices of its characters.
"Basically, I think many people are blind to the fact that pets might have any impact at all," Gregory explains.
In the early 90s, Evenson was a young writer in the Pacific Northwest submitting manuscripts blind to publisher's slush piles.
And there are little dropperfuls in everything I do, because to be blind to the things that exist is foolish.
Yet, we should not be willfully blind to the implications of the dossier's use to support a secret FISA investigation.
Wallace, in a fervent hope to work with Moscow, was blind to the machinations in which he was a pawn.
And she is, like most US political journalists, blind to (or at least quiet about) the asymmetry of tribal news.
But even hawks like me cannot be blind to the prevalence of "black swan" events in the past 235 years.
It allows privileged, powerful men like Stephen Ross to be blind to the fears, hopes and dreams of everyday Americans.
"Asking Trump to understand morality is like asking a person born blind to understand color," the former Bush aide said.
In "The Elements of Style," the images coat the volume with a layer of capricious artistic intervention blind to regulation.
"I'm not blind to the importance of this proceeding to many people," he said, minutes before ordering Mr. McCullough's release.
Continuing to deny access to this saving grace would be a tragic scandal, which Mr. Douthat seems blind to see.
Our personal and political isolation has rendered us suspicious and blind to the fears and concerns and cares of others.
But a neural network pretrained with word embeddings is still blind to the meaning of words at the sentence level.
"Martial-law baby" became the phrase for people like me, Filipinos who grew up under authoritarianism, blind to its buildup.
For all his godlike powers, he's seemingly blind to the fact that there's still a relentlessly human piece of him.
He was, instead, blind to the ways that McPherson, like the invisible man himself, was making an art of restlessness.
It's an authoritarianism she fears others have been blind to, projecting onto him the leader they hope he will be.
You can't take the politics out of politics, and being blind to the basic realities of the situation is dangerous.
"You would be blind to miss the carcasses sticking out" of the weathering rock, said Mr. DePalma in an interview.
That same month, the China Daily, another government-owned newspaper, accused Navarro of being "deaf and blind" to trade benefits.
Irish ministers, exasperated that MPs appear blind to the risks, are spelling out how serious they perceive them to be.
Accordingly, this critically acute artist could be willfully blind to the political implications of situations he encountered, for example, German militarism.
Stephens and his ilk really did help create Trump — and they're completely blind to the way in which they did it.
Retinal implants can help the blind to see, and people who are paralyzed can drive mechanical arms using only their minds.
And yet they were blind to the lives of the people who originally owned the land the impressionists depicted so lovingly.
In mania you see nothing but mad, brilliant, glimmering opportunity; in depression you are blind to everything except your own despair.
To view goods made under these conditions as no different than products made within Israel requires going blind to such indignities.
We were all hoping for another, better Kanye West, and were willfully blind to reality in the process of that hope.
Nevertheless, undeniable strengths must not make America blind to a self-critical analysis of its shortcomings and the need for reforms.
"You have to be willfully blind to say Russia is not trying to help one side over the other," California Rep.
And when he points to native Americans' lack of political power, he seems blind to the parallel with Tibetans and Uighurs.
However, nothing is more awkward than a white person who is blind to how their racial privilege is clouding their judgement.
Both of Maduro&aposs opponents accused electoral authorities of being blind to blatant violations before the vote and on election day.
But as I grew more self-aware, I turned to embrace my cultural difference rather than remaining willfully blind to it.
I'm reading all these quotes and they're completely blind to the fiasco on the individual market that they're about to create.
A veteran of economic practice as well as principles, he was not a slave to formalism or blind to "realistic considerations".
"While wearing the product's headset you are blind to the world around you," says the safety information page for HTC's Vive.
Some have taken to the anonymous chat app Blind to complain and even banter over if Khosrowshahi's job is at risk.
Men are on remote control, steeped in tradition, just doing what we've always done and blind to what is around us.
But he maintained that rigid political ideologies, in Sweden and elsewhere, have made us blind to the humanity of other people.
However experts say Modi isn't blind to the risks inherent in the United States withdrawal from the global climate change accord.
" Kobach said in a statement to CNN that Dunlap was "willfully blind to the voter fraud in front of his nose.
By imparting our human emotions to animals, we're actually making ourselves blind to the complexities and beauty of their natural behavior.
It's difficult to believe that someone capable of such greatness is also so blind to how far that greatness can fall.
Just as androids blindly believed in the human kind, I believe that we are also blind to what we believe in.
Free-traders are not indifferent to national security nor blind to the benefits a nation derives from having a middle class.
You'd have to be extraordinarily blind to not know that fear is a dominant, if not the dominant, feeling in 2018.
We're simply quicker to recognize information that confirms what we already know, which makes us blind to facts that discount it.
One big problem, though, was that at the front of that wave, most of us were blind to what was arriving.
The recency of the 2012 case initially made me blind to the possibility that 2016 could be a quite different situation.
Suddenly, the Soviets were not only forced to create their own technology, they were also blind to Reagan's massive defense buildup.
Right-wing toughness is too inflexible and blind to civil society; leftist rage is too scornful of institutions and market forces.
When only people with serious symptoms are tested, the predictive model becomes blind to those who have no or mild symptoms.
I never want us to be in a situation where one of us is blind to something that could have happened.
When Maggie's husband of 17 years left her for another woman, he accused Maggie of having been blind to his misery.
He treats members of the Atlanta Police Department and the F.B.I. like his professional peers, and seems blind to their condescension.
And it left them blind to the fact that the political rules to which they adhered no longer seemed to apply.
Instead, it uses his victims as a window into the ways homophobia manifests itself and leaves us blind to its violence.
Apparently blind to the notion of fiscal prudence, Pruitt and Zinke have both made rolling back these rules a top priority.
Essentially, if LPI is true, then measurements should be entirely blind to whether they occur in a gravity field or not.
He mentioned populism, propaganda, institutionalized hatred and an international community that he regarded as sometimes seemingly blind to these social forces.
European regulators were as blind to the mounting problems as their American counterparts, which led to problems on a similar scale.
But I do think you're right that elements of the left are blind to the struggles of the white working class.
Then it talks to people who are actually face blind to get a sense of what that world would actually be like.
I didn't want to face the possibility that my dad was racist or blind to the social consequences of a Trump victory.
She returned back to Earth, now blind, to live with her father until he died and she was given up for adoption.
"You can't be blind to other geostrategic concerns," the senior official told CNN, referring to the wider security threats in the region.
If you want to legalize marijuana, the solution for the federal government is not to be willfully blind to existing federal law.
I told myself it was survival—blind to the fact that true self-preservation is, too, a kind of continuous, laboring work.
So sad in this modern world to see such devastation and death .. as no one cares and all suddenly blind to see.
We were surprised to find that the men working in the same venues seemed to be blind to microaggressions, calling them uncommon.
Is the queen just so consumed by her lust for revenge at this point that she's blind to her own self-interest?
Are millions of American voters deaf and blind to the risk of putting this reckless man in charge of the nuclear button?
Many of these claims are detached from the facts, and blind to what health care was like before the ACA was passed.
"The public will be BLIND to details and asked to TRUST that there are no conflicts," Axelrod, a CNN contributor, tweeted Wednesday. .
He can be quick in the moment, an impressive tactician, and he is often fairly blind to the long arcs of strategy.
We are not blind to the existence of some burdensome and ineffective environmental regulations, and we recognize the need for some reassessment.
"The photo's caption read, "I have worked my whole life to prove that the system is blind to see talent like mines.
However, reading "Refugees Encounter a Foreign Word: Welcome" renewed my faith that people are not blind to the unfair condemnation I see.
Eventually, you either move your Nest Cam to somewhere with less movement, disable notifications, or just become blind to the motion alerts.
Perhaps you've been incensed at the perceived elitism of the 1 percent who seem blind to their own privilege, arrogance and condescension.
That means they are often blind to the ways in which they end up being the victimizer, imposing itself on minority groups.
If one were blind to the outside world, being "best friends" with your partner wouldn't be such a positive thing after all.
Others would say he was blind to the threat of radical Islamist terrorism, the resurgence of Russia, and the ascendance of China.
Google's left leaning makes us blind to this bias and uncritical of its results, which we're using to justify highly politicized programs.
The Democrats cannot sit this one out, especially when the Republican leader is so blind to the true sources of America's greatness.
Amis, who has reveled in and brandished his coolness since boyhood, is blind to the resentment his kind of derision can provoke.
Eclipses reveal things that we were previously blind to, and put us on the right path if we've been going off course.
But she's blind to the culture she has stepped into, which is where "The Good Fight" might find its most interesting stories.
That's why his paintings can make us wonder about the opportunities for consciousness and revelation we have been blind to in ourselves.
But Chauhan is dogged in his pursuit and blind to the horror that the women of the family feel about his endeavour.
Chiang discusses this a bit earlier in the story: They're blind to a simple truth: complex minds can't develop on their own.
We'll remain blind to it, because it's much easier to spot bias in another person than it is to recognize it in yourself.
Through acceptance, you'll open your third eye and see beyond what you were blind to when you were thrashing around for quick solutions.
There was one standout, however: a man who proposed building virtual-reality devices that would allow the blind to see that alternate world.
It offered no Braille for the blind to use in its museum experience, so his mother read information from the placards to him.
I also make sure to point out that in the desire to villainize an enemy, we can't be blind to our own actions.
Its narrator, Stevens, a butler, hews so closely to his idea of duty that he is blind to larger questions of moral obligation.
But disturbingly many men are still blind to the way that personal remarks, lewd jokes and the like can make a workplace hostile.
This is a genuine problem, but it's also one we're trying to solve now, not a scary future apocalypse we're all blind to.
The best approach, in Mr Rahman's view, is for the state to be blind to all forms of marriage except the civil sort.
While the buying capabilities continue to expand for both TV and digital video, marketers are still blind to what the optimal mix is.
This was never going to be an impartial film, but Panse's biopic is blind to even the irony that is openly on display.
In his search for satisfaction through conflict, deception, and self-glorification, Donald Trump is utterly blind to the actual needs of the other.
They'll also need access to rooms large enough to safely run around swinging their arms, blind to the real world, without breaking anything.
But the liberals in charge of intelligence-gathering, Kendall thought, seemed blind to this and thus played into the hands of the enemy.
In tech, they stay blind to the jungle of competitive initiatives daily reported in sectors like mobile payments, text messaging or online ads.
I have never been blind to this — the people who see black religiosity as an indicator of primitive thinking and lack of enlightenment.
It was far from the first time that officials were blind to the concerns of the communities in which the Games were held.
Stocker suggested that the delay in removing caps stemmed from legislative bodies being "blind" to the unintended consequences of their well-intentioned policymaking.
Any Republican who does not see that their party has been hijacked by anti-Semitism, racism, Islamophobia and hatred is blind to reality.
British foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt said the BBC investigation showed that Corbyn was either "wilfully blind to anti-Semitism or anti-Semitic himself".
White, elite institutions were blind to how stereotypes had twisted their ability to assess what it means to be a qualified black candidate.
"I think a lot of men and women were blind to the power men had over women," said Ms. Liza, the singer-songwriter.
Every good love story has a moment in which the precious ingénue, blind to the complexities of the world, misinterprets the lover's move.
To show he wasn't blind to how the whole stunt came off, Rinaudo gave a Nintendo Switch away to one of his patrons.
Shareholders should worry also that Exxon is blind to alternative technologies like electric cars and electric transport technology that challenge oil and gas.
"He's not going to be deaf and blind to those pressures, but he's going to see them for what they are," Hosko said.
People with this disorder distort reality to meet their extreme ego needs, rendering them blind to other views and facts but their own.
Isn't denying access to the facts of the prosecution's case ''blind to the superlatively important public interest in the acquittal of the innocent?
So eager is it to connect with that world, that it is often blind to the dangerous anger and isolation of the banlieues.
Is that whole process really blind to demographics like gender and race when it comes to performance metrics and possible adjustments by managers?
As the author of an excellent book on American racial politics, Gerstle is hardly blind to the racialized violence inherent in Jackson's military campaigns.
They've been accused of being blind to the Russian operations, and then uncooperative with the House and the Senate investigations trying to untangle them.
We are blind to and dismissive of what people beyond our walls (let alone even within our walls) think about complex issues that matter.
You get so focused on getting the main thing spot-on that you become blind to everything else, especially when you're on a clock.
High tech is blind to the plight of the migrant worker and depends on the largesse of governments for programmers and outsourced data centers.
Pad users, in their minds, are blind to social norms and addicted to the pleasures of the napkin, a disposable mattress for the vagina.
He excoriated the Bernanke Fed for being too aggressive in its efforts to stabilize the economy and too blind to the risks of inflation.
The lovely drama Little Men is a small-scale tragedy populated by perfectly well intentioned people who are willfully blind to their own selfishness.
Sessions' clear prejudices and racism make him willfully blind to some of the most pressing civil rights abuses and environmental injustices in our country.
Even at this point in the semester, the students, some of whom had studied gender issues before, seemed blind to their own ingrained assumptions.
"We're not keeping up, we're losing," says one insurer, who thinks most people remain blind to the real-world damage such assaults could do.
He is blind to some of the consequences of his own behavior, which includes cheating on Nicole with a member of the theater company.
Don't be blind to the fact that today's pot, with THC levels more than ten times what it was in the '70s and '80s.
It makes them blind to the proper steps to take to ensure those funds last a lifetime — and, for their loved ones' sake, beyond.
It is so blind to its faults and so engrossed in what it thinks is profundity that it doesn't realise it is unintentionally hilarious.
They are not blind to the problems in their country but there is no time to be down because … there's a rumba street festival!
A. Privilege is often blind to the more subtle aggressions students face when they are asked to talk about their lives to the elite.
The confessors tell us their secrets, but choose to remain blind to the real secret — not what they did, but why they did it.
"Tech companies are blind to this," says Brianna Wu, the co-founder of Giant Spacekat, a software company that makes games with female protagonists.
"It seems like such a lonely life to be deaf and blindto not be able to see and hear," Clara said on Sunday.
It's also demeaning to insist that university admissions officers become blind to race, which treats racial identity as taboo but other identities as legitimate.
They show that Americans aren't blind to the disorder in the White House — that at least some Trump supporters are second-guessing their president.
While tactical measurements are important, they do not paint a complete picture of security performance and could leave the organization blind to potential risk.
For one thing, it is entirely possible for algorithms to discriminate on gender, even when they are programmed to be "blind" to that variable.
No longer will abusers be able to hide in the shadows, protected by institutions or a legal system blind to the realities of trauma.
"As the sheriff, I am not blind to the offensive conduct of some demonstrators nor will I ignore their criminal conduct," the statement said.
"Our politicians are blind to these people," says Dr. Garrett Adams, who founded the Beersheba Clinic to provide health care in Tennessee's rural mountains.
In these plants, it's as if the stem cell niche were blind to the FCP1 signals, with the result being out of control growth.
The nation-centric approach remains blind to the circulation of materials, visuals, ideas, and technologies beyond national boundaries that informs the creating of photographs.
Bundy's girlfriend at the time was blind to her boyfriend's nocturnal deeds (but she later suspected him, and went to the police with her findings).
If we do that, we stay blind to some very real opportunities to find chinks in Trump's armor — and keep a light shining on them.
Also, because the models the researchers created are using historical data to make their predictions, they're necessarily blind to any future political twists and turns.
I've often found myself struggling to argue that people can be confused about what's actually motivating them, or at least blind to the root causes.
The results throw doubt on Facebook's claims to be blind to race, says David Garcia, a researcher at the Complexity Science Hub in Vienna, Austria.
Rather than simply disagreeing over policy outcomes, we are increasingly blind to our commonalities, seeing each other only as two teams fighting for a trophy.
He had said last month that he had agreed with Dutch coach Danny Blind to stay on as assistant until the end of the year.
Only someone willfully blind to all this would fail to see that exactly the same behaviors have rearisen in exactly the same places as before.
During a time of conflict, as in the South China Sea, disrupting satellites and communications would make us deaf and blind to a significant extent.
People of color have been fighting against racism for hundreds of years, but much of white America has been blind to or complicit in it.
Since the algorithm relies on place as a search term, it is blind to killers who are nomadic over any range greater than adjacent counties.
A: We think of the courts as being a place of equal justice, of Lady Justice being blind to the relative finances of the parties.
Cambodians may not have any outlet for displeasure with the regime, but that does not mean they are blind to, or tolerant of, its faults.
"USA Diving knew or was willfully blind to the fact that ... Bohonyi presented a clear and present danger to young female athletes," the lawsuit says.
Allies of the president have been swift to say that the memos expose Comey as a leaker who was "blind" to biases with the FBI.
Jamison is not blind to the ideological implications of the twelve-step logic, the way that it forces everyone to read from the same script.
"I don't want you to grow up blind like me, blind to everything going on in the world," her mother says, adamant that she remain.
This seemed like a totally fanciful possibility to Sorenson herself, but she wasn't blind to its inspirational potency: Flip the Hillary districts, flip the house.
The pre-credits scene makes it abundantly clear that C.C. isn't blind to Lori's ambitions and still has the power to brutalize her into submission.
On my side, there is my own guilt, my fear of being perceived as racist or somehow embodying an oppression I am often blind to.
I've already purchased a fine window blind to remedy the whole blinding glare situation, I just haven't found the time to install the thing yet.
We're told from there, Cosby is escorted through Phoenix by a personal guide -- Bill's legally blind -- to use the prison's library, yard and other facilities.
The phrase became a certain savvy shorthand, a proven truth about "how things really work" that the old media was just too blind to see.
My editors are somewhat blind to my gender because they send me to report stories that most other editors would rarely assign to a woman.
Company: OrCamTotal raised: $130 millionOrCam is an Israeli unicorn, valued at $1.75 billion, developing technology that helps the visually impaired and the blind to see.
Here are six ways we were blind to screaming red flags about government surveillance abuse: We have in place a system of checks and balances.
And they are so concerned with how they can be good for Emira that they're blind to questions like: Why doesn't she have health insurance?
Marx had various limitations and various things that he wasn't very interested in, and I do think he was blind to many of these weaknesses.
In 2017, it threatens to make journalists blind to genuine threats to democracy that take the form of unsewing certain marginalized groups from public life.
As Edith, an aspiring actress who seems blind to her deficits and personal flaws, Ms. Goldstein demonstrates impressive skill in slowly peeling away her character's charm.
So the question remains: Why didn't NBC opt to put a much better installment, like the series' third outing, "Chuck Pierce Is Blind," to air first?
Although the federal government seems blind to the importance of environmental protection policies, mayors are taking the lead on renewable energy policy at the local level.
The same cultural safe spaces that blinkered coastal elites to candidate Trump's popularity have rendered them blind to President Trump's achievements on behalf of ordinary Americans.
I believe in Robby, and I believe he had an honest soul but I've been blind to things before in my past relationships because of love.
But the United States already has a lot of stuff, and the policymakers of the past were not blind to where the low-hanging opportunities were.
Traditional retailers are not blind to the change — hundreds have already turned to B8ta for assistance in navigating the necessary evolution in the physical retail space. 
We'd do well to take stock of what we were blind to in the raciest days of Silicon Valley and the government-as-usual Obama years.
" It adds: "This effectively means there is no way to trace back your activity on Blind to an email address, because even we can't do it.
There is no "American dream" for entire groups of people because the system is permanently built against them and the privileged are seemingly blind to it.
Without these necessary assets, and a strong American weather enterprise, our nation and the world would be blind to some of the most substantial natural threats.
"It's not uncommon for esports teams to sign player contracts without knowing how old the player is, or making themselves willingly blind to it," McArthur said.
Three writers who are not blind to the worst humanity has to offer but who so beautifully express our best that you can't help feeling optimistic.
"None of us are blind to the state of affairs of our great state of West Virginia," Jenkins said Monday, according to West Virginia Metro News.
"In the caption of the photo, Brown wrote "I have worked my whole life to prove that the system is blind to see talent like mines.
Then-candidate Trump responded by suggesting that President Barack Obama was either not tough enough or was being willfully blind to the threat from such attackers.
I could finally see what my teenage self was blind to: The stands were filled with doting parents and proud siblings, supportive neighbors and sentimental alumni.
But in the end, it seems as if the Qataris were less villains than dupes, drunk on natural-gas money and blind to its fatal consequences.
More important, the legislators pressing for the passage of this bill are dishonest in their motives and willfully blind to the consequences of its probable passage.
They do so not as stock figures offering insights into game theory but as flesh-and-blood individuals mostly blind to the consequences of their actions.
In a post on the legal site Just Security, Mr. Hathaway called Mr. Trump's executive order "willfully blind" to the United States' obligation under that law.
And she's not blind to the attitude that the Bay Area could solve many of its problems if it simply drove the techies into the Bay.
Physicians, especially surgeons, are not blind to the momentum of cost-saving medicine, but this needs to be driven by science not by an insurance company.
Without global data standards for identifying financial products, financial participants and financial transactions regulators will be blind to systemic risks building up in the financial system.
To claim otherwise is to be blind to the relative position of privilege you're operating from, and to undermine the experiences of others in the process.
It leaves Republicans blind to the electoral threat posed by Warren's Nordic-style social democracy, because they can't see the difference; they can only see reds.
For instance, Korean Air employees used Blind to anonymously discuss a response to the 2014 "nut rage" scandal, when a company executive's daughter assaulted a crew member.
Whichever it is, Europe's political evolution, regardless of the hardships some voters feel, seems to be coming from a position of relative comfort, blind to potential pitfalls.
"If you want to hire someone for a position of trust, do you want to be blind to that or see what was on file?" he said.
Entitled, rapey, gropey, grabby, disgusting, and the way that he, and she, destroyed these women and the way that everyone went along, and are blind to this.
Some may be experiencing the subtle signs of cognitive loss; others are still blind to growth of the devastating plaques and tangles destined to steal their memories.
"But there are a lot of people that are just blind to it, they just like the fact that he's talking about Carrier and what they're doing."
Such deep affection may explain why so many of their supporters were blind to the Cruz trajectory: They'd loyally pinned their hopes, and their bets, on Jeb.
Blind accounts need to be verified through users' work emails, which enables Blind to ensure discussions about a company are actually coming from people who work there.
" Cramer Remix: Fab versus faux cloud stocks Cramer: Fed blind to recession signs everywhereCramer: Apple could have real upside this year Lending Club: "No, way too risky.
King and Chavez were not blind to the anger of their fellow protestors and they knew and understood that the temptation to respond with violence is strong.
Short of selling the entire Trump empire, experts said, he will find it difficult to create a trust sufficiently "blind" to avoid the possibility of any conflicts.
This one-two punch — Trump's disdain for facts and overriding focus on feelings and personalities — has made the president largely blind to the consequences of his actions.
Once you have some adoption, though, I think it's very, very easy to fall into the trap of being blind to some of what's holding you back.
In retelling the history, the author seems as blind to this as she is dogged in her biases, making frequent mentions of "freedom fighters", "comrades" and "cadres".
But she expressed dismay that the 5-4 majority ruling was "blind" to the context of the travel ban and "unhinged from the facts," in her eyes.
"We are concerned that this resolution offers a limited perspective on carbon taxes and is blind to the potential benefits of market-based climate policy," they wrote.
Capital rules that are blind to risks and require banks to hold capital based on the size the investment may be part of the problem, Powell said.
Lawmakers and investigators say authorities were likely blind to the plots because of the secure technology, although the exact role encryption played in each incident remains unknown.
The model, first outlined last year, takes into account role, job level, job location and performance ratings, but is blind to gender - and, as of recently, race.
Success is not one-size-fits-all My upbringing, aimed at getting the best education and career, made me partially blind to the rich variety of life.
For me, that period kind of coincided with becoming an artist, so I was a little bit blind to some of the big changes that were happening.
Powell, in his remarks, said the Fed is not blind to the possible "revenge" of prices rising as they have before during times of sustained low unemployment.
"The fact that lots of people are using something doesn't mean they're critically looking at its code, or that they're not blind to fundamental mistakes" Sirer said.
The revolving cast is full of striking characters, including a girl with unnaturally fast-growing hair and an Englishwoman who is literally blind to her beloved's race.
Being blind, or choosing to be blind, to the scale of her misfortunes is one way for Anne to cope, but this renders Limburg's task more difficult.
Plus, there's more Love Is Blind to check out this weekend, along with an Anne Hathaway-starring movie, a few buzzy docuseries, and lots of international content.
"There should be no place in society for racism, white supremacy and neo-nazis," she wrote on Sunday, apparently blind to her father's accommodation of those forces.
On particularly busy days when you need to manage your time most precisely, you&aposre most likely to become blind to your true priorities during task transitions.
Socialists believe that liberals are entranced by "bourgeois democracy," blind to the ways private ownership of the means of production makes reform inadequate and meaningful democracy impossible.
But his co-founder in WTF, Pincus, previously had told Recode he hoped to convince Stephan Jenkins, the frontman of Third Eye Blind, to carry their mantle.
As Edith, an aspiring actress who seems blind to her deficits and personal flaws, Ms. Goldstein gives a performance that requires her to swing between disarming and loathsome.
I spoke to travel writer Tony Giles, artist and bodybuilder Claire Lawrence, makeup vlogger Lucy Edwards and athlete Selina Litt, all of whom are blind, to find out.
The artists seemed to suggest that Trump was very much an emperor without his clothes — a man obsessed with his own image and blind to his own faults.
The way this feature allows you to interact with real reality turned out to be pretty effective and ensured that you were never fully blind to your surroundings.
They manipulate vast arrays of data in a single step, pick out subtle patterns that classical computers are blind to, and don't choke on incomplete or uncertain data.
I've seen situations where other companies can be blind to potential issues or concerns, so I've always viewed it as a valuable way by which we get feedback.
"I suppose we're interested in the way in which we are all a little bit blind to our current condition," said Thomson, offering climate change as an example.
The Thermians are essentially fans writ large, driven to emulate the admirable principles that inform the series, while remaining blind to the flaws of its extremely human creators.
With more than 7 million blind and low-vision people in the US, Mattel worked with the National Federation of the Blind to make the game more inclusive.
Perhaps the most ominous would be to expel the inspectors from the IAEA who closely monitor Iran's nuclear facilities, leaving the world blind to any attempts at breakout.
Policymakers thus far appear blind to the coming job losses for women, experts say, and risk putting in place training programs and safety nets that mainly rescue men.
Entitled, rapey, gropey, grabby, disgusting, and the way that he—and she—destroyed these women and the way that everyone went along, and, and are blind to this!
But he's not blind to the spectacle of Republicans running away from the health care bill — and his comments suggest he knows he may need a backup plan.
All swear blind to the media that after the officials have spoken to people in their tents and shacks, contractors will move in to destroy any empty tents.
" Trump listed some of the Castro regime's anti-United States actions, ranging back to the Cuban Missile Crisis, and added, "We will never, ever be blind to it.
I crumple them until they tangle and (inevitably) fray, and I remain blind to them until the moment they trip me or yank my devices off the table.
This is especially true with race in America, and why some have been critical of millennials who express that they prefer to be blind to others' racial differences.
This epidemic is blind to a person's background and profession, yet unattended it can distort the honest, passionate rhetoric of protest into the delusional hate of dangerous radicalization.
"She adores all my kids, it's amazing," Donald once told a reporter — he was happily blind to the strangeness in the air whenever she was with his children.
Conspiracy theories also flatter the theorists themselves: They are exceptional because they can perceive what everyone else is either too blind to see or too afraid to admit.
You'd think that I would become blind to it after a while, or that I might occasionally feel embarrassed by its pretentiousness when guests come over, but nope!
Brandon My wife and I don't think of race when we see each other, but we aren't blind to the reality that we, and our son, get looks.
Ibrahimovic assisted Daley Blind to score the game's first goal in the 39th minute before Paul Pogba freed up Ibrahimovic to score his 13th goal of the season.
Though encryption is seen as a plus for security, WhatsApp is blind to what's being said in messages — and that makes it difficult to police or moderate content.
A diarist writes in the moment, in private, blind to the future, which is how Tina Brown filled one blue school workbook after another from 1983 to 1992.
The speech quickly turned into an election rally, with Mr. Noor saying the leaders of the government in Kabul were blind to Afghans' suffering through years of war.
In the scathing report, the rights organization said that European countries had remained "willfully blind" to the dangers of returning the thousands of Afghan asylum seekers, including children.
They can do the country an enormous favor by spending zillions in the general election, helping along those who are still blind to the fraud of Donald Trump.
It would do nothing to protect public safety, but rather, would increase cynicism about a system that too often appears immune to justice and blind to common sense.
Perhaps, but they are blind to the dangers of the JCPOA that they support — it's a pathway for Iran to develop its nuclear program in the near future.
It now seems to me that ObamaCare's creators weren't blind to what they were doing — they were playing a long game that is just now coming to fruition.
As a black scholar of race and a minister committed to social justice, I could no longer be part of an organization that is blind to its racism.
In fact, I use the election to address in my book why even the most educated white people were so naïve and blind to the realities of race.
Trucks: The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) will allow dozens of truck drivers with poor vision, many of whom are partially blind, to operate commercial motor vehicles.
Although he wrote about how meritocracy is blind to inequalities of race and income, he had little to say about the relationship between anti-system anger and racism.
While he is accused of defending Trump out of blind devotion, he believes it is the rest of the conservative media that has become blind to Trump's appeal.
Representing a more inexperienced class of trader, the group may not fully comprehend what they're betting on, and may be blind to the associated risks, the firm says.
Television and movies are passive, but VR requires one to be active, engaged, and immersed in a virtual environment that renders them blind to the one they're actually in.
This solar eclipse in your sign will remove relationships that are no longer serving you and make you realize things about yourself that you may have been blind to.
Understanding the larger context will help you to get the support of other people and make sure that you are not blind to the environment in which you're operating.
Templeton succeeds in what many street-style photographers aim to do — to capture and show audiences what is right in front of them yet what is blind to them.
"Security teams are currently well armed with personnel and tools and data in their own enterprises, but largely blind to the security and reliability of third parties," White said.
Google sent a message with the Pixel, and only a fool would be blind to it: It's getting serious about building its own phones to run its own software.
Lucy is very hypercritical and aware of other people — which becomes so funny during her support group — but she's occasionally blind to her own faults and what she's doing.
Vulnerability to adversarial examples, a special kind of attack that can cripple certain kinds of AI systems, potentially making an autonomous car blind to a fast-approaching stop sign.
"This is something that has been going on for years, and everyone's blind to it, but they know it's going on, if you get what I mean," Nelson said.
They put the cart before the horse, blind to the fact that protections for economic freedoms and private property must precede prosperity and the social inclusion of working people.
The Mexican government is not blind to these concerns, and the secretary of the Treasury has tried, with little success, to incentivize the states' tax collection through matching funds.
The couple also has to decide how they "come out" to their friends and family, and they can't be blind to the fact that it will have an impact.
"Large, sophisticated companies like Marriott are not blind to the risks posed by cyber criminals, who are constantly attempting to infiltrate corporations that store sensitive consumer information," he said.
Not blind to slavery, nor to the fact that Washington owned human beings, Goodman nevertheless wrote words about our first president's letter that have stayed with me for decades.
They grow reckless with their power, blind to their effect on anything beyond tech, and they systematically sideline any voices that counsel some new and less obviously idiotic path.
In "The Sopranos" there were a lot of things that weren't found in other mob presentations, and it pissed me off that people were kind of blind to that.
But too many of us tend to interpret events, political figures and issues in all-or-nothing, allies-or-enemies, black-and-white terms, blind to shades of gray.
"When you leave Cuba for the first time, you discover many things that you had been blind to," said Yaili Jiménez Gutierrez, one of the doctors who filed suit.
It cannot see you; it has always been blind to the human and the things we do to stave it off, the taxonomies, the cleaning, the arranging, the ordering.
Although people can be blind to what is going on in their own households, the fact that he doesn't share your anxieties should make you wonder if you're right.
Many Republicans and Democrats in Congress are bitter that the Trump administration has, until recently, been blind to the atrocious war that has torn apart an already fragmented Yemen.
It often happened, Agnes said, that we recognized the misshapen offspring of tragedy while growing blind to the events that had given birth to it in the first place.
When he takes a liking to someone he can become blind to their faults and when he does not, it is hard to reverse that first impression, they said.
" The charge that educators, arts institutions and music historians other than Gioia are, on the whole, blind to the value of transgressive innovation threads through "Music: A Subversive History.
Kammen told me it's not because anyone is blind to the truth, or corrupt; they simply have deep differences in the way they model emissions and land use change.
She can be blithely unaware of her vanity, but she isn't blind to Jessica's envy, and she's tried, however indelicately, not to make a big show about the clothes.
Social media companies were "willfully blind" to Russia's misinformation campaign undermining the 2016 U.S. election, and it's time to dump stocks in the industry, money manager Ross Gerber told CNBC.
Mosseri, for instance, disputed the notion that Facebook is blind to the downsides of its products: "More of us worry about worst case scenarios than you may think," he wrote.
"We can see that there is still a section in Washington that insists in being blind to the immense progress Egypt has made in becoming a stable nation," Orabi said.
The government has not been completely blind to the need to ensure that rural people have enough schooling to work in factories, but it has shown little sense of urgency.
They have sometimes become blind to the shadow sides of liberal democracy, and this has led to a technocracy that has spun out of control, with politicians essentially being managers.
Still, she's not blind to the inherent sizeism that exists in the industry when it comes to who gets to wear what — and how it hasn't really changed at all.
Click here to view original GIFWhen you strap on all of the gear required for a modern, immersive, virtual reality experience, you're all but completely blind to the real world.
"We are essentially 'blind' to these seafloor events unless we are able to map them before and after," Crawford explained, saying the stars just happened to align for this event.
With large-scale incarcerations following protests and rioting under British rule in the 1960s it would be blind to history to argue that they are Hong Kong's first political prisoners.
Mercury and Saturn suggest you spend time with your elders—people who've been through some shit and are comfortable being honest with you about what you may be blind to.
Jenkins wrote in a letter to the university community that "many have come to see the murals as at best blind to the consequences of Columbus's voyage" for indigenous people.
In a world of "I'm not racist" defenses, there aren't too many stories that better articulate how the Neesons of the world can be blind to their own ingrained racism.
That's not to say that you've been whipping voters into a frenzy all these years, but perhaps you've been blind to the role of conservative media in all of this.
For Hillary Clinton to make this claim suggests that either she doesn't understand how abuse of power works or that she's simply blind to it where her husband is concerned.
Think of me as a story's first and worst reader: doubtful, questioning, blind to subtlety, skeptical of the facts, regularly prodding editors and reporters to do something more or different.
But for over 40 years, as I became more knowledgeable about deer and birds, I somehow remained naïvely blind to what happens to the lead in a bullet once shot.
If we're only seeing right now one-seventh of the actual disease because we're not testing enough, and we're just blind to it, then we're in a world of hurt.
He lashes out at the smallest perceived slight with ferocity, while praise of any kind is so intoxicating to him that he is blind to where that praise comes from.
No offense, but your close friend sounds like a monster — not just blind to the challenges of raising (and being) a special-needs child, but disrespectful to both of you.
If you, like me, are fairly blind to rebus themes, feel free to use my patented method for sussing them out: Fill in as many gimmes as you possibly can.
" DAVE REAY, CHAIR IN CARBON MANAGEMENT, UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH "The United States will come to rue this day ... Climate change knows no borders, its impacts are blind to national flags.
In the clips, the idea that anyone can move through life blind to race is rejected and, in one video featuring the company's new CEO, Kevin Johnson, mocked and dismissed.
Nunes's announcement was a bombshell with no bomb, just enough mud in the water to obscure the blood in the water for those too willfully blind to discern the difference.
As is often the case with financial crashes, markets and experts alike turned out to have been focused on the wrong things, blind to the true problem that was metastasizing.
McKinsey "acted with intent to deceive the court and in a manner that was willfully blind to the truth and was in reckless disregard of the truth," Mr. Alix wrote.
The humor of the skit comes from the incredulous logic that a black man could be so blind to his own self-preservation that he would become a white supremacist.
However, various media outlets seemed willfully blind to the countervailing facts and stuck with the narrative of a group of MAGA-hat wearing thugs 'swarming' a Native American war veteran.
The result is an administration that, while it may suffer periodic losses like Porter or Puzder, remains fundamentally blind to the reckoning going on in the rest of the country.
Overall, she said, she's still frustrated by the unwillingness of tech leaders to accept their share of responsibility in the media space, and not because they're blind to the problem.
I love "On the Road," despite knowing very well that it's a fantastical and likely toxic account, blind to both engines of privilege and the sacrifices inherent to endless meandering.
Oleg certainly got told this week, by both his partner and his prisoner, that he's still living a privileged life, blind to the choices other people have to make to survive.
Trump responded Wednesday by casting his critics as victims of "Trump Derangement Syndrome," a term coined to describe a fury so deep it renders the afflicted blind to the president's accomplishments.
So one night we hear a noise outside and my mom pulls up the blind to find herself eye to eye with this old man trying to look into our window.
"We are gratified the court reinstated the jury's verdict finding the defendants were willfully blind to the rampant infringement on their website," said Andrew Bart, a lawyer for the recording labels.
"The world isn't 'going dark' to law enforcement because of encryption; law enforcement are going blind to the huge amount of unencrypted data that is available to help investigations," he said.
Perhaps the best thing to come of Trump's candidacy is that we will no longer be blind to the coexisting, and mutually reinforcing, perils of the pussy-grab and the pedestal.
The results are surprising, given that Uber has long argued that its algorithms that determine how much drivers earn are supposed to be blind to things like race, gender, and sexuality.
It's not that she's completely blind to what's happening, but she knows they're acting out of grief, and that makes her afraid to tread too heavily lest she make it worse.
Such a product could allow the deaf and blind to communicate more easily -- or allow everyone else "to type five times faster than you can on a smartphone," according to Dugan.
"Our terrestrially trained minds are blind to the terrifying potential for tyranny in the power to claim land—fixed, immobile, where people have no choice but to live," write the authors.
Those who know Mueller say he's not blind to the sensitivity of the midterms and the potential implications of unveiling charges against individuals in Trump's orbit so close to the election.
In the New York map of Equinox locations, Midtown isn't short of outposts — Equinox isn't blind to the opportune convenience they can provide to the throngs of midtown white-collar workers.
"It's deeply troubling that Hassan is either blind to basic facts or so beholden to the Clinton machine that she can't level with voters," Liz Johnson, Ayotte's campaign spokeswoman, told WMUR.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.
Hefner, who saw himself as helping to liberate people from sexual repression, was blind to his own privileged position as a man; he reacted to these critiques with defensive ill-temper.
Without this awareness it's easy to demand an unrealistic perfection, ignore the trade-offs inherent to all the approaches, or be blind to the costs and risks of more aggressive options.
My classmates and I are so caught up in the liberal echo chamber of our affluent Northeastern suburb that we are blind to the ideological diversity that exists in our nation.
One colleague in particular — a peer, though he's been here longer — appears to be completely blind to his faults in this area, and is increasingly becoming unhappy at not being promoted.
Half a century ago, we were largely blind to sexual harassment and gender discrimination, so talented women were pushed out — not just from doctoral programs but from every institution and workplace.
The most obvious byproduct of that choice: TikTok videos that are weeks or even months old—an eternity on the internet—can suddenly go viral, with viewers blind to their age.
He cannot bear to look at what the gods have ordained, or, in a less generous interpretation, he is determinedly blind to his own role in the murder of his daughter.
I want to tromp around in boots in the china shop, where you've laid crystal figurines on the ground and dressed the halls in lace that someone went blind to stitch.
As an educational framework, vocation might focus on an individual's desires and choices, but it need not do so in a way that is blind to social ideologies and structural inequality.
The developers, who come from the City College of Kunming University of Science and Technology, say they hope the helmet will enable the blind to go about their everyday life more easily.
Eclipses bring massive reveals, so expect to see something you were blind to before—your family, your early childhood, and your current living situation are likely themes that this eclipse will trigger.
They are also blind to the dramatic decline in the French support of the EU; only 38 percent are now favorable to the EU, compared with 70 percent about ten years ago.
"Studies show that users do not perceive the lack of a 'secure' icon as a warning, but also that users become blind to warnings that occur too frequently," wrote Schecter last September.
Those who argue that another Clinton White House is somehow preferable to four years of Trump are blind to the consequences -- for the nation, for the party and for the conservative movement.
And as Melanie, a mother who loves her daughter fiercely, but is blind to the scope of what's going on behind her closed bedroom door, Hunter quivers with anger, anxiety and concern.
Consumed by her own perceived slights and aggressions, she's blind to her son's descent into dangerous drug-use, instead constantly turning to him for the attention she doesn't receive from her husband.
"A lot of great founders are very type-A, relentless people who can be blind to the reality they might have to sell at a lower number than they expected," he said.
"I was kind of delighted that I'm that blind to what's going on because it means I'm reading books or something," says Offerman, who hosted the Television Critics Association Awards in 2011.
You can't give the Palestinians hundreds of millions of dollars in security assistance and be blind to the fertile culture of jihad there that imperils the security of not just its neighbor.
Automation is now "blind to the colour of your collar", declares Jerry Kaplan, another Stanford academic and author of "Humans Need Not Apply", a book that predicts upheaval in the labour market.
SHEILA FOX Baltimore To the Editor: Hillary Clinton fought back against the truth, and she either was willfully blind to the truth or considered it a mere inconvenience to be swept away.
Progressives were not nearly as blind to the problematic aspects of claiming an identity with flimsy support when it came to Rachel Dolezal so why should we make an exception for Warren.
There are women of color in I Feel Pretty, but because they're skinnier than she is, the film is blind to any of the prejudices and injustices that they might be facing.
Because Republicans chose to make the change to the benefits so late in the game, moderates feared that they were walking in blind to what the effects of repealing them could be.
However, many experts believe that President Trump suffers from narcissistic personality disorder and distorts reality to meet his extreme ego needs, rendering him blind to other views and facts but his own.
The Trumpian case against supporters of a liberal immigration policy is that we are indifferent to law, blasé about crime and blind to the social costs illegal immigrants impose on American communities.
It is the symptom of an illness that is fundamentally spiritual: a kind of narcissism that allows him to focus only on sating his need, blind to the pain of the victim.
He and his brother understood back then, years before hair and beauty became strongly associated with black politics, that people, sometimes even black people themselves, were blind to how black is beautiful.
Cognitive tunneling — also known as tunnel vision — occurs when your focus narrows during periods of elevated stress, making you, in effect, blind to things in your environment that you would normally perceive.
In this groundbreaking and prophetic book, Taleb shows in a playful way that Black Swan events explain almost everything about our world, and yet we — especially the experts — are blind to them. 
So although there's evidence that some gun control measures could work, we by and large remain blind to what specific solutions would work best and what all of their effects would be.
Peter Dutton, the home affairs minister, took to a Sydney radio station that same day and said that "political correctness" had rendered leaders in Victoria blind to the crime wave around them.
The president and his pals are evidently blind to the value of art, but as many of us know so well, both agencies have supported countless individuals and organizations with the roughly .
Rather than limit itself to this critique, the Clinton camp is also throwing in a more demagogic argument that Sanders is soft on Iran or blind to the problems with existing Iranian behavior.
But recently, I came to the realization that it's not just that midis are great — it's that I was just too blind to recognize how great other types of skirts could be, too.
And because BCIs can send electric signals as well, researchers believe the technology could eventually allow the deaf to hear and the blind to see by simulating the electric signals these senses create.
TDC CEO Allison Kirkby was quoted as saying that the operator "is not blind" to widespread concerns about Huawei and information security, although she also pointed out that price was a significant factor.
" In another post, the group professed, "When people look at us and think we are craving for attention because we eat too much, they are clearly blind to what is happening out there.
Sadly for gamblers, the involuntary "tell" he has discovered is of no practical use in winning a game, since the dealer's hand is blind to everyone, dealer included, until all others have played.
"I believe we made the right decision and the world is better and safer as a result of it," he said, which seems willfully blind to the current chaos in Iraq and beyond.
"We can't be blind to the fact that the rules in our country have been rigged against other people for a long time," Warren said when announcing her presidential bid earlier this year.
Late in the afternoon, Mr. Icahn issued a statement denying any intention to sell his shares in Herbalife, accusing Mr. Ackman of being "blind to the facts" and wrongly speaking on his behalf.
So if a developer wants to understand the technical reasons why people are leaving their app, they're basically "blind to it," he said, or they have to build their own "jury-rigged" products.
To give any weight to those portions of the speech that included messages of unity is to be blind to the clear patterns that we have seen from this White House every day.
"This is a huge thing," D'mello says, emphasizing that common myths that only strangers are responsible for stalking and sexual violence can make communities blind to what's going on in their very homes.
But, behind the persona, critics say, he is a populist who opposes same-sex marriage and abortion, and subscribes to a hard line on Brexit that seems blind to warnings of economic damage.
Party elites in the grip of dogma can't see the point of checking in with the people they represent and are blind to new problems the partisan catechism is not equipped to comprehend.
From giving "sight" to the blind to identifying drowsy drivers to robot pets used to complement dementia care, there are a number of commercial applications that could dramatically improve lives around the world.
Mattel worked with the National Federation of the Blind to develop the game, and with more than 9613 million blind and low-vision people in the US, it's sure to be a big hit.
Americans wishing to emigrate to Canada, as well as hopefuls from the rest of the world, are all subject to a points system which is blind to race, colour, creed and country of origin.
In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan argued that the majority's position ignored the "norm of religious equality" at the heart of the First Amendment and was blind to the prayers' "capacity to exclude and divide".
To the type of person who feels a bit guilty staring at their phone all day, blind to everyday life's beauty, this is clearly a next step, literally affixing a screen to your face.
"There are just so many anecdotes like this of him being blind to the fact that gay people face real consequences for being who are they are in parts of the world," they added.
"Think about it: While it might be uncomfortable at first, the aura of secrecy can only be harmful in the long run if we're all blind to what other people are making," she says.
But with the current toolkit of monitoring high-level aggregate trends, the Fed will likely remain blind to the real changes going on in the world around us and continue down a path unknown.
"You're always gonna be instinctually blind to the spot you're not seeing," she tells Collin (Diggs), her ex-boyfriend and co-worker at a moving company where he hauls boxes and she manages workflow.
Tina Bhatnagar Tina Bhatnagar But Coinbase isn't blind to these shortfalls, and about six months ago unveiled a plan to revamp their customer service experience and roll out phone support and shorter response times.
While the Bitkovs say they left Russia because of what they called physical and legal threats from a corrupt system, they appeared blind to the kind of corruption that would ensnare them in Guatemala.
Mueller has conducted his inquiry into Russian interference and links between the Trump campaign and Moscow largely behind the scenes, leaving the public blind to the value or extent of information Gates has provided.
Research has shown that when university administrators are blind to race in their admissions processes, they inevitably deny the challenges students from marginalized communities face, in turn privileging the experiences of many white applicants.
Just as critics often wrongly portray those objecting to protests during the national anthem as hostile or blind to racial inequality, it is equally wrong to suggest that protesting players are somehow lesser Americans.
The problem is that the politicians spouting free trade, like Ryan, are so enamored by the dream that they are blind to the reality; a reality the four men on Mount Rushmore warned against.
"The way I see it, democracy is an opportunity to have different opinions but to not be blind to the weaknesses of your argument," said Mr. Almeida, a social policy analyst at the ministry.
So, this is how it's gonna be -- Kevin Cadogan is so done waiting for Third Eye Blind to cough up cash, the ex-lead guitarist is suing the band and its frontman, Stephan Jenkins.
"Acting for so long in the theater of right-wing politics," he writes, "Stephen and Trump may have become numb to the resultant human tragedy and blind to the hypocrisy of their policy decisions."
I think very few people take the extreme view that the government should be blind to financial and communication data but very few people think giving the government carte blanche without safeguards makes sense.
Although federal legislation passed in March could help improve the monitoring of volcanoes like Mount Hood, scientists remain concerned that red tape could continue to leave them blind to future eruptions, with deadly consequences.
All the times I met him, I had the strange feeling of being scrutinized on the sly, while at the same time getting the equally strange feeling that he was completely blind to me.
Her narrator, Linda, may be a bit perverse and amoral; or she may be just your averagely narcissistic teenager, prone to casual brutality and blind to the hardships and hurts of those around her.
That lie fell apart when officers discovered that he'd accepted the bottles in exchange for £2500,2607 ($2200,702) in overdue rent, and admitted that he was "willfully blind" to the idea that they could've been stolen.
Dodge does not identify the objects he chose as his models; their titles are simply suggestive and seemingly disparate, ranging from the linguistic ("camelCase" ) to the intellectual ("The Walloping Window Blind") to the political ("Caucus").
Even now, Airbus watchers say few outside the company believe the French and German governments are blind to who runs Airbus, especially in the light of recent corruption investigations over commercial jetliner and fighter sales.
Speaking at a congress of the Confederation of German Trade Unions (DGB), Merkel said Europe was not blind to Iran's activities but still believed that sticking to the nuclear deal was the best way forward.
But wholly accepting the modern reductive message of Pride makes us blind to the fact that the mechanics of success in America are still so selective and precarious when it comes to Black trans women.
Previous rulings against the Trump administration in the travel ban cases were policy defeats but political opportunities — chances to cast Trump as the lone populist hero against complacent elites blind to the dangers of terrorism.
They are so enchanting and so promising -- they may help paralyzed patients regain use of their limbs or help the nearly blind to see -- that they have Food and Drug Administration officials scratching their heads.
Sarkozy and Le Pen argue that Parisian elites have become so lost in their bubble of cultural relativism that they are blind to the destruction wreaked upon France's secular, Western identity by immigrants and refugees.
"We love this country, we love what it stands for, not that we're blind to it's flaws ... but I believe with all my heart that America's best days are still ahead of us," Clinton said.
Standing on a drawbridge one night early this month, a man and a woman stood close and kissed, blind to everything around them, even the motionless toxic porridge of the Gowanus Canal below their feet.
A media company could potentially be held criminally liable for bribery if it benefited from a wrongful payment and its employees had knowledge of or were willfully blind to the transaction, legal experts have said.
"It is new and it is woefully blind to class and equity," Karissa Haugeberg, author of Women Against Abortion: Inside the Largest Moral Reform Movement of the 19803th Century, says of this "pro-life" message.
Lyft notes in an August blog post on their website that they are working with Voto Latino, local Urban League affiliates, and the National Federation of the Blind to provide free rides to underserved communities.
Uber employees have taken to an anonymous messaging app called Blind to confide in one another about company leadership amidst sexual harassment allegations and other issues that have recently plagued the company, according to TechCrunch.
But they're also largely blind to how their egos and power trips are hurting the women and children they're supposed to love, even as they delude themselves into thinking they're doing right by their families.
The research suggests that such people, by extension, also may be oblivious to the effect of their attempts at physical contact, and perhaps blind to the cringes of someone they're trying to reassure or support.
The further the nation moved from 1965, the more natural it has become to expect American immigration laws to be blind to race and religion, that maybe that was the way it always had been.
Even if Trump was somehow completely blind to the history and conduct of the man he chose to lead his campaign, Manafort will nonetheless remain a permanent stain on Trump's legacy and this country's history.
If you do not do this, you may be walking in blind to a situation that could waste time for everyone because you are ignorant of what the other person is bringing to the table.
The latter opposed cloture, and came across as willfully blind to math and history, namely that the Democrats are in the minority in both houses of Congress, and that shutdowns do not alter policy outcomes.
Trump cited both Russia and China as "rivals … that challenge our interests, our economy and our values," thereby giving the lie (yet again) to those who say he is somehow blind to the Russian threat.
Peter Zwack, a retired Army officer who was the American military attaché in Moscow at the time of the visit, said Mr. Flynn was not blind to the pitfalls of forging closer ties to Russia.
But if your parent has an outlandish sense of entitlement, makes unrealistic demands on you, seems blind to other people's emotions, and fits the other descriptions of NPD, it might be time to let go.
"Since messages were encrypted without being validated first, WhatsApp and Telegram were blind to the content, thus making them unable to prevent malicious content from being sent," the Check Point researchers explained in a blog post.
Far from admired as a dedicated public servant, the énarque has come to embody the perceived arrogance and disconnection of the governing class, skilled at devising technocratic policies and blind to their effect on ordinary people.
"I think very few people take the extreme view that the government should be blind to financial and communication data but very few people think giving the government carte blanche without safeguards makes sense," said Gates.
The idea is that unlike standard banner ads — which users can become blind to and easily overlook — people are more likely to engage with content that looks like the rest of the content on a site.
After the first days, Maersk's port operations had regained the ability to read the ships' inventory files, so operators were no longer blind to the contents of the hulking, 2188,22016-container vessels arriving in their harbors.
One would have to be blind to not see that these actions of state legislatures are designed to artificially enrich Big Eye by being protectionist and anti-competitively destructive of the market place and individual liberty.
At once, John's the Matilda whose intelligence was never acknowledged by Miss Honey; he's the old woman in the mansion on the hill, the conspiracy theorist who sees a reality everyone around him is blind to.
While the Senate investigation has largely stayed above the partisan infighting that plagued the House panel, Burr said he is not blind to the fact that the committee's final findings may split members along party lines.
At the moment, the Western node is running as a middle relay, which means that it operates as one of the three hops in the network, and is blind to the final destination of any traffic.
And to not be cynical about much of it is to be blind to the reality of this area of the video games industry: These people are up there, above anything else, to sell you things.
Mr. Moon's government has appeared to be blind to this critical shift in popular sentiment, instead promoting the idea, to take a line from a presidential office Facebook post, that "We are one" with the North.
But while Sanders and Warren may want to curtail the financial industry&aposs influence, the progressive candidates should not be entirely blind to what the wisdom that some in the financial-services industry have to offer.
In some ways, this family is deeply prejudiced and blind to Marta's humanity, they're also very much a group of people who have been shaped and warped by the privilege that has been granted to them.
If your only vision is what you think can squeak through, you're blind to the desires of the liberal heart, to the American heart, to the desire for the country to aspire to and achieve greatness.
Even in Connecticut, which has come to be seen as a model, parolees face obstacles that can seem blind to individual circumstances — Mr. Brantley, for example, could be forbidden to see Ms. Eaton until May 2019.
Motor racing as a pastime for the upper classes led to a small coterie of successful female racers in the 1920s and 1930s, and the manufacturers of the era were not blind to the promotional opportunities.
Scientists cannot help operating on their beliefs about the world (even scientists act within the framework of culture), but most are blind to the lines between their scientifically validated understanding of the world and received assumptions.
Born poor and blind to Chinese parents in postwar Vietnam, she was sentenced to death by her paternal grandmother, who believed that her disability would bring shame to the family and render her an unmarriageable burden.
After two decades, something equally alarming may have happened: I became blind to the fact that even for all of Vanguard's success, brokers are still out there selling mutual funds on a commission basis and finding takers.
As we explain on the latest episode of the Original Content podcast, we aren't blind to the show's flaws — there's something old-fashioned and formulaic about the writing, and the script regularly ignores major gaps in logic.
" He also doesn't spare Trump, noting the similar chain migration journey of the president's ancestors and saying the two "may have become numb to the resultant human tragedy and blind to the hypocrisy of their policy decisions.
But for two men who once prided themselves on managing spick-and-span administrations, claiming to have been blind to alleged acts of petty revenge and bribery at the highest levels of state government seems bad enough.
Federal judges in charge of investigating corruption, who had seemed blind to corruption during the Kirchners' 12-year rule, now seem to be picking up the pace, but they are very careful whom they target and when.
To some extent, the American people may be blind to this carnage, having been lulled by their military and political leaders into believing that advanced technology and precision strikes kill the bad guys while sparing the innocent.
Four of the biggest buffet restaurant chains in the country tell TMZ they have no plans to close up shop amid what is now a global pandemic -- but they're not blind to the concerns about COVID-19.
In his first comments since the Patriots opened training camp, the quarterback said that he was "not blind" to problems such as chronic traumatic encephalopathy but that he remained confident in how he tries to avoid injury.
A touching spoken declaration by a white teenage member of the chorus about the responsibility of privilege was followed by Shara Nova's "Blind to the Illness," which seemed to encase the same sentiments in a melancholic bubble.
Bill Maher seems to consider wokeness his personal albatross as he's apparently blind to the paradox of getting paid likely millions of dollars a year to complain about what he believes he's no longer allowed to say.
Father Samir said he gently countered that he himself could not be blind to the negative aspects of Islam, that both needed to be considered, but that the pope seemed to have little interest in the subject.
"You're asking the court to decimate a contract that was heavily negotiated and typical for the industry," she said in her judgement, seemingly blind to any consideration for the well being of an alleged victim of sexual abuse.
His alliance with a conservative movement that is overwhelmingly blind to these realities makes for a strange marriage indeed; it also, oddly enough, aligns him with many progressives who share his grim view of racial progress in America.
She's blind to his true self, to be fair he does a great job of hiding it for a while, as she makes excuses for him to her quickly skeptical daughters, played by Julia Garner and Juno Temple.
Then, using something called the Merz-Carruthers Facial Aging Photo Scales, dermatologists were asked to rate pictures taken at the beginning, at eight weeks, and at the end of the 20-week experiment, blind to the pictures' chronology.
One of five children, she made up "epic" stories with her Barbies ("soap operas with different locations and cliff-hangers—that's when I started playing with character"), but she wasn't blind to what was happening outside her door.
Vikas Desai, also a principal author of the consortium-led study, says that despite the clear picture of health risks from pollution that has emerged over the years, many in Kolkata today are still blind to the problem.
Mr. Aron, who took over AMC in early 2016 after running the Starwood hotel chain, has been more willing to embrace change than many other theater executives, in part because he is not blind to his industry's challenges.
HRW dismissed the new procedure as "burdensome," yet it is basically blind to the need for safeguards, given how Iran's principal exporter of terrorism, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, has conscripted the country's financial institutions into its service.
He was blind to how he would come across when, in his speech at the 2012 Republican National Convention, he took such a gaudy star turn that the party's presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, was reduced to a cameo.
And for those who weren't willfully blind to the truth, the fact that Trump cared more about having a good time than he did about any woman as a human being has been clear for a long time.
But the argument of my book is: Just because these companies have delivered fantastic things for us, and just because we can look at them as incredible innovations, doesn't mean that we should be blind to the dark side.
When you've been coloring your hair for longer than you can remember — blonde babylights every six weeks since the ninth grade, buying bottles of Olaplex in bulk — you may find yourself blind to the beauty of your natural color.
AI systems learn how to translate by studying statistical patterns in large bodies of training data, but that means they're blind to the nuances of language that are used more infrequently, and lack the common sense of human translators.
Data-bias in the aluminum market means too much weight is placed on the highly unreliable reported stocks from the LME, so those who aren't paying for bespoke research remain blind to a key part of the bull story.
NGOs say they are unwilling to send staff into the settlement because they would be operating blind to risk and without protection, and because it has not been fully established where the actual border is between the two countries.
The girl formerly known as Arya Stark is at the center of what might be the episode's strongest scene, a montage of her slow rise from helplessly blind to exactly the kind of assassin Jaqen has been looking for.
"Without the monkeys in our forests, we'll be blind to detect the arrival of the YF virus before we start detecting human cases and casualties, increasing the risk of re-urbanization of the disease in Brazil," Bicca-Marques wrote.
Cramer Remix: Fab versus faux cloud stocks Cramer: Fed blind to recession signs everywhere Cramer: Apple could have real upside this year Sure enough, Kimberly-Clark soared to $133 a share and hit an all-time high on Thursday.
Data-bias in the aluminium market means too much weight is placed on the highly unreliable reported stocks from the LME, so those who aren't paying for bespoke research remain blind to a key part of the bull story.
The objectives further call on NAFTA countries to prohibit trade in goods made with forced labor to echo an existing U.S. law that seems blind to the government procurement preference granted to domestically-made goods that use forced labor.
Moreover, the algorithms produced by Silicon Valley engineers reflect the assumptions and biases of their creators who are largely blind to the challenges and inequities of oppressed people—including trafficked women and girls—whose liberty is ensured by government.
" Mr. Obama was not blind to the United Nations' weaknesses, observing that "this body has often become a forum for sowing discord instead of forging common ground; a venue for playing politics and exploiting grievances rather than solving problems.
You have to have been utterly blind to what the Soviet Union and communism were all about to have taken those positions, and by the time Sanders came of age there was no excuse for ignorance or naïve idealism.
To do so would also make the city seem willfully blind to the work of black women who served at the vanguard of the fight for universal rights — and whose achievements have already shaped suffrage monuments in other cities.
But he seems surprisingly blind to how he fuels such fatalism by playing to the worst stereotype of the enlightened cosmopolitan: disdainful and condescending — sympathetic to humanity in the abstract but impervious to the suffering of actual human beings.
It's through their eyes that we see his naïveté and delusion: He's as blind to Cassie's true identity (she's gay) as he is to Julia's pre-motherhood past, and it's his misguided marriage proposal that necessitates a maternal reunion.
She tempered her push to get United Nations forces to disarm Hezbollah in Lebanon even though she had excoriated the force commander of the Interim Force in Lebanon as being "blind" to Hezbollah's weapons buildup near the Israeli border.
A child care proposal that focuses on those who are lucky enough to control their work hours will further alienate the working class from urban liberals who appear blind to the plight of workers they interact with every day.
In a statement to Gizmodo, John Yanchunis, an attorney for the firm, told us:Large, sophisticated companies like Marriott are not blind to the risks posed by cyber criminals, who are constantly attempting to infiltrate corporations that store sensitive consumer information.
"There's a reason everyone's so blind to what [the Annex] is doing," she says, referencing the blatant use of sacred indigenous symbols, practices, and even bodies (see: the local high school's mascot) for the benefit of Crystal Valley's wealthy white residents.
Benetech, a social impact technology nonprofit, is working with researchers at Northern Illinois University and staff at San Francisco's LightHouse for the Blind to design 3D-printed body parts in hopes that they'll facilitate better sex education for the blind.
" In his Politico essay, Glosser wrote that perhaps Miller and Trump "have become numb to the resultant human tragedy and blind to the hypocrisy of their policy decisions" after spending so much time "in the theater of right wing politics.
Some argue looking past those identities — or being "blind" to them, as someone in the new PSA suggests — means ignoring not only what makes people different, but also the discrimination that prevents love from flowing across boundaries, concerns or reservations.
Many attendees said they felt Facebook was often too lax and blind to local circumstances, but the company has held firm to the concept of a single set of global standards and a deliberate bias towards leaving content on the site.
Discuss their set-up with the Wallenbergs and they say "Anglo-Saxons", schooled in British and American ideas that companies are best owned by masses of small investors (or pension funds), are wilfully blind to the benefits of family-dominated firms.
Cramer Remix: Fab versus faux cloud stocks Cramer: Fed blind to recession signs everywhere Cramer: Apple could have real upside this year Meanwhile, companies like TJX were able to beat Street estimates from strong holiday sales because of the bargains.
Her comments earned her death threats and a provincial party disciplinary hearing, but Khoza said she was not prepared to sit around and wait for the verdict from a party she said was willfully blind to the failings of its leader.
However, it's worth extending the analogy as an object lesson on the shortcomings of the Green New Deal resolution, which is insufficient in scope to meet the global challenge of climate change and blind to geopolitical realities of the 220006st century.
ANKARA, Nov 23 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's comments on the investigation into the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi show that he will turn a blind to the incident no matter what, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Friday.
Karamo Brown may have developed a friendly relationship with his former Dancing with the Stars competitor Sean Spicer, but that doesn't mean he's blind to Spicer's faults — including the fact that the former White House press secretary isn't the best dancer.
In Mr. Finkielkraut's view, Marceau was blinded to the dangers of Hitler by the horrors of World War I; and the French left, obsessed because of fascism with the National Front, has been blind to the dangers of radical Islam.
The best thing would be, of course, to ask ourselves whether it's always [a good thing] to be blind to differences—or rather, would people benefit from having their differences accepted, without being put into the same box with everyone else?
" In other words, our eye-rolling at Barnum and James Frey and Pizzagate is itself a blind to our need to understand what they have to do not only with each other, but with ourselves: "Hoaxes are both overexposed and underexplored.
Instead, if the facts and evidence are adequate for indictment, then prosecutors must be blind to the officeholder's position — especially so in this case because, unlike in President Clinton's case, the investigations relate to how Mr. Trump won the election.
Atkinson noted that the cut-off line for poverty has been drifting upwards as more goods and services come to be seen as essential, but he seemed almost blind to what might be called the cultural multiplier of these basic gains.
In the best neorealist tradition, the film aims to shake the conscience of a country blind to the poverty that surrounds it, but Kore-eda is equally interested in how resilient families (and surrogate families) can fortify themselves against extreme challenges.
That's the topic of his 2015 book It's Not Over, in which Signorile warns about "victory blindness"—the idea that the LGBTQ community shouldn't be blind to homophobia and transphobia despite political rights victories, and instead should remain vocal and confrontational.
This cartoon is a very obvious expression of age-old anti-Semitic sentiment, the belief that a Jewish cabal secretly controls the world's political and financial systems with world leaders too blind to see that they are being led by Jews.
"The president and his attorney general expect the American people to be blind to what we can now see," Representative Elijah E. Cummings, Democrat of Maryland and the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, said in a statement.
The new policy is also blind to the massive cultural shift toward legalization that has been happening at the state level in recent years, after decades of outrageously harsh punishments that have fallen disproportionately on the shoulders of people of color.
Our Fact Checker team has reconstructed events that left the government blind to the virus's spread, and they examined how those errors opened the door for 11 confirmed cases to balloon to more than 100,000 in less than six weeks.
And, I believe that too many of our white neighbors are choosing to be intentionally blind to the enormous breadth and scope of racism in this country, because to acknowledge it would be to condemn self, family, friends and community.
The truth is, investors would do well to be concerned about how ExxonMobil remains blind to the inroads being made by renewable energy, although it is happening around the world, even — ironically enough — under its nose in Texas, its home state.
She said it was hard to believe that executives of high profile companies would go in blind to an intimate dinner, particularly when many have staff who prepare them ahead of time with briefing books on who will be attending events.
"We'd be blind to ignore the large number of takeovers that are now occurring each week, and, perhaps more important, like the potential Sprint-T-Mobile combination, I think the Trump administration may bless every one of them, " Cramer said.
She has Asperger syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder that makes her indifferent, often blind, to social cues and incentives as well as inclined to focus intently on a single subject, a tendency Thunberg says is exacerbated by obsessive-compulsive disorder.
In the book, you seem to imply that the scientists and the researchers authoring this revolution have a kind of tunnel vision — they're focused on the incremental advancements but blind to the big picture, to the potential transmogrification of our species.
Anyone familiar enough with the book's points would have to be blind to miss that then-candidate Donald Trump was such an extreme outsider, from his resume to his very personality, that he was indeed the only real candidate for that smashing job.
Now, before you assault my enthusiasm with somber observations about the silly fingerprint reader placement right next to the camera (a totally valid complaint) or the superfluousness of a dedicated Bixby button, please understand that I'm not blind to those downsides and annoyances.
While I was performing the technical aspects of the campaigns, which had evolved well past a Dungeons and Dragons scenario and into an I Love Bees or Cloverfield style ARG, I was blind to most of the scuttlebutt going around the community.
In a new profile with The Independent published Wednesday, the 32-year-old On the Basis of Sex actor opened up about how growing up in a wealthy family (his grandfather is oil tycoon Armanda Hammer) made him blind to his own advantages.
Bloatware is still an issue too: not on my carrier-agnostic review device in Europe, but definitely so on the T-Mobile version in the US. So no, Samsung hasn't rectified all wrongs and I'm not blind to the faults that still remain.
In fact, the tech industry faces many of the same issues that other industries face with sexism, racism and ageism, but is blind to it, which means there is even less of an urgency to change Silicon Valley itself for the better.
Especially when it comes to economic issues, excluding women means staying blind to the economic concerns of women and working families, and as important, what the workforce looks like today, when women are primary or co-breadwinners in two-thirds of all households.
Dorsey tweets about his various Stoic endeavors, for which he is often derided: When he went on a 10-day meditation retreat in Myanmar for his birthday in 2018, he was blasted for being blind to the human rights atrocities occurring there.
"Allianz is still blind to the contradiction between its ambition to be a climate champion and its support for coal, and its new policies will do little to protect the climate," Regine Richter, energy and finance campaigner at Urgewald, said on Friday.
Read More Cramer: Fed blind to recession signs everywhere February has been an incredible month for the stock market, and now Cramer is ready to sort through the stocks that have fallen out of favor to see if any are ready for investing.
I am so lucky to share these moments with you, I am so glad God is able to move even when people are blind to it.. I am the one on that stage but I am nothing without a light shining through.
But just as in economics, the market metaphor brings with it a quasi-theological belief that everything eventually evens out—an ideology that is deliberately blind to the way the largest players in the capitalist system rig that system in their own favor.
Instead of PowerPoint presentations and state-by-state voter analyses, there was morose self-flagellation, as some admitted they had spent the election seduced by "magical thinking," unable to envision a Trump presidency and therefore blind to the story in front of them.
The way Iden speaks about the Rebellion and the Empire, she's either a full-on believer in the Empire's goal of dominance and submission, or a lifetime's worth of emotional indoctrination and propaganda has left her blind to the consequences of her actions.
"It's very complicated to bring up the issue of racism in the French society, because in France we pretend to be blind to colors," said Lilian Thuram, a defender on France's 1998 World Cup championship team who has closely followed Sissoko's case.
On Thursday, advisers planned an announcement that new tests for the coronavirus would be available soon, hoping it would put to bed recriminations about the insufficient availability of test kits that has left health officials largely blind to the virus's domestic spread.
Standing in front of a phalanx of reporters in the Capitol, State Senator John DeFrancisco, a Republican from the Syracuse area who is running for governor, said Mr. Cuomo was either intentionally or inexplicably blind to misdeeds occurring in his inner circle.
Critically, a more compressed income distribution might also help address the unfortunate reality that today's social and political elites inhabit a kind of bubble that leaves them somewhat blind to the disastrous consequences elevated unemployment has for the majority of the country.
Paul Thiboutot, Carleton's vice president and dean of admissions and financial aid, told an in-house publication that he cried when the school went from need-blind to need-aware in 1993, though he came to believe it was the right decision.
Milton Mollen, who led a commission that found that the New York City Police Department had been "willfully blind" to drug-related corruption by organized bands of rogue officers in the 1980s and early '90s, died on Monday at his home in Manhattan.
One man asked her about foreign aid to Israel, suggesting the country had "targeted" Gabbard "through the media" (Gabbard responded that Israel would always be an ally, but that the US "should not be blind to that relationship, like with any ally").
Often, they feature eccentrics and visionaries who see things that others are blind to — like Mr. Beane of the A's, or Michael Burry, the misanthropic hedge fund manager in "The Big Short," who made a fortune by betting against the housing market.
Old age shouldn't be taboo to discuss, but politicians and commentators should be careful to talk about age as a factor in the race without veering into bias against older candidates -- and without being blind to the disadvantages younger candidates can face.
Mr. Trump has repeatedly withheld details of his conversations with Mr. Putin, according to current and former American officials, a practice that has left officials blind to the dynamic between the two leaders and intensified questions within the administration over the president's actions.
While they may not be entering the same bleak economic landscape Millennials did (although, that depends on what happens with COVID-19), they grew up during the foreclosure crisis and are definitely not blind to the unstable climate future we are all facing.
The 50-year-old actor admitted he had been blind to his family's unhappiness — something he only realized when his 17-year-old daughter Willow shaved her hair off in protest to doing any more music after her hit "Whip My Hair" came out.
"We are not blind to the risk and are prepared for every scenario," he told an investors' conference, adding there was an alternative pipeline system, a quick response mechanism for faults and insurance to cover any damage affecting Israeli gas exports to Egypt or Jordan.
Nothing has done as much to help me understand the fears that bind the "Intellectual Dark Web," or the way otherwise smart people are blind to the way they practice identity politics even as they use the term to condemn others, as the resulting conversation.
When he told me that, a distinct memory flashed, of me sitting on the porch of my father's Arizona home shortly after he moved there, wondering why he seemed to be blind to the beauty of the Ponderosa pines that towered above like skinny skyscrapers.
"Read more: Antonio Brown asks for 'release' in Instagram post after Raiders reportedly void $30 million in guaranteed moneyIn the caption of the photo, Brown wrote "I have worked my whole life to prove that the system is blind to see talent like mines.
The Commission, in its role as enforcer of a single market blind to national frontiers inside the EU, has long cited its campaign to cap roaming charges, forcing them down by some 90 percent since 2007, in efforts to show voters it works for them.
"We would stop this evil by sending a loud message to the President and a loud message to Saudi Arabia that we are not going to blindly support the arms race, we are not going to be blind to human rights transgressions," Paul said.
Appearing on FS1's Undisputed yesterday, Cube was asked if he'd be willing to move his game for "small compensation," and the rapper, no fool and no stranger to making money and surely not blind to the benefits of a little unexpected publicity, was enthusiastic.
At the time, conservative critics had for several years been attacking the C.I.A.'s National Intelligence Estimate, an annual assessment of the Soviet threat, calling it overly optimistic about Soviet foreign-policy intentions and blind to what they believed to be a dangerous military buildup.
Du Sautoy's articulation put me in mind of how some literary theorists define the role of art: It's meant to enhance our perception of the familiar human condition — the thing we're so used to that we've become blind to it — by making the familiar strange.
" My colleague Frank Bruni notes that it should be possible to consider both Bush's strengths and weaknesses: "Too many of us tend to interpret events, political figures and issues in all-or-nothing, allies-or-enemies, black-and-white terms, blind to shades of gray.
The play is not entirely blind to the flaws of its characters but bundles up sufficiently under the pup tent of hagiography to have us assume that the Lehman brothers invented the notion of brokering, a tradition that predates them by at least a millennium.
Perhaps most astonishing of all, a chief executive who touts himself as a shrewd businessman, and who ran on a promise of jobs for the middle class and making America great again, seems blind to the damage this will do to America's own economic interests.
Teixeira isn't blind to the violence faced by non-conforming communities — in one scene the family is chased by and later defecates on a pursuing police car — but he extols the freedoms that have been won, particularly in terms of expressions of sexuality and gender.
Carrère's true subject isn't evil, but rapture, its precarious presence in our lives; how it disappears, how we become blind to it, how we seek it, how we become its prey and how, if we are fortunate, it at last catches up to us.
Simply put, the human rights groups and Sanders are willfully blind to the fact that Hamas has no interest in living at peace with Israel and instead wants to destroy it by whatever means it can, including the confrontation at the Gaza-Israel border.
When supposedly religious conservatives were able to look past Trump's bullying, his clear lack of religious conviction, his appearance in pornos, his lying, his provocations to violence, his adultery, his three marriages and his professed — taped — propensity for sexual assault, they became blind to bawdiness.
In one instance, the five participants attempt to connect a pipeline of wiener-dogs on skewers with only their hands visible through the marquee, meaning they're blind to one another's progress; they must operate as multiple but interconnected mechanized limbs attached to a singular mind-body.
"The Trump administration isn't just willfully blind to the reality of systemic racism — it&aposs coldly indifferent to its destructive consequences, and it&aposs absolutely committed to dismantling any efforts to address our nation&aposs original sin," Democratic National Committe Chairman Tom Perez said in a statement.
It makes his supporters blind to his excesses, to the threat he poses to basic American institutions, and likely to see moves that threaten the foundations of American democracy — like, say, firing FBI Director James Comey for pursuing the Russia investigation and being insufficiently "loyal" — as justified.
Jaz DriveZip Drives could easily be on this list (just for the 'click of death' alone), but it felt more appropriate to include the technology that came after the Zip drive—the Jaz Drive—which was completely blind to the way technology was heading in the 643s.
So taken is she with her teacher that she is blind to the affections of Kamal (Irfan Khan), a young boy who professes undying love for Sandhya, and is aided loyally in his quest for her love by his friend Mintu (played wonderfully by Mohd Samad).
I knew who APOLO Ohno was, but got stuck all the way down the far right-hand side with both HOLSTERS (I knew Gustav Mahler and tried hard to make that work — this one was tough!) and ARNESS (the clue here seemed a little blind to me).
Climate advocates all too often treat skeptics of the climate orthodoxy — that human use of fossil fuels is causing rising temperatures and extreme weather events — as tools of the fossil fuel industry or as people to be patronized because they are blind to a serious risk.
" Another tweet, this time from Pirro, featured a video of her December 15 opening monologue in which she asserted that "we are in a dark and dangerous place in America" because "politics is driving our system of justice, instead of lady justice being blind to politics.
There's nothing inherently wrong with trying to use technology to democratize music-making, or to offset our reliance on fossil fuels—but it's hard to take techno-optimism seriously when its proponents also seem strangely blind to the world that exists right in front of them.
Clinging to neither guns nor religion, and anything but blind to red-state fevers past and present, he wonders only if those on the other side of our ever more emotive and reflexive politics can at least see him apart from company he isn't even keeping. ♦
The two researchers had gathered the mugshots of 196 players from the Baseball Register of 1952, which lists the game's professionals in a given year, and asked a team of volunteers who were blind to the purpose of the experiment to study the players' smiles and rate their intensity.
But her belief—and her unwillingness to think of the universe as a directionless accident, or of the human mind as a collection of brute responses, totally reducible to the brain and blind to values originating outside itself—isn't stuck in the past; it determines her future, too.
While "all lives matter" is, sure, technically a true statement, the phrase and the sentiment around it have garnered a stigma as it has been adopted as the official response phrase used by irate white people blind to their privilege and seeking to delegitimize the Black Lives Matter movement.
Looking back, I realize that I had been blind to significant sociopolitial realities, ranging from income inequality—which, only the Democrats have offered convincing solutions to—or the struggle that the LGBTQ community is facing, and how transgender people have been discriminated against for a very long time.
" Republicans, who are investigating what they say is bias and possible wrongdoing by the Justice Department in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, say the memos show Comey was "blind to biases within the FBI and had terrible judgment with respect to his deputy Andrew McCabe.
And unless you are unaware that identity forms the basis of our conscious and unconscious apprehension of reality — and can give us insight into reality that people with different experiences are effectively blind to or unmoved by — Roni Horn's room of almost ethnographic photo diptychs quickly becomes redundant.
"We always want universal inclusion at the Olympic Games, but we can't be blind to the evidence before us, and if we – as those who cherish the Olympic values – are not preparing for all potential outcomes, then we are not fulfilling our promise to clean athletes," he said.
Where we're usually yelling at characters for being too dumb and blind to see the murderer right in front of them, Species gives us reason to disregard our lives and safety, in the form of the only feeling we can all relate to being irrationally consumed by: arousal.
A device like this could one day help the blind to see (after some extensive training), but it could also potentially enable some more transhumanistic applications, like giving sighted people the ability to see with even greater clarity, or see light in different spectrums, such as infrared or ultraviolet light.
"You'd have to be sort of dead, deaf, dumb, and blind to not think they just did what no one else had done, which was sort of copy the Supreme playbook," says fashion writer Daryoush Haj-Najafi, about Palace's tactic of producing short runs, keeping availability low and demand high.
We choose to be blind to the policy choices our politicians have made — and that many have benefited from, while others suffered — while simultaneously holding firmly to the belief that all of our own successes and comforts are simply the result of our and our families' drive, ambition and resourcefulness.
Pretending that there are only a handful of paths to follow, or that only certain types of lives, usually involving money and white collar jobs, are "worth living" (as we like to say here in Serbia) is to make oneself blind to intrinsic joy of hustle and hassle that is life.
General Ross doesn't get the big showdown with Hulk (that dubious honor goes to Abomination), but for the first two-thirds of the movie, he's a rather chilling portrayal of a man so obsessed with revenge that he's blind to the fact that he's become a monster in his own right.
"When Lior and Ronen approached us about this significant security gap and outlined the way many security teams were running blind to this risk, we were immediately compelled to invest in their pioneering solution to resolve it," said Yoav Leitersdorf, managing partner at YL Ventures, who led the Cycode funding round.
An inventor who has never been a server or talked at length with one is blind to the invisible preparations and attentions that make a meal in a restaurant go smoothly, and thus apt to believe that a robot need only handle plates and credit cards to do a server's job.
So the theory, from the city's perspective, was that, in general, those types of sales practices in which manufacturers are willfully blind to how their guns are being sold leads to the flux of guns into the criminal market, and then the cost of gun violence is borne by the city.
"The RAD is the first system to make it possible for people who are blind to play a 'real' 3D racing game–with full 3D graphics, realistic vehicle physics, complex racetracks, and a standard PlayStation 4 controller," said Smith, who worked on the project with Shree Nayar, T.C. Chang Professor of Computer Science.
The problem, they say, is that the whole saga buttresses existing negative perceptions of the Trump administration: that the White House is too impetuous, too in thrall with the idea of breaking with "business as usual," and too blind to the pitfalls that might dot their preferred path on any given issue.
Now that's not a base I accept, and I agree with the Irish government on this, and Leo Varadkar that we cannot just go in blind to the next phase without some clear indication as to the pathway in relation to the border of north and south on the island of Ireland.
For example, Flannery O'Connor advocated for herself in a way that demonstrated her business acumen by essentially pulling out of a deal that she had originally arranged with a publisher — standing up for herself and having the wherewithal to know when she was working with an editor who was blind to her talents.
WE MUST ACT NOW to adequately fund the maintenance of these treasures, and adequately staff them, so that we are not vilified by our posterity for being the generation that was too blind to see what we had been given, and too miserly to pass these treasures intact to future generations of Americans.
It's this sort of calculus that looks irrational to most outsiders and rational to Saudi leaders — not because they're blind to the risks, but rather because they are so intently focused on what they see as the overwhelming and ever-present threats to regime survival that they're willing to take those risks.
The most effective way to become a dead dinosaur, though, is to kick angrily at the pebbles twitching on the ground, or to pretend that they're not moving, because you're wilfully blind to the fact that they're harbingers of an unstoppable locomotive of change … until it's too late to get off the tracks and evolve.
It's possible, perhaps even likely, that many of the malicious acts that are blamed on Facebook would have happened without it, but the social network has nevertheless been a kind of inadvertent pathfinder, a company so convinced of its public utility that it was, until it was too late, blind to its numerous adverse effects.
By the second glass, Bella did not have any difficulty seeing herself as the Little Match Girl, forever begging, forever dying, yet Miss Chu would not notice the tiny bursting flame when Bella struck a match for her; she would remain blind to the streak of light when Bella turned into a falling star.
Today, as President Trump tries to roll back health care for a large part of the population, as he invests in domestic division and further economic inequality, as he undermines alliances and the international order, he seems blind to the value of what he does not like, indifferent to the consequences of his actions.
But when it comes to being a true football fan, you can't be blind to the problems that surround the sport, but rather your commitment requires you to look at the problems dead in the eyes, acknowledge them, and fight your hardest to fix them for the good of the sport that you love.
There has been much hand-wringing and navel gazing since the election about how liberalism was blind to a rising and hidden populism, about how identity politics were liberals' fatal flaw, about how Democrats needed to attract voters who were willing to ignore Trump's racial, ethnic and religious bigotry, his misogyny, and his xenophobia.
After all, even if Tesla stock goes to zero, and its bonds default to pennies-on-the-dollar, its factories and software repositories and human capital will all be there, and no Chapter 11 court or committee will be blind to the fact that they're worth far more as a coherent unit than they would be as separate assets.
It is an absolute outrage how so many pampered, affluent, upper-middle-class professional women chronically spout snide anti-male feminist rhetoric, while they remain completely blind to the constant labor and sacrifices going on all around them as working-class men create and maintain the fabulous infrastructure that makes modern life possible in the Western world.
Writer-director David Ayer isn't blind to the optics: there's a scene where a white soldier just assumes her white male subordinate is in charge and talks right past her, and another scene where Will Smith as Deadshot appears to do the same, then proves he's smarter than he's acting by acknowledging her as the real boss.
Ayer also isn't blind to what Waller needs to be to succeed: he undermines all his supervillains by giving them secret sentimental sides and soft hearts, but she's the full-on murdering sociopath who's colder than all of them, and she gives the film a spine and a dark edge that isn't blunted by comic relief.
Today, people still try to use, variously, both Smith's and Marx's tools on a different, postindustrial world: Images of free market society that made sense prior to the Industrial Revolution continue to circulate today as ideals, blind to the gross mismatch between the background social assumptions reigning in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and today's institutional realities.
Infectious disease geneticist Gaetan Burgio of the Australian National University noted that statistically, weighing national responses to a pandemic on a study of 2000 people was unwise, that the French study was not conducted with doctors and patients blind to the treatment, and that only a quarter of the placebo patients had their viral load measured.
The irony here is that Durbin was apparently blind to the fact that his own public record, which strongly supports same-sex marriage and virtually every other policy favored by the LGBTQ community, proves that those in public office are fully able to discharge their duties in a way that is unaffected by any dogma their religion might endorse.
Among them: people who want to release a "perfect" product (he says this is usually toxic); and founders who fall so in love with their own technology that they're blind to the imperatives of building a business (in other words, they confuse validation from a small, early group of users as success and don't pay enough attention when user growth turns sluggish).
" Tygart, in a statement emailed to Reuters when asked about the draft letter, said: "We always want universal inclusion at the Olympic Games, but we can't be blind to the evidence before us, and if we — as those who cherish the Olympic values — are not preparing for all potential outcomes, then we are not fulfilling our promise to clean athletes.
I used to be the same way when I was younger and more blind to my privilege (and as a result, made some mistakes in terms of supporting or covering bands that now I'd never touch); however, as I've grown up and become more politically active, I've realized that—for me, at least—that approach is just not going to cut it anymore.
The essential question that confronts Chile is one that many other nations are grappling with today: Can the demands of a radicalized and disaffected movement of citizens, most of whom are young, impatient and social media-savvy, be channeled and resolved by a political elite that has shown itself, until now, blind to the needs of the great majority of its populace?
UN official says US is torturing Chelsea Manning with detention Six ways we were blind to screaming red flags about government surveillance MORE testified to a Spanish court that a Spanish security company, UC Global S.L., acting in coordination with the CIA, illegally recorded all his actions and conversations, including with his lawyers, and streamed them back in real time to the CIA.
"Whereas the gravity of the situation requires a clear explanation of the Iranian threat to Congress and the public, disclosure of any possible classified information does risk exposing sources and methods which could then leave us blind to Iran's next threat to U.S. lives,"′ said Norman Roule, former national intelligence manager for Iran at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
"He wouldn't speak about any of the cases directly, but when asked whether Google could have asked Blind to remove the posts about Fong-Jones, McCarthy said he doesn't believe Blind received any emails from anyone at Google, "So if it was taken down, it would have been from the flags from the users, or it was flagged, and we hit it after that.
Set two generations before Superman (aka Kal-El) or his later nemesis General Zod were born, the series's 10-episode season tells a political story about members of the El and Zod families and about a Kryptonian society in flux, struggling with class warfare and other internal conflicts that occupy the ruling class and keep them blind to the external force posed by the alien Brainiac.
Cramer Remix: Fab versus faux cloud stocks Cramer: Fed blind to recession signs everywhere Cramer: Apple could have real upside this year With the company out of hot water, Supervalu restructured itself into three different segments: a wholesale food unit called Independent Business, discount retail chain called Save-A-Lot, and a regular retail operation under Cub Foods, Hornback's, Shop N' Save, Shoppers and Banners.
It's not better to seem so blind to the nuances of the moment that, like Anthony Vaccarello at Saint Laurent, you build an entire collection on one idea — the dominatrix in the C-suite; the fetish fantasies of the bourgeoisie — and then express it in endless iterations of latex leggings (in oily black, lipstick red, nail polish blue), latex pencil skirts and matching latex thigh-high boots.
She was detained again in May of this year after refusing to testify in a potential case against WikiLeaks founder Julian AssangeJulian Paul AssangeUN official says US is torturing Chelsea Manning with detention Six ways we were blind to screaming red flags about government surveillance Trump's exceptionalism: No president has so disrespected our exceptional institutions MORE, until she either complies or the grand jury term expires in November 2020.

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