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72 Sentences With "dissents from"

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

Pompeo challenged the president or dissents from his existing convictions.
But even those dissents from inside the party were not too widespread.
Strong dissents from Thomas, Alito Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito wrote dissents.
In each case, Kennedy's stance drew strenuous dissents from the court's other conservatives.
There were no notable dissents from the court's refusal to hear Young's case.
Two biting dissents from Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor took sharp issue with this holding.
The opinions were all dissents from the court's decisions not to hear particular gun-rights appeals.
There were no noted dissents from Wednesday's opinion, which appeared to be the product of compromise.
Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor noted dissents from Thursday's order, which was brief and unsigned.
The Supreme Court order, which only covers the Ohio case, included no noted dissents from the eight justices.
As is typical, the justices did not explain their reasoning, and there were no dissents from the denial.
But a series of recent dissents from Thomas and his most conservative colleagues shows how he may yet win.
In fact, Pai's dissents from the FCC bench are a must-see for any student of politics, law and regulation.
Yet despite the research and the dissents from many Native people, these customs -- the racist names, the fan behaviors -- persist.
The Supreme Court rejected the appeal in a brief order with no noted dissents from any of the nine justices.
The decision drew dissents from Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Kansas City Fed President Esther George who argued for leaving rates unchanged.
In two oft-cited dissents from 2011 and 2015, Kavanaugh argued against striking down elements of former President Barack Obama's signature health legislation.
The opinion is one of Judge Garland's rare dissents from a majority ruling, which was written by a judge nominated by President Bill Clinton.
She has said in public appearances she chooses to read dissents from the bench only when she believes that a majority's opinion is particularly egregious.
The Fed's policy decision drew dissents from Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Kansas City Fed President Esther George who argued for leaving rates unchanged.
The court's ruling on the Texas and Ohio cases elicited scathing dissents from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the only Latina justice, about the costs to democracy.
Previous meetings had featured dissents from as many as three members who felt the Fed should resume a rate-hiking cycle it began in December 2015.
This has prompted a series of scathing dissents from Commissioner Richard Glick, a former Democratic Senate aide whom President Trump appointed to the commission in 25.
That dissents from these propositions are so rare raises a basic question: How do we judge whether a country exhibits "strength" or "weakness" in world affairs?
TWO 'NO' VOTES The decision drew dissents from Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Kansas City Fed President Esther George who argued for leaving rates unchanged.
WASHINGTON — Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's indignant dissents from the bench have turned her into a heroine of the left, beloved for methodically skewering her conservative colleagues.
The justices gave no explanation for denying the request that was submitted by the company, and there were no notable dissents from the nine-member court.
In an official video released on Sunday, she accuses an unspecified "they" (presumably Democratic elites) of organizing to "destroy" and "discredit" anyone who dissents from their official line.
The mood was so divisive that on the 24 term's penultimate day, two decisions on immigration and abortion prompted liberal justices to read three dissents from the bench.
They tend to focus instead on the kind of knowledge that dissents from popular as much as authoritative opinion, instead of merely replacing it with a more "correct" one.
These opinions represent different groups — a unanimous court, a majority of the court, dissents from with the majority decision and even opinions that concur in part and dissent in part.
In recent years, she has begun reading those dissents from the bench — as she did in the landmark Ledbetter case, an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) case on pay discrimination.
Fed speakers will also be watched carefully in the week ahead, after the Fed reached its agreement to hold rates steady with a surprising number of dissents from three Fed presidents.
There were no public dissents from the Court's order, although it is possible that one or more justices voted not to grant the stay but decided to keep that vote private.
Meanwhile, the question of whether Democrats should try to cast out every single person who dissents from every important item on the progressive agenda is a lot bigger than the primary.
"RBG" reveals a lot about the jurist known as the Notorious RBG for her fierce dissents from conservative rulings on so-called "partial-birth" abortion, contraceptive care, campaign finance and voting rights.
We can expect people to actually act preemptively and pass laws that will go into effect when the newly constituted Court overturns Roe (no doubt with strong dissents from Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan).
The town has a long history of Nonconformism, a form of Protestantism that dissents from the established Church of England, but modern-day Lewes seems more attached to the trappings of sectarianism than its reality.
That same day, the Supreme Court -- again over public dissents from Thomas and Gorsuch -- rejected a Trump administration request to block a lawsuit by youths who want to hold the government responsible for emissions policy and climate change.
In a unsigned opinion with no noted dissents from any of the nine justices, the high court directed the San Francisco-based 22016th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to reconsider the case because of Judge Stephen Reinhardt's death.
Word of the Day noun: a person who dissents from some established policy adjective: characterized by departure from accepted beliefs or standards adjective: disagreeing, especially with a majority _________ The word dissident has appeared in 208 articles on nytimes.
The final tally among the 10 voting members saw three dissents from Fed presidents – Eric Rosengren of Boston and Esther George of Kansas City, who favored holding the line, and James Bullard of St. Louis who wanted a half-point cut.
As I've said before: Art you can take home in a taxi dissents from the big scale and site specificity that, regardless of medium, are so highly favored if not fetishized by the current system of huge spaces, museum commissions and sprawling international exhibitions.
Instead, Justice Anthony Kennedy's decision for the court only drew dissents from two justices by focusing on the fact that, as he put it, Phillips was treated with "hostility" by Colorado's Civil Rights Commission — action that the Supreme Court ruled violates the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause.
The Fed's policy decision drew dissents from Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and Kansas City Fed President Esther George who argued for leaving rates unchanged in the face of the current economic expansion, an unemployment rate that is near a 50-year-low, and robust household spending.
This was an easy message to counter, especially given the extreme nature of the Left's position — that grown men have a civil right to shower with young women, and that any business or organization that dissents from this view should be removed from the public square.
Unfortunately for them, not only was the request denied, but some particularly absurd dissents from Judges Brown and Kavanaugh allowed the court to give the ruling a fresh coat of paint and further discredit the arguments against Title II. Kavanaugh argued that net neutrality infringed on the free speech rights… of internet providers.
RELATED: Ruth Bader Ginsburg's absence creates uncertainty about Supreme Court's present and future The justices are clearly moving gingerly, with Roberts, who cares about the integrity of the court more than any other justice, perhaps urging caution at times and maybe trying to limit -- if not eliminate -- any angry dissents from some of his colleagues.
The social justice left, which is essentially a Marxist construct, has not just advanced an idea of the way the world is but has decided to instantly stigmatize and demonize anyone who dissents from it as a bigot and a racist or a homophobe and all the other litany of bullshit they throw around.
In addition, a top Democratic senator dissents from growing party calls to abolish ICE A left-wing populist who fervently opposed President Trump's immigration policies won Mexico's presidential election Sunday night NBA superstar LeBron James agrees to four-year, $29 million blockbuster contract with the Los Angeles Lakers, once again leaving behind his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers THE LEAD STORY - FOX NEWS EXCLUSIVE - TRUMP ON SUPREME PICK, ROE V. WADE ... AND PUTTING DEMS ON ICE: President Trump expects his next Supreme Court pick "to go very quickly" and says he is unlikely to ask his nominee's position on the landmark Roe vs.
86 Edmund's full brother Æthelred may have inherited his position as heir.Miller, "Edgar"; Higham, Death of Anglo-Saxon England, p. 7. Williams, Æthelred the Unready, p. 8, dissents from this view.
24; Macrobius Saturnalia i. 4, extr. He is occasionally quoted by Livy, who sometimes, with respectful consideration, dissents from his authority. It is manifest, however, from Cicero and Valerius Maximus that he was fond of relating dreams and portents.
"Kropotkin, Peter (1901). Modern Science and Anarchism, Part VII During their final meeting, Leithen accuses Lumley of believing "nothing", but Lumley dissents from this judgement. "'I am a sceptic about most things,' he said, 'but, believe me, I have my own worship. I venerate the intellect of man.
Finally, the judge stated that the bright line licensing rule is easy and efficient to interpret while the introduction of a 'de minimis' inquiry by the majority shall is 'fuzzy' and 'visceral' and shall only add to the burden of the dockets of copyright courts across the United States. Thus, he stated that he dissents from the majority decision.
The Language Instinct is a 1994 book by Steven Pinker, written for a general audience. Pinker argues that humans are born with an innate capacity for language. He deals sympathetically with Noam Chomsky's claim that all human language shows evidence of a universal grammar, but dissents from Chomsky's skepticism that evolutionary theory can explain the human language instinct.
March 30, 2011. RCWP dissents from what it calls myths or misconceptions about women's role in the Catholic Church and about the exclusion of women from holy orders."Roman Catholic Womenpriests", Retrieved on 2008-10-05. It mentions the case of Ludmila Javorová, a Czech woman who worked in the underground church during the Cold War and said she was secretly ordained as a priest, as an instance of female ordination in the modern era.
When the number of directors was diminished under the act of 1853, he was one of those elected by ballot to retain their seats. In 1858, when the council of India was established, he was one of the seven directors appointed to the new council. In the council of India, Prinsep recorded frequent dissents from the decisions of the secretary of state. He was opposed to some of the measures adopted after the Indian Rebellion of 1857.
This is not to say that he dissents from "the general rule that this Court should not treat broad constitutional questions when narrow ones will suffice to dispose of the litigation,"Street v. New York, 394 U.S. at 604 (1969). but rather, neither the prosecution nor the defense based their arguments on the question of whether it is constitutional or unconstitutional to prohibit the utterance of "words" against the flag. Instead, both sides argued vigorously regarding the Constitution allows states to prohibit the burning of the flag.
Within the next few terms, Toolson's logic was criticized directly and indirectly by other justices, including some who had been in the majority, in dissents from opinions in which the Court held that it was specific to baseball and that even other professional sports weren't covered. Chief Justice Earl Warren admitted, writing for the majority two years later when denying boxing the exemption, that "this Court has never before considered the antitrust status of the boxing business. Yet, if it were not for Federal Baseball and Toolson, we think that it would be too clear for dispute."United States v.
As the court has tilted in a conservative direction, Ginsburg's dissents from majority opinions have become more frequent and forceful. Despite being in her eighties and having survived colon and pancreatic cancer, Ginsburg works relentlessly late nights and often gets only a few hours of sleep. She also is shown exercising at a gym with a personal trainer. When asked how long she plans to remain on the Supreme Court, Ginsburg responds that she will stay only as long as she is able to address the cases placed before her with the full ability and integrity of her lifetime of experience in practicing law.
Chestnut The chestnut, also known as a night eye, is a callosity on the body of a horse or other equine, found on the inner side of the leg above the knee on the foreleg and, if present, below the hock on the hind leg. It is believed to be a vestigial toe, and along with the ergot form the three toes of some other extinct Equidae. chapter 2 Darren Naish dissents from this belief, noting that the chestnut is "not associated with the metacarpus or metatarsus, the only places where digits occur." Chestnuts vary in size and shape and are sometimes compared to the fingerprints in humans.
But since this decision deals with abortion, no legal rule or doctrine is safe from ad hoc nullification by the Supreme Court when an occasion for its application arises in a case involving state regulation of abortion. The dissent believes that the 36 foot speech-free zone did not meet the burden for the test the Supreme Court set, as it burdens more speech than necessary. The dissent charges that speech-restricting injunctions are deserving of strict scrutiny by the Supreme Court and that the Supreme Court did not award it this level of review in this case and therefore dissents from all portions of the judgment upholding the injunction.
As remarked above, Borges greatly admired Martín Fierro as a work of art, but did not particularly admire its protagonist. In El "Martín Fierro", he dissents from Lugones's nationalist cult of the epic, but professes to admire Martín Fierro all the more in its aspect as a verse novel, concise and full of morally complex characters very much of a particular place and time. He sees in Hernández's work a confluence of two Argentine literary traditions that previous critics had generally not distinguished: the rural payada and a separate and more artificial tradition of gauchesque poetry. Both in his commentary on Martín Fierro and on its critics, Borges effectively positions himself, like Hernández, at a confluence of two literary traditions with common roots.
A 7-2 majority held that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) applied to contracts executed under state law. Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote for the majority that it was clearly the intent of Congress in passing the FAA to encourage the use of arbitration as widely as possible, that it enacted "a national policy favoring arbitration." Justice Sandra Day O'Connor dissented, along with William Rehnquist, arguing that the legislative history of the FAA strongly suggested it was intended to apply only to contracts executed under federal law. In later years, Clarence Thomas would make those arguments the foundation of a series of dissents from cases concerning the application of the FAA to state law, even in cases for which O'Connor decided with the majority, citing stare decisis.
The Unitarian Christian Association, as its name suggests, exists primarily to preserve and celebrate Unitarian Christianity. In short, the Unitarian Christian tradition is founded on a theological position (originally espoused by Michael Servetus and Francis David) that dissents from the doctrine of the Trinity instead affirming the unity of God and placing emphasis on the humanity of Jesus. This strict monotheism is arguably more akin to Islamic and Jewish positions than the positions of larger Christian groups such as the Roman Catholic Church - and as a result, they may be regarded by some fellow Christians as 'unorthodox' or 'heretical'. In tandem with their aim to promote Unitarian Christian beliefs, the UCA also maintains an ethos of theological open-mindedness and inclusivity shaped by its links with the Free Christian tradition.
The insurers challenged the Assembly's legislative competence generally and for breach of ECHR Art 1 Protocol 1 because of the retroactive effect of the legislation upon liabilities under employer's liability insurance contracts entered into in some cases many years ago. The Supreme Court agreed 3-2 that the Assembly did not have competence to enact the Bill at all, as its provisions did not "relate to" the national health service in Wales (a devolved subject area), and that the recovery provisions did (in any event) offend against the insurers' accorded property rights. Powerful dissents from Lord Thomas CJ and Lady Hale held that the Assembly did have legislative competence generally in the area dealt with, but that Art 1 was indeed infringed by these provisions. The Bill accordingly fell.
The Court ruled 5–4 that no constitutionally valid recount could be completed by a December 12 "safe harbor" deadline. The Court asserted that "the Supreme Court of Florida has said that the legislature intended the State's electors to 'participat[e] fully in the federal electoral process,' as provided in ." The Court therefore effectively ended the proposed recount, because "the Florida Legislature intended to obtain the safe-harbor benefits of 3 U.S.C. §5." Four justices (Stevens, Ginsburg, Souter and Breyer) had dissented from the Court's earlier (December 9) decision, by the same five-justice majority, to grant Bush's emergency request to stop the recount and grant certiorari. In their dissents from the Court's December 12 per curiam opinion, Breyer and Souter acknowledged that the counting up until December 9 had not conformed with equal protection requirements.
Melvin I. Urofsky and David W. Levy, eds., Letters of Louis D. Brandeis: 1921–1941: Elder Statesman (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1978), 239n Though a Democrat, he gave only reluctant support to President Roosevelt's agenda. In 1936, when some Democrats looked for an alternative presidential candidate, he supported Roosevelt, "although their relations are none too good". A newspaper reported that "He is not of the insurgent type ... At heart, observers [in Boston] say, he dissents from many of the policies of the New Deal," but "he will stay on the reservation" and "he will avoid an open break."New York Times: F. Lauriston Bullard, "Walsh Casts Lot with Curley Group," March 1, 1936, accessed October 30, 2010 During the campaign, he failed to speak in support of the President until October 20, 1936.
Flinn dissents from this identification; Harthan, 44 However this refers to a prayer book not a book of hours, and it has been doubted that this imprecision would have been likely in such a context. In addition none of Jeanne's heraldry appears in the book, unlike two other royal manuscripts made when she was queen, her Coronation Book and a breviary.Flinn, 260; Harthan, 44 On the conventional assumptions, the book was first owned by Queen Jeanne until her death in 1371, when it was left to the then king Charles V. In 1380, an inventory of Charles V's possessions mentions a Dominican Book of Hours that had belonged to Jeanne d’Evreux. This book is assumed to be one mentioned in an inventory from 1401-2 of the books of John, Duke of Berry, who inherited many manuscripts from his brother's collection.
Reprinted in The Will to Believe, Dover Publications, 1956, p.145 Far from "reconciling" free will with this kind of determinism, as David Hume said that he had done in his "reconciling project,",David Hume, An Enquiry concerning Human Understanding, VIII, 1, §72 James proposed the first two-stage model of free will that denies predeterminism and accepts absolute chance as necessary for the generation of alternative possibilities, which are the source of "ambiguous futures" selected by the determination, but not predetermination, of the will.Bob Doyle, "Jamesian Free Will: The Two-Stage Model of William James," William James Studies, April 2010 Miller/Hobart dissents from James's new idea about free will, constructing a distinctive reconciling compatibilism that dispenses with any requirement for chance in the analysis of what persons' abilities to perform alternate acts. Rather than analyzing causality as Hume did, Hobart focuses on moral evaluation of acts and character.
The Court delivered its opinion on June 26, 2018, ruling in a 5–4 decision split along ideological lines that upheld the validity of the travel ban as within the President's powers. Justices Breyer and Sotomayor both read aloud versions of their dissents from the bench. The decision lifted the current injunction against the travel ban's enforcement and remanded the case back to lower courts to review other merits raised by the plaintiffs. Delivering the majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts concluded the language of 8 U. S. C. §1182(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act was clear in giving the President broad authority to suspend the entry of non citizens into the country and Trump's Presidential Proclamation 9645 did not exceed any textual limit on the President's authority. Under 8 U. S. C. §1182(f), a President may limit alien entry when he finds that their entry “would be detrimental to the interests of the United States.” Trump determined that aliens from some countries are detrimental because those countries do not share adequate information with the U.S. for an informed decision on entry, and that other countries are detrimental because their aliens create national security risks.
An anonymous reviewer in the New York Times wrote that "Mr Poulton wishes first of all to put himself right with regard to his attitude to Darwinism", mentioning that in 1888 he had been cited in the Edinburgh Review as attacking Darwinism. The reviewer hastens to agree that Poulton is in fact "ready to combat Wallace, his master, on points wherein that great fellow-laborer with Charles Darwin dissents from the latter's views." As an example of this, the reviewer mentions Poulton's argument that Wallace must be wrong that "the coloring whereby the sexes often differ one from the other in a startling way is occasioned by a surplus vitality" because "sexual colors are only developed in species which court by day or twilight" and then only on parts of the body which the female "would oftenest and best see them". The New York Times reviewer argued that the title should have been less general "for readers are sure to demand too much from so comprehensive a term", given that Poulton refers mainly to insects rather than "wild beasts", but in the end he agreed "that Mr. Poulton has written a very suggestive treatise, well fitted for the general reader".

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