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948 Sentences With "harms"

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

"The American side's behavior harms China, harms the world and also harms itself," China's Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.
And we believe that protectionism ultimately harms retail and harms consumers.
"What harms insects also harms people," Germany's environment minister Svenja Schulze said.
Similarly, if you're looking at harms, who's measuring harms to whom, right?
Michelle argues the harms of criminalizing weed outweigh the harms of legalizing it.
Second, does a transaction result in public interest harms, including harms to competition?
"The American side's behavior harms China, harms the world and also harms itself," China's Ministry of Commerce said in a statement to the New York Times on Tuesday.
When evaluating whether to legalize, the question should not be whether marijuana is harmless, but whether pot's harms and the harms of legalizing it outweigh the harms of prohibition.
Not just the immediate harms to individual people or groups, but the harms to democracy itself.
And contrary to some claims, case-by-case enforcement both corrects past harms and deters future harms.
The rules were premised not on actual harms or market failures, but on potential harms that might materialize.
Today, standard practice includes social assessments, remediation to mitigate harms and compensation for local communities for unavoidable harms.
Similarly, trade in cars from Japan harms US autoworkers, and trade in tomatoes from Mexico harms US agricultural workers.
From her perspective, banning transgender individuals not only harms these service members, but it also harms our national defense.
"The harms from colonoscopy are small relative to the benefits, but that's where the harms primarily come from," he added.
They found that the overall rate of harms, and the rate of preventable harms, did not significantly improve over that period.
The New Health Care You may reasonably decide the benefits outweigh the harms, but you should know about those potential harms.
The Court thus recognised that privacy harms can trigger a wealth of related harms, chilling freedom of speech and freedom of association.
They found that, over all, harms increased with each additional drink per day, and that the overall harms were lowest at zero.
They say HB2 harms the dignity and privacy of transgender persons, but their way harms the dignity and privacy of everyone else.
The harms of losing the Court are obvious and palpable; the harms of sacrificing our witness to win it cannot be measured.
"Usually, when we talk about harms from substance use during pregnancy, we talk about the harms from the use itself," Roberts told Vox.
It's almost impossible to disentangle the harms caused by the drug business and the harms caused by the fact it's a criminalized industry.
There are also asymmetries in the way we think about harms that result from our actions and harms that result from our inactions.
Earlier in the Slam, Anderson beat Wesley Harms 10-2, and Harms blamed his loss on a "fragrant smell" that came from Anderson's direction.
"There are numerous known harms from the use of cannabis products including addiction, mental illness, increased accidents, and smoking related harms," read the resolution.
In other words, to the extent that zero-rating harms internet openness, the effect of those harms will be felt most acutely by poor people.
Shumate replied that DC and Maryland were arguing about abstract political harms, not specific harms to their respective jurisdictions that would give them grounds to sue.
Likewise, in its "Big Data" workshop the FTC focused on theoretical harms and anecdotes about big data to drive the conversation without identifying real world harms.
"This problem is a huge concern for us because it harms our image, it harms our credibility, and it's just plain bad for news," said ANI's Prakash.
So how quickly are Americans changing and adapting to new information about the personal harms that could be associated with that and perhaps the global environmental harms?
Historically, antitrust law was used to go after solely economic issues and economic harms, and now we're seeing a new school of antitrust thinking, which says no, let's look at the harms to democracy, let's look at the harms to privacy, or let's think about the impact of data.
Three of the biggest harms caused by our current food system are the harms to the environment, to public health through antibiotic resistance, and to animals through factory farming.
" Medication, the task force warned, poses a risk for "potential harms" to fetuses and breastfeeding newborns, though they write that the "overall magnitude of harms is small to moderate.
"The harms identified by the School District are all speculative and based upon conjecture, whereas the harms to Ash are well‐documented and supported by the record," she said.
Significantly (and appropriately) — unlike many merger reviews in the past — the commission will not impose conditions to remedy pre-existing harms or harms that are unrelated to the transaction.
They challenged the criticisms of Dr. Tuvel's article, questioned the harms it was said to have caused and underscored the harms to Dr. Tuvel herself, an untenured female professor.
CHRIS COONS, D—DELAWARE: A wildly swung bat that is hitting our closest allies in a way that harms our national security, harms our chance at better trade deals. SEN.
"The reality is that the harms associated with statins are tiny," said Collins, who emphasized that the harms should still be acknowledged and informed to patients, but along with their likelihood.
A transformative justice approach understands that you need to address these interpersonal issues and those interpersonal harms, but acknowledges that those harms are beyond the individual and beyond even the community.
In both cases, women helped raise concerns about the effects on children and families: first the harms done by drinking, then the harms done by the laws attempting to stop it.
It's easy to see how overprotection harms individuals, but in a disturbing essay titled "Cooperation Over Coercion," the economist Steven Horwitz made the case that play deprivation also harms liberal democracies.
Judge Ann Claire Williams of United States Circuit Court declined to reconsider and rejected the district's other arguments, saying harms to others are speculative while harms to Mr. Whitaker are well-documented.
If this is right, we've largely been looking in the wrong direction both for the harms of privacy rights violations and for the harms involved in our wanton disregard of those rights.
Molly Roberts: I have a few questions about getting into the guts of those Internet harms or device harms, starting with privacy, for which I think you've proposed what people call data ownership.
Product Launch and Fireside Chat with Ole Harms (MOIA / VW)
Meanwhile, smog also harms our lungs and causes breathing problems.
There isn't much convincing evidence of harms to humans yet.
"The injunction immediately harms the public," Justice Department lawyers wrote.
" Right: "Again, Jacoby-Harms is bemused by objects floating above.
I don't understand why or how anyone harms a child.
But marijuana's harms also disproportionately fall on the black community.
There's more social support that helps people than harms people.
Faced with such harms, policymakers would feel pressure to act.
A recent ACLU report discusses these harms in more depth.
But in this case, help for one industry harms others.
Environmentalists dislike it, saying it harms plant and animal life.
His main task was fending off the harms of protectionism.
Harms attributes Musk's antics to awareness that he's a performer.
Everyone harms everyone else in his person and his belongings.
What are the harms of being exposed to the vapor?
The harms of such payments are all too real: As
Scholars have discussed how witnessing violence harms children's mental health.
Pignone said the potential harms from depression screening are minimal.
The benefits, while arguably real, are small; likewise the harms.
The Exxon and BP oil spills involved all these harms.
Unnecessary jail time harms defendants and may actually increase crime.
Our government instead harms children and deports parents every day.
Reparations for the harms of climate change are more complicated.
"You know, it has to be meaningful," Harms tells me.
It is a cycle of violence that harms everyone involved.
This study shows, however, that marijuana has some clear harms.
Contrary to Mr. Pai's claim, the harms are not hypothetical.
Palestinian lives and livelihoods should matter despite who harms them.
Deaths also aren't the only way to compare drugs' harms.
They say the move harms the students and the university.
Both also spoke to the possibility of harms to patients.
This, in turn, promotes societal division and harms the economy.
"We know that lead harms children's intellectual abilities," she said.
And they should explore other ways to mitigate potential harms.
And a slowing economy almost always harms the incumbent party.
The poor performance of NBC harms the nation's political process.
"Creaming of the crop harms schools and neighborhoods," she said.
At a hearing on Wednesday, Simmons' attorneys argued that the court should confront the reality of the harms that transgender people face, rather than assume an ideal world where such harms do not exist.
The Online Harms Whitepaper proposes to put a mandatory duty of care on platforms to take reasonable steps to protect users from a range of harms — including those linked to the spread of disinformation.
These companies have converted an engineer's disregard for real-world outcomes into a libertarian ideology that belittles the harms that stem from their platforms and rejects rules and regulations meant to prevent those harms.
The commission is overly focused on theoretical internet privacy harms (nearly a third of all workshops in 2014 were on internet privacy) when most consumers are complaining to the FTC about other real harms.
Air pollution harms human health in two major ways, said Wexler.
Georgetown could apologize for a great many harms related to racism.
The mushrooms contain a toxin called gyromitrin, which harms the liver.
The degree to which pollution harms the mind is less clear.
Where drug use directly harms society, government is right to intervene.
Research into the harms to children from early transitioning is suppressed.
Many experts would agree, arguing that the long break harms children.
Na indicated to reporters, however, that he may pay Harms more.
That typically harms the cells that are dividing quickly, Chai says.
And we need better laws to protect people against privacy harms.
Brawley said that, despite the possible harms, patient preference comes first.
"There are intrinsic harms here that can't be cured," Cassidy says.
"We demand reparations for past and continuing harms," the website states.
That doesn't mean that it can consolidate infinitely without any harms.
That sonar harms marine mammals like whales, dolphins, seals, and walruses.
It chases headlines instead of fraudsters and real harms to consumers.
The second concern is the WHO diagnosis will cause unintended harms.
The Justice Department said the deal harms consumers and stifles innovation.
Not making that differentiation and demagoguing FARA actually harms national security.
The groups argued the move harms people with pre-existing conditions.
This paranoia harms the most vulnerable Christians the most of all.
By any measure, this response could inflict exceptionally far-reaching harms.
Privacy benefits, by definition, consist of reducing harms from privacy violations.
The Lao government says these tweaks will alleviate the worst harms.
Many legislators seem unaware of the catastrophic harms child marriage causes.
Our thoughts are for the safety of all in harms way.
And it harms the very public officials it seeks to protect.
Russo, Louisiana has doubled down on the "abortion harms women" argument.
And evidence has emerged of the harms created by the strategy.
We must also consider harms that go beyond the immediate victims.
"Public disclosure of classified information harms the national security," Barr said.
Instead, they are turning to arguments that abortion harms women's health.
The purported harms reported here are exaggerated to a ridiculous level.
Because those activities bring benefits that individuals value over the harms.
We evaluate each practice to see if it actually harms consumers.
Rent control harms almost everyone eventually because the housing stock deteriorates.
Texas offers proof that limiting choices for health services harms women.
They don't realize it harms people financially, physically, emotionally and spiritually!
To his credit, Katz understood the harms that lead to alienation.
Pornography's enjoyments may be private, but its harms are inescapably public.
And they may look quite different from the harms of smoking.
Others get the same side effects or harms with little benefit.
The gas harms the ozone layer and contributes to global warming.
It also harms the prospects of reconciliation across the political spectrum.
Even in an ineffective year, the benefits greatly outweigh the harms.
The avoided costs of future harms will boost the economy further.
Harming such people in turn harms the state, goes the argument.
"We are increasingly aware of the harms associated with alcohol consumption, and we need to communicate what the harms are and how to reduce them," said lead author Sandra Jones of Australian Catholic University in Melbourne.
It not only involves estimating the timing and severity of climate impacts, which are notoriously uncertain, but it also means choosing a discount rate, which determines how much you discount future harms relative to present harms.
Thus, Thomas rejects affirmative action not because it harms whites, as other conservatives claim, but because it harms blacks, brands them with a "badge of inferiority," elevates whites to the status of benefactors and perpetuates white supremacy.
The INSIDER Summary: We already know heavy drinking during pregnancy harms babies.
After all, I wrote a book about the harms of pervasive surveillance.
Providing the cartels with yet another source of money harms all Mexicans.
Closing these loopholes could remove many of the harms of data collection.
People love free stuff, particularly when the harms are difficult to perceive.
"We are operating with full respect of the public system," Harms said.
As a former dentist, Kearns had seen some of those harms firsthand.
It's clear how large plastic debris harms, and can kill, sea life.
"It just goes from generation to generation," Christina Harms, 31, tells PEOPLE.
But lawsuits are about more than just getting reimbursed for past harms.
The Future of Transportation with Ole Harms (VW) and Shahar Waiser (Gett)
Smaller harms are, by definition, smaller, and on their own, less dangerous.
It is associated with a greater range of physical and psychological harms.
If more ISPs offer similar programs, these harms will only grow worse.
It harms families, does little to help victims, and costs the taxpayers.
The findings, despite being unconfirmed, created an impression that marijuana harms newborns.
The harms that have happened as a result of systemic racism compound.
Still, it's clear Senate Democrats cannot confine themselves to mercury's harms alone.
Your response to Charlottesville enables racism, sexism, & harms our country and planet.
In one big way, though, the proliferation of donors harms poor countries.
The report included clinical data, testing platforms, treatments, benefits and possible harms.
But his harms, while acute, are ultimately treatable—many are even reversible.
And the harms they produce will not be contained within their walls.
Lust added that she believes Pornhub harms performers in the porn industry.
"For a lot of people, those harms are quite invisible," Franco said.
Amy Runyon-Harms is the Keep Birth Control Copay Free campaign coordinator.
As she interviewed colleagues, she learned about all sorts of emotional harms.
But it's an indisputable fact that alcohol harms women more than men.
Opponents say they attract kids and mask the harms of e-cigarettes.
And only two of the additives have been tested for developmental harms.
Well, you are doing something wrong if your view harms another person.
In a way, it harms those who benefit from that racism too.
I think this law, practically, will protect fewer people than it harms.
You can't look at individual harms alone and make good health decisions.
The harms to the government from such a proceeding are self-evident.
Both crises will disproportionately visit their harms upon the poor and vulnerable.
We must remind ourselves that this deplorable behavior harms all of us.
With no clear benefit, and significant harms, a D recommendation seemed appropriate.
But the tangible harms of facial recognition are potentially far more menacing.
But polluted air also harms billions of people on a continuing basis.
"The E.R.A. is outdated, it's expired and it harms women," he said.
People are dying because of the harms associated with drug use, yes.
At almost 20 pages long, it reviewed both potential benefits and harms.
Almost all the harms the medical literature focuses on involve smoked cannabis.
We unquestionably need more research, and more evidence of harms may emerge.
It harms the confidence that underpins investment in the world's largest economy.
Precisely how vitamin E acetate harms lungs has not been fully established.
A more nuanced discussion would consider both the benefits and the harms.
In fact, it is being denied a wanted abortion that harms women.
Sometimes it fails spectacularly, and every failure harms the rule of law.
Court documents show chemicals manufacturers have known of their harms for decades.
Important to remember that data harms are not abstract, the stakes are high.
Rather, it continues "a cycle that harms our discourse in the long run."
"In a sense, parents' refusal of sex education harms their children," Li said.
The arguments exist whether it helps or harms our health and the economy.
Harms to our privacy and elections are not inevitable — they are business decisions.
These harms are the true crisis, and they are of the president's making.
Still, Singh wants to draw attention to the potential harms of recreational use.
Colonoscopies and other screening tests come with "both harms and benefits," Chang said.
Your response to Charlottesville enables racism, sexism, & harms our country and planet. pic.twitter.
These harms may include poverty, neglect, police violence, sexual assault and human trafficking.
The harms that were the reason for the regulation don't count at all.
"There is very large uncertainty about the harms that plastics do," he said.
This kind of high-profile incident harms more than just the direct victims.
The trio argued that the model harms students and hobbles research and innovation.
They said the tax increase disproportionately harms the poor while benefiting the wealthy.
Trump's decision isn't the first from his administration that harms trans people's rights.
And whoever undermines the foundations of liberal democracy harms one and the other.
We know vaping harms developing lungs, but other effects are largely still unknown.
"There have been problems of people believing the harms are common," he said.
Harms is a nurse at Spectrum Health Medical Center in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
And they seem not to realise how much motherhood harms their partner's career.
Gomez suffers from Lupus, an autoimmune disorder that typically harms tissues and organs.
The big harms perpetrated by apex predators are exactly that: big and dangerous.
It feels like a language problem that harms a lot of our discussions.
"We know this online behavior harms the children in the images," Squire says.
All of this stress harms biological function and increases susceptibility to chronic diseases.
Could I mitigate the harms of casual alcoholism by drinking more celery smoothies?
In Washington, no action is deemed truly successful unless it harms someone else.
Mounting opposition However, critics say that dollar stores' unchecked growth harms local communities.
She's seen the harms of drug addiction personally, including with siblings and cousins.
But Europe's labeling harms not only Jews and Palestinians, but also Europe itself.
As a society, we know the benefits of these institutions outweigh the harms.
In our current system, the "harms" of society are being put into cages.
I think every year might increase the risk of harms without incremental benefit.
Regulation inherently requires tradeoffs between costs and benefits, possible advantages versus potential harms.
However, there are some ideas in the paper that would fix real harms.
Fortunately, we can enjoy the benefits of data while significantly mitigating potential harms.
Anyone who harms the unity or stability of the kingdom by any means.
" "Netanyahu's discriminatory decision to ban members of Congress from Israel harms int'l diplomacy.
First, a national emergency conjures up a sudden event that harms the country.
Lead pollution harms brain function in children and can cause other health problems.
Wallace lived there alone, then with a girlfriend, Juliana Harms, then alone again.
In that case, we must weigh the potential harms against the unproven benefits.
But the most widespread harms will linger and continually drain Americans' financial resources.
Critics say it provides cover to biased judges and harms the wedding industry.
Ocean warming is disrupting the Arctic ecosystem, which also harms the fishing industry
Our collective failure to provide paid, job protected leave harms mothers and babies.
Unfortunately, there are very real harms that come from the government losing credibility.
"Shit, I thought I was going to have more time," I tell Harms.
Her work highlights another important aspect of the long-term harms of bullying.
That mindset actually harms the fight for racial, gender, and other social equalities.
It inflicts psychic, familial, reputational and professional harms that can last a lifetime.
That's because lawsuits are about more than just getting reimbursed for past harms.
That's what harms the country, because that's where you get the real story.
Some say she harms pregnant women and drinks the blood of newborn babies.
Staying on the platform is the only effective way to manage its harms.
"If the host nation shuts you out, though, your ineffectiveness harms the nation."
We need much more information, fast, to understand how to limit the harms.
Surely such a violent overreaction to natural error harms justice itself, she argues.
We Know It Harms Kids to See Smoking on TV. What About Rape?
It complicates already complicated Russia-US relations and harms international relations in general.
The review found no direct evidence of harms in screening adolescents for depression.
Some have therefore proposed expanding the antitrust laws to reaching other noneconomic harms.
The harms of the changing climate become more apparent even in the present.
Nor are the identified potential harms to economies and ecologies any less significant.
The system of structural surveillance inflicts multiple, simultaneous harms on communities of color.
Some studies show that this virus is highly contagious, and harms fish populations.
Even there – especially there – Trump's value-free foreign policy harms our national interest.
This is a terrible policy that harms all Americans, and Democrats in particular.
Traditional antitrust approaches call for market analysis and a showing of consumer harms.
Unfortunately, says Harms, Musk might not have such a person at his side.
Excessive bail disproportionately harms people from low-income communities and communities of color.
This profound misrepresentation of social science has led to extraordinary real-world harms.
The harms are not evenly distributed, but this is in our lives, right?
So I would answer these are profound and material harms that are happening.
Not all researchers hold the same view about the harms of solitary confinement.
But even the harms from commercial hosting are overblown, according to many experts.
The absence of an effective policy response to the scale and severity of harms related to stimulant use, combined with the fear and stigmatisation of so-­called problem users, has restricted the allocation of resources to reduce stimulant ­related harms.
"Breast cancer is more common as women age and some of the harms of screening, such as false positives, are less common in older women, thus making the benefit increase and the harms reduced as women age," Elmore said by email.
Privacy harms lead to a host of other harms, such as reputational harm (publishing inaccurate information about a job candidate), financial harm (with identity theft), discriminatory and bodily harm (when a member of a non-visible minority is "outed"), among others.
But the fact of the matter is that liberals normally don't use that kind of moral language in thinking about war and peace — and they certainly don't use it in trying to weigh discrimination harms against harms in war and peace.
"What our study has shown is that there are people who are likely to benefit overall from aspirin, taking into account the bleeding harms, but a personalized prediction of benefits and harms is needed in order to identify these people."
The disease leads to persistent infections and harms the ability to breathe over time.
Yet, Trump is actively working to legalize loopholes that promote discrimination that harms them.
How heat harms gadgetsElectronics don't like getting too hot any more than humans do.
Nor are the harms inflicted by Trump's ongoing constitutional violations solely economic in character.
Beyond the harms on individuals, overuse and addiction are probably bad for society too.
That benefits both manufacturers and consumers, but harms everyone who breathes in the byproducts.
The Nobel committee overlooked Rubin for years; this slight harms their reputation, not hers.
Finally, the administration's rule actively harms the very people USDA has committed to protect.
The bigger picture: The Fed also focused on additional harms from increased student debt.
Not so, the scholars respond: separate bathrooms do not impose "severe harms" on employees.
"He pretends to be 'colored people's' friends and then he harms them," she said.
"Trying to fix both means fixing neither well, and harms our credibility," he wrote.
There are known harms to such "off label" promotion, so the FDA prohibits it.
They should seek data from platforms to help researchers identify potential harms to users.
The temporary conditions attached to the merger do too little to remedy these harms.
But they'll achieve the primary role of public health policy: mitigating deaths and harms.
We also support the report's references to the growing public debate on internet harms.
He imagined the harms they could suffer as a result of rampant data-mining.
", "Love, and Let Live," and "The Harms of the Pill and Other Hormonal Contraceptives.
All of this harms Beijing's interests more than those of any other country. 7.
She's also willing to go to school to tell firsthand how bullying harms people.
But in this case, the Trump administration exaggerates the harms and undermines the benefits.
Commit to mitigating bias, inequity and other potential harms in automated decision-making systems.
After all, the American people, regardless of party, know the harms ObamaCare has caused.
Intervening early or preventing trauma exposure entirely can help mitigate those long-term harms.
"Devumi's fraudulent practices are likely linked to widespread consumer harms," Moran and Blumenthal wrote.
It gives women who have suffered different kinds of harms an umbrella of solidarity.
In the case of chimpanzees, the N.I.H. finally concluded that the harms did matter.
We are not advocating the mass shutdown of charters, because closing schools harms children.
The rights of defendants are protections against the state, not harms done to victims.
Excluding faith-based providers harms kids by cutting off agencies that can help them.
Cancer is a disease that harms all Americans regardless of political party or ideology.
That's their prerogative, but using this regulation as a backdoor budget strategy harms kids.
In its lawsuit against the fiduciary rule, the chamber cites harms to small businesses.
This one certainly fits that description and harms American consumers at the same time.
But the potential harms of hospitals have to be weighed against the potential benefits.
But the farmers responsible for these vast environmental harms should not get a pass.
Myths about vaccination harms also have widely circulated among wealthy, white communities for years.
This not only harms the children, but it also adversely affects the court system.
He made a case that the law should target specific harms, like statutory rape.
If used poorly, gene drives could cause social harms that are difficult to reverse.
It's Exhibit-A of how unchecked special interest money in politics directly harms Americans.
After working as a strategy consultant at Capgemini, Harms joined Volkswagen Consulting in 2008.
Ultimately, it could save lives by getting residents and firefighters out of harms' way.
Finally, targeted advertising and the algorithmic curation practices associated with it harms democracy itself.
In fact, research shows that low-quality child care harms children, especially young boys.
Furthermore, some harms seem perennial, such as domestic violence, sexual harassment and sex trafficking.
But bringing long-hidden harms to the surface cannot help disturbing the status quo.
They want to know whether the tech giant undermines its rivals and harms consumers.
If we look at all cancers together, the benefits seem to outweigh the harms.
"Thus the trial could show benefits while missing the harms," said the investigators' report.
These harms are often traced back to ethanol, the key intoxicating agent in booze.
But the operations still carry a 0.3 percent mortality risk and other potential harms.
The mirrored harms by the two types of viruses is more than just speculation.
"This directly harms the culture of Tibetans," Mr. Tashi told The Times in 2015.
Evidently neither party is immune from the harms that come from rampant gun proliferation.
But with this administration we've learned that high hopes must rest with slight harms.
That harms consumers and innovators alike due to a lack competition, choice and investment.
Providing health care through insurance means providing access to both its benefits and harms.
The speech stigmatizes and harms ex-offenders who are trying to rebuild their lives.
This harms Senator Sanders, who is in first place and could become their nominee.
And it's part of why these harms and inequities will compound if left alone.
But freelance journalists have pushed back against AB5, arguing that it harms their careers.
People in their 70s "have fewer years to experience the harms," Dr. Sussman said.
This is an issue that harms small businesses like ours in every congressional district.
Ultimately, it does more damage to our civic fabric than it harms the NRA.
The tax exclusion also harms workers by driving up the cost of health care.
Sticking with the big picture is a better fit for most founders, says Harms.
"The harms to Whitaker are well-documented and supported by the record," Williams wrote.
Yet the harms are more salient to a lot of Americans than the benefits.
This pattern harms women in many ways, particularly when it comes to career advancement.
A recently published white paper sets out its plan to regulate a broad range of online harms, including proposing a mandatory duty of care on platforms to take reasonable steps to protect users from a range of harms, such as child sexual exploitation.
In addition to traditional financial harms, the commission focused on protecting consumers against other harms such as stalking, discrimination and doxing, the recent practice of intentionally publishing private or identifying information about a particular individual on the internet, particularly with malicious intent.
Anderson, who's won the title of world champion twice, was quick to refute Harms' accusations.
Finally, some attorneys general argue, it harms the interests of the citizens of specific states.
Above all, the report is meant to be a much-needed reminder of alcohol's harms.
The second chart looks at ways to solve or at least reduce these algorithmic harms.
He meets some of Alex's weirder creations, such as a robot that intentionally harms humans.
The recall of Judge Persky is already causing harm, but we can limit future harms.
The Democrats each put forth their platforms to further reduce mass incarceration and its harms.
So when it's added to water, the sunlight penetration is hindered, and that harms photosynthesis.
Worse yet, many experts believe our overly large number of bases actually harms American interests.
The plaintiffs argue Trump&aposs hotel harms area businesses because of the president&aposs ties.
A government effort to protect children from fast food that harms their health: absolutely not.
Oregon. Loznak's full list of harms, from the dried-up rivers where he used to
First, it would make operators responsible for any harms their algorithms might cause, not developers.
Anytime you have new technologies, you have to confront a package of benefits and harms.
"I have the freedom of speech also and I say, 'you're wrong'," Harms, 57, added.
Over 24-hours of work for over 24 weeks certainly harms the quality of games.
There are other things we could do that still keep prohibition but reduce the harms.
The CPP could play an important role in reducing these harms and improving public health.
Otherwise 'freedom to amplify any awful thing' becomes a speech chiller that disproportionately harms minorities.
Many try to limit corruption, treat employees well, sell safe products, and limit environmental harms.
Patel said in a statement that specific topics included cyber security, encryption and "online harms".
Like much of the criminal justice system, the bail system disproportionately harms communities of color.
Implement evidence-based prevention and early intervention strategies to reduce substance misuse and related harms.
"Helping" in any other way than building upon this foundation does not help; it harms.
The straws are a source of plastic pollution that often clogs waterways and harms wildlife.
Can we actually do something about irregular or unpredictable work scheduling, without doing unintended harms?
Psychological science demonstrates the harms of discriminatory public policies and the benefits of supportive ones.
Privacy harms stem from the inappropriate maintenance and use of data, not its mere collection.
Shortly after, Human Rights Watch published a report documenting patient harms from forced opioid tapering.
I'm keenly aware of the indignities and harms of justice not being served for them.
The Obama Administration has done little to address the harms caused to the Navajo people.
If there are no harms, then restricting data use has only costs and no benefits.
The Green New Deal cannot truly deliver environmental justice without including reparations for these harms.
The species is endangered because of commercial fishing, which not only harms the sea lions ...
The National Association of Manufacturers reports that annual federal regulation compliance mostly harms small businesses.
The deafening noise created by the seismic airgun blasting harms whales, dolphins and sea turtles.
The straws are a source of plastic pollution that often clogs waterways and harms wildlife.
Environmental activists are sounding an alarm about potential environmental harms, but their arguments are weak.
"I said it three or four times, 'no, no, I don't like it'," Harms said.
Two analyses found no overall harms or benefits from taking omega-3 fatty acid supplements.
Going along with conservative justices for no good reason causes significant harms to liberal jurisprudence.
For most of that time, there was no official government recognition of the chemical's harms.
And it harms the good people in the City of Philadelphia and rewards the wicked.
"I think alcohol causes far greater harms," said Mr. Thompson, a divorced father of three.
E.M.R. vendors ought to be held responsible when their medical documentation product harms patient care.
She never harms Cassandra Cain, protecting her from Sionis and his bounty hunters multiple times.
Critics of Clearview said the benefits of such a database did not outweigh its harms.
"It is critical to act now because the harms are happening now," Mr. Minter said.
Self-limiting drone exports has not stopped proliferation and harms U.S. interests in tangible ways.
Third, if a transaction raises no public interest harms, are there any public interest benefits?
It comes as the harms of the changing climate become more apparent in the present.
We know there are many—perhaps millions—of additional victims, each with their own harms.
" The new report adds, "Deepfake pornography is a phenomenon that exclusively targets and harms women.
"This decision harms American credibility on the world stage, and it is unacceptable," Engel wrote.
The shelter is kept locked at all times, lest anyone threatens or harms the guests.
Meanwhile, lynching, segregation, and disfranchisement created new obstacles for reparations and new harms needing redress.
At high exposures, the metal attacks the brain and kidneys, and harms multiple body systems.
Critics charge that using such tactics harms civil liberties and encourage anti-American sentiment abroad.
For example, if the CFPB harms you in any way, you have no redress whatsoever.
Andy Cohen, for his part, doesn't entertain the idea that the show harms its stars.
Though it might go without saying, a constant lack of sleep harms our overall health.
In this case, unscientific information is causing a public health crisis that primarily harms children.
No upside to worldwide patent liability would make up for these harms to American interest.
But the association did provide written responses to questions through its lobbyist, Threase A. Harms.
But just as the dominance of social media brought unforeseen harms, so might these developments.
"Former FTC chief technologist Ashkan Soltani told the Times that the growing number of agencies involved in the inquiry is "very significant because it means the government is not just interested in harms to privacy, but is interested in a broad array of harms.
According to the Guardian, after Gary Anderson beat Wesley Harms 10-2 on Thursday for a spot in the quarter-finals, Harms blamed his loss (in part) on a "fragrant smell," which he claimed came from his opponent repeatedly letting out some rancid stinkers.
And if you guessed Harms would deny he was the one who dealt it, you're correct!
We are literally making updates and we need to do that because we're seeing new harms.
We're trying to end those harms, but we also think it's critical to repair past damage.
These harms are dangerous because cities and organizations rely on algorithms to make big-scale decisions.
Under the legislation being drafted, a new regulatory framework for online "social harms" would be created.
These studies revealed real CrossFit harms, but is the workout really more dangerous than any other?
Heroin addicts are an ageing, sickly group, particularly vulnerable to the harms of their drug habit.
Locking up parents harms children; and female prisoners are much more likely to be custodial parents.
In the process, this widely used material clogs up waterways, harms wildlife and pollutes the planet.
In an attempt to reform the technology industry, they plan to introduce a Ledger of Harms.
With these policies, states could minimize the harms of legalization and cut the downsides of prohibition.
You will be polite to them in turn, but you need not stand for such harms.
That is a sign of how much the system for allocating them harms competition and consumers.
This adverse selection harms poor, existing residents by gobbling up a huge share of their incomes.
To date, governments have been too focused on the harms to customers from increasing industrial concentration.
Peter Harms, a management professor at the University of Alabama, compares Musk to Leonardo da Vinci.
Subsidies to debtors and penalties for savers, I think in the long term harms the economy.
Earlier this month the U.K. government set out a broad policy plan for regulating online harms.
If misused, though, crack can certainly cause health harms, including cuts and burns from unsafe pipes.
Certainly there are harms associated with indiscriminate aspirin use for primary prevention in low risk populations.
They claim that sound from these surveys harms marine animals without providing any evidence it does.
"When someone intentionally harms you or your reputation, how do you react?" he wrote in 2007.
This isn't the first research to find a lack of health harms tied to occupational sitting.
The Justice Department has to prove a proposed deal harms competition in order to block it.
Eventually, Moia sees this as fitting in nicely with VW's broader autonomous driving ambitions, Harms noted.
"In Europe… you can only do it with electric vehicles," Harms said during a press briefing.
We could potentially have a first look at Moia's tailor-made vehicles next year, Harms teased.
It also agreed to open settlement talks with four states that have sued over environmental harms.
"This can lead to overdiagnosis, overtreatment (with associated harms) and wasted resources," Woloshin said by email.
"We actually want to make a concrete that heals rather than harms the environment," he added.
He would have challenged Happer's ignorance, and educated CNN viewers on the harms of greenhouse gases.
Ofcom, the regulator, will now have jurisdiction over it, and could investigate whether it harms competitors.
This is a big one that most people don't even realize harms their sleep and productivity.
These advertisements describe medical malfeasance, coverups, and corruption, often linked to purported evidence of vaccine harms.
Nearly all fume about pollution, which clogs their lungs, shortens their lives and harms their children.
Prostitution is a sexist, racist and classist institution that harms those who are sold for sex.
"All of these treatments have lower risks of harms than medications, injections and surgery," Cherkin said.
Any responsible person wants to make sure this is a medicine that helps people, not harms.
There is simply no proof that competition from Gulf carriers harms U.S. airlines in any way.
Some environmentalists objected, citing the harms from hydraulic fracturing and the climate impacts of natural gas.
And more generally, patients tend to vastly overestimate the benefits and underestimate the harms of treatment.
To vote for people who enact such policies requires intense denial about the harms taking place.
Dimock was featured prominently in the 2010 documentary "Gasland" about allegations of environmental harms from fracking.
In so doing, though, they are effectively assuring that the harms the ACA does will continue.
These kinds of serious harms are distinct from temporary distress that leaves a person unchanged psychologically.
Perhaps even more damaging to the "harms women" argument, the FAMILY Act applies equally across genders.
As a result it harms those hard working Americans participating in pension plans and the economy.
But that doesn't keep Giertz from considering the potential harms that may arise from the gig.
Already, public interest groups and politicians alike are sounding the alarm about potential harms to consumers.
Would a mass cocaine boycott in the UK actually prevent the harms connected to the trade?
Hargan, has already documented egregious harms against other young women in Office of Refugee Resettlement detention.
Vaping, while safer than smoking, carries health risks and the long-term harms still aren't known.
This bill is not the solution to the real and serious harms it claims to address.
Peach sees through some of Joe's scam, but she herself manipulates and harms her friends, too.
What are the relative benefits and harms in a particular situation, for a person like you?
The Brazilian strain of Zika virus harms health in ways that science has not observed before.
We could have an extremely active hurricane season that never harms a single person on land.
"Simply put, we need much more research about the potential benefits and harms of psychedelic microdosing."
They are a form of harmful waste; those producing the waste should pay for the harms.
It's defined as a persistent compulsive dependency on a behavior or substance that harms the user.
Catch Terror on Tour with Power Trip, Harms Way, Angel Du$t, Fury, and Red Death.
Those sound a lot like the harms that conservative economists have long attributed to excessive taxation.
"Gender-based violence harms us all," Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada said in a statement.
I think we'll know whether it harms him if he runs in 513 and he's elected.
If we don't, we can't hold the police accountable for whatever those harms end up being.
"How they misread a four from a five, I don't know," said Ms. Harms, a Republican.
And in these instances, the harms of medical treatments are, on average, outweighed by the benefits.
In terms of absolute numbers harms, regular driving is one of the great public health threats.
They are weighing the risks of getting and spreading illness now to prevent worse harms later.
It is too early to say, but it doesn't really matter if it harms my career.
Try and imagine another industry that enjoys total immunity, even when their product harms American consumers.
Getting agreement on comprehensive regulation of online harms is also unlikely to prove any less controversial.
Failing to limit air pollution will also increase the threat of health harms from climate change.
"This is truly a statement that wrecks the nation and harms the people," Mr. He wrote.
Climate harms are determined much more by what everyone else does than by what you do.
Patients are more sensitive to harms than benefits, but doctors tend to dwell on the upside.
Many of the harms we've discussed are statistically significant, and yet they are of questionable significance.
But Google is now out of the authoritarian straddle once again — and out of harms way.
This is a big one, which most people don't even realize harms their sleep and productivity.
"The whole mobility market — transportation as a service — is just at the beginning," Mr. Harms said.
Conservatives oppose Obamacare because it harms Americans two ways: in their health and in their wallets.
He also contends current family-based immigration harms American workers by bringing in low-skilled immigrants.
Far from mitigating these harms, the Trump administration and congressional Republicans are working to exacerbate them.
Second, the science has changed:  It has only gotten stronger about the harms of sugar drinks.
Researchers concluded: These findings raise concerns about the potential harms of over-diagnosis and over-prescribing.
"The argument that affirmative action harms Asian American people is simply inaccurate," Leong and Chemerinsky write.
Studies have found the rule contributes to unsafe abortions and actively harms AIDS relief efforts overseas.
Voluntary actions from industry to tackle online harms have not been applied consistently or gone far enough.
DESANTIS: And that means it undermines the rule of law, harms taxpayers, and lowers wages for Americans.
Exaggerating the harms of opioids, or any other drug, does little to ensure the safety of users.
And the harms of declaring one wouldn't be offset by the additional attention a PHEIC would bring.
Photo: Getty ImagesThe debate over the potential harms and benefits of vaping has raged on for years.
"The sanctions restrictions were strictly followed by the German side," the committee's head, Michael Harms, told Reuters.
Vendors were unfairly denied access to the formal economy and have suffered the harms of local criminalization.
Sex workers have made some progress in bringing attention to the harms of criminalizing sex work policies.
Leaving out the environmental harms from the price tags for fossil fuels keeps energy affordable as well.
Regardless of government regulation, companies have a responsibility to avoid causing or contributing to human rights harms.
Some harms demand that perpetrators be removed from their jobs to keep the women around them safe.
In Crawford's keynote, she presented a fascinating breakdown of different types of harms done by algorithmic biases.
Sixty years of Chinese Exclusion, which lasted from 1882 to 1943, imposed myriad harms on Chinese people.
Gone from the series is how Hannah harms herself, and her body remains largely out of sight.
Requiring individual accounts to label themselves as bots does little to address such cumulative, scale-driven harms.
The paper may have been picking up old harms from smoking, rather than new ones from vaping.
The theory is that resentments, fears, and harms done block you from the power of the creator.
It is also far from clear that a disclosure law would address the deepest harms bots present.
Luckily, experts say there are ways to minimize the harms of so-called vicarious or secondary trauma.
Harms from unauthorized and illegal use of personal information can be economic, social, and sometimes even physical.
According to this model, kratom is an opioid — and comes with all of an opioid's potential harms.
This harms people inside the company, and communities outside who bear the brunt of Google's bad choices.
In particular, certain harms to original members of the category "woman" should be weighed against any gains.
It's clear that Kaine listened to his constituents about the harms of denying abortion care and coverage.
Mr Musk also seemed, in his tweets, to suggest that the aims of Starlink outweighed the harms.
At almost every step, human activity has exacerbated the risks, the damages, and the harms from fires.
Sulfur dioxide is also linked to acid rain, which kills forests, damages soil, and harms aquatic ecosystems.
Harms and others want to develop a web-based course that would teach medical students about finances.
But there are harms, and particularly in their 254s, women have to make a decision for themselves.
A society which celebrates fake women and outright abuses those who are true to themselves harms everyone.
So, I don't know, a lot of this stuff, it's very diffuse harms and very tangible benefits.
Aetna and Humana are attempting to merge, despite questions from antitrust officials about potential harms to consumers.
This is necessary but insufficient: After all, it's possible to enthusiastically consent to something that harms you.
Repealing the SEC rule harms this positive trend, and does nothing to help U.S. companies and workers.
Systemic inflammation appears to be the primary way that air pollution harms the brain, says Caleb Finch.
Beyond the potential harms of more stigmatization, the reality is that locking up more people costs money.
You have to talk about drug-related pleasure if you are going to talk about the harms.
The level of homogeneity in tech isn't just bad for those excluded; it harms the industry itself.
He has spoken out against the executive order, understanding that it harms, not enhances, our national security.
Will the paid ads work, though, or will they be gamed in a way that harms users?
Its harms include serious damage to the nervous, pulmonary, digestive, and immune systems and developmental brain defects.
We teach each of these girls about the harms of FGM and how it can be ended.
What harms the planet is the global mixing of pollution from carbon, methane and other warming gases.
However, these individuals ignore the potential benefits and overstate the possible harms of right to try laws.
These harms may include sexually transmitted infections, unwanted pregnancy and emotional distress, Brodsky wrote in her article.
Conversely, there is evidence that using e-cigarettes harms hearts, adversely increasing aortic stiffness and blood pressure.
But we have to pay attention to how it should be regulated to prevent public health harms.
"We firmly support the public awareness of the harms of smoking cigarettes," she said in a statement.
U.S. cities, large and small, can stem the harms associated with both drugs and failed drug policies.
"[The Plaintiffs' alleged harms] would continue in full force as a result of the NDAA," she concluded.
" Trump's "scathing attack on its ultimate friend," he notes, "harms the United States and its global standing.
Second, privacy harms should always be at the center of the activity that policymakers seek to prevent.
They argue the free market will keep internet companies from engaging in nefarious behavior that harms consumers.
These harms can be in the form of higher prices, lower output, reduced quality or lost innovation.
"Hezbollah knows that anyone who harms the state of Israel will pay a heavy price," Netanyahu said.
"Partisan gerrymandering no doubt burdens individual votes, but it also causes other harms," Justice Elena Kagan wrote.
The recent wildfires in California once again cast light on the increasing harms resulting from climate change.
They result in other harms, which are probably more pervasive and might have a bigger overall impact.
Jones stresses that while there are signs of possible benefits or harms, we know nothing for sure.
This prevents future governments from operating in the public interest if it harms business in any fashion.
Beneficial outcomes and protections against harms must be actively fought for and built-in from the beginning.
Still, this story has turned into an iconic illustration of the harms generated by massive data collection.
There are certain types of people whose lack of emotional intelligence harms their careers more than others.
Since at least 2016, she's been warning about potential harms of consolidation among such large tech companies.
These included harms to minors, connections to violence, interstate trafficking, and using public lands to grow marijuana.
They are uniquely vulnerable: their developing bodies suffer disproportionately from climate change's most serious and deadly harms.
But there are also significant benefits, and for many women these will be greater than the harms.
From a Latin word referring to enslavement, addiction is a compulsive dependency that harms the affected individual.
It'll take time to know this for sure, and to develop the regulations that minimize potential harms.
Here, we need statutory damages — harms spelled out in the law that don't require any further proof.
So far, the Trump administration's response to mitigate the economic harms of coronavirus has been woefully inadequate.
The first argument is that the benefits of using a new technology can often outweigh the harms.
But for stimulants, deadly harms can't be fully reduced until levels of consumption are reduced as well.
And it harms American companies in particular, since they bear such a big share of those costs.
The Digital Economy Act [DEA] objectives will therefore be delivered through our proposed online harms regulatory regime.
The EFF and other digital rights groups have often argued the benefits of scraping outweigh the harms.
Even from the perspective of project proponents, outsourcing unmitigated harms generates fierce opposition and less sustainable results.
What it really would have done is subject them to fines for pollution that harms human health.
Discouraging students from taking out loans — without providing financial alternatives — harms their ability to progress through college.
"Screening is controversial owing to lack of survival benefit and the harms from overdiagnosis," the editorial notes.
George Ryan declared a statewide moratorium on executions, but nationally, the harms of jailhouse informants went unaddressed.
White racial illiteracy is a skill deficit that, left unexamined and uncorrected, ultimately harms the public good.
Family Equality Council, an advocacy group for LGBTQ families, said the rule harms children in foster care.
"I don't know how many farmers were able to move those out of harms way," Hall said.
He pointed out that fat-shaming only harms fat people and triggers depression and self-destructive behavior.
A weak, isolated Israel harms the security of the region and consequently that of the United States.
Often it is added that we are free to do whatever we want unless it harms others.
Localized harms include impaired drinking water, antibiotic resistance, air pollution, and waste spills and associated fish kills.
E-cigarette manufacturers should promptly fund the studies necessary to evaluate their product's potential benefits and harms.
They're reminding voters of the health harms of soda, and the revenue benefits these taxes will bring.
Both products also create significant harms for third parties, among which are increases in greenhouse gas emissions.
The potential harms of AI are not evenly distributed, and follow historical patterns of discrimination and exclusion.
Allowing discrimination against LGBT families isn't just morally reprehensible, the ACLU argues—it also harms vulnerable children.
"The plaintiff states have alleged significant harms to their sovereign interests caused by another state," Thomas wrote.
This is especially true when such harms have an alleged disparate impact on a discrete class of society.
Congress' inability to function properly harms every sector, industry and resource in our country, including our natural resources.
And perhaps it's time to think about other ways to blunt the harms of meat production and consumption.
They are struggling with low salinity which harms shellfish reproduction, water stagnation, pollution and agro-chemical run-off.
Even where such processes remain somewhat opaque, technologists should seek indirect means of validating results and detecting harms.
Crawford tied together the complex relationship between the two harms by citing a 2013 report from LaTanya Sweeney.
And maybe it's time to be a little more restrictive about alcohol because of its known health harms.
Proper sunscreen application is a good way to protect yourself against the harms of UV radiation, said Young.
The Justice Department said the court decision harms the public and second guesses the president's national security judgment.
I stand with all angry voices against abuse of power that harms or compromises any and all lives.
Washington demands changes to Chinese law; Beijing says it won't swallow any "bitter fruit" that harms its interests.
Legalisation, argue Mr Reuter and his co-author, Robert MacCoun, would result in "a clear redistribution of harms".
Why is abuse such a big concern, particularly for a drug that has very few direct health harms?
This is one that's really big, that harms a lot of people, and that's really easy to solve.
Finally, they can raise awareness about the health harms of drinking what is essentially nutrient-bankrupt liquid sugar.
The Fortnite cheaters are on weaker ground because what they do arguably harms the game studio's bottom line.
"There is a very long history of trivializing the harms that are done to women specifically," she said.
We need to have well-funded observations of all these harms and then generating policy proposals much faster.
Anything that harms Istanbul, the centre of Turkish commerce and tourism, will harm the country as a whole.
Addiction is a brain disease that causes people to continue to use substances even though it harms them.
Notably, Google recently said it will consider potential harms of its AI research before deciding to publish it.
Perhaps Schiff will continue to press both companies to ensure their platforms aren't spreading information that harms society.
The fact that there are harms has been difficult for many advocates of prostate cancer screening to accept.
The UK government is due to put out a policy White Paper on regulating online harms this winter.
She also handily explains why this gender preference is completely unnecessary and could actually lead to serious harms.
"One needs to weigh the benefits and harms and make a decision you feel comfortable with," Brawley said.
A virus that harms shrimp has spurred some nations to ban imports from all but bio-secure hatcheries.
It said the report by the United States harms mutual trust between the two countries, the ministry said.
Cable companies argue Wheeler's proposal, which aims to create an open standard for set-top boxes, harms innovation.
Use compost to fertilize your lawn and you won't have to buy chemical fertilizer, which harms the environment.
But those voices were tempered by conservatives who argue the agreement harms American jobs and punishes US taxpayers.
The CFPB has also imposed $440 million in civil penalties to punish wrongful conduct and deter future harms.
Society, as a whole, will rarely turn its back on advancements in technology, regardless of its potential harms.
This stifles competition and harms consumers, especially by limiting innovation, according to Margrethe Vestager, the EU's competition commissioner.
They do not know exactly how the additive harms the lungs, but studies in animals are being considered.
This shutdown, which has no end in sight, harms the very people with disabilities we want to succeed.
The two groups had the same baseline desire to quit and similar understanding of the harms of smoking.
"While plaintiffs' claimed harms are hypothetical, the discrimination suffered by transgender individuals is all too real," they wrote.
Granting access to banking would put pedal to the metal on marijuana commercialization and its public health harms.
Sex-trade predators cause women harms that cannot be separated from prostitution itself, regardless of its legal status.
" In contrast with his playing as a college student, Harms said, "he's really starting to communicate something deeper.
They should be transparent about both benefits and harms these AI tools may have in the long run.
Mr. Hsia added, "This seriously harms the cross-strait mutual trust built up over the past eight years."
Furthermore, opponents say, scientific studies do not show large-scale harms from lead use in hunting and fishing.
Jorjani's policy repealed a January 2017 memo by the Obama administration that said incidental harms would be prosecuted.
Depriving prisoners of decent food harms both individual and group morale—and has been known to cause riots.
With the revenue raised from recreational marijuana sales, California hopes to reduce some of the harms of criminalisation.
Jorjani's policy repealed a January 2017 memo by the Obama administration that said incidental harms would be prosecuted.
But our research suggests the variety of content may be reduced, which in the long run harms consumers.
F-15 "pilots kept plane out of harms way and people on ground safe," the sheriff's office tweeted.
That's the advice of a Georgetown professor who says it's a distraction and harms our ability to concentrate.
"They're concerned because they grew up experiencing the harms of the internet along with its advantages," Calo said.
They divided alcohol use into three broad categories: any alcohol use, problematic alcohol use, and alcohol-related harms.
That's why I'm excited to announce that Moia CEO Ole Harms is joining us at TechCrunch Disrupt Berlin.
They then narrowed their results down to literature that focused on sex differences in consumption and related harms.
The man couldn't stop talking, as one of the inspectors, Cynthia Harms, would later recall in court testimony.
How will the harms of your action match up to the good you'll accomplish by reporting the scam?
The wall is exactly the type of issue that harms Trump's chance of becoming popular with the center.
What's more, personal attacks in lieu of vigorous debate on the merits of opposing approaches harms us all.
In the past decade or so, we have succeeded in recognizing the harms of sugary beverages like soda.
" If there are harms, he added, "the antivaxxers can set back not only this vaccine but all vaccines.
If anything, he frequently uses his office to downplay the harms of the virus and hawk unproven cures.
Just as carbon dioxide emitted in the United States harms other countries, emissions from other countries harm America.
However, with climate change, the plaintiffs are seeking damages for future harms, things that have not occurred yet.
All seven of these people were men, despite the real-world harms of deepfakes being leveled against women.
But it's up to the FDA to decide whether the potential benefits of IQOS outweigh its potential harms.
And sometimes that law is enforced in a way that harms women, even though it really shouldn't be.
In fact, that's not the case: Employer market power, sometimes called "monopsony," harms economic growth and raises prices.
It can help our politicians focus on the real harms and the actions needed to challenge this abuse.
But there's no good reason to make a Good Samaritan liable for the mine's existing or unforeseeable harms.
For here, politicians' incentives conflict with voters' interests, leaving citizens without any political remedy for their constitutional harms.
But passing a hastily written, deficit-busting bill that harms the middle class would not be great, either.
Lack of dental care through Medicaid not only harms people's health, but has negative economic implications as well.
The trick with the IoT, as with anything, will be to maximise the benefits while minimising the harms.
For women 75 and older, current evidence is not adequate to balance benefits and harms of screening mammography.
We are witnesses to the harms of a life and its slow repetitions that lead to new beauty.
They would hesitate to join in countering Chinese industrial espionage or rule-breaking that harms the United States.
"This high and rising debt matters because it harms our economy," said Peterson, whose group backs fiscal conservatism.
The elevated licensing fees charged by Qualcomm amount to a tax that can exclude competitors and harms competition.
This is not the first time the Bluegrass State has tried to address the harms of felony disenfranchisement.
In Morgan's statement, she talked about the Online Harms White Paper, which the government published in April 2019.
Before the law passed, the commission handled complaints about other online harms, from cyberbullying to child sexual exploitation.
The harms include treatment side effects like discomfort in the nose or mouth area from using a mask.
We therefore conclude that the states have alleged harms to their proprietary interests traceable to the executive order.
Restitution — meaning a company paying for the harms it imposes — is important in helping victims of corporate misdeeds.
Hockey players can be cruel teasers, and Harms said the Fitzgeralds still took occasional needling about the movies.
Our society's over-reliance on prisons and punishment instead of real community prosperity and safety harms us all.
As long as Trump's trade policy is limited to this rhetoric, the harms are probably not too great.
"You can't even run an engine for maintenance," he said, which harms his mechanic and paint shop tenants.
There's no way I can take responsibility for the harms or benefits of the web as a whole.
Everyone should support the courts' responsibility to adjudicate constitutional harms, even in the absence of any financial injury.
The United States, which backs Guaido, has warned of "serious consequences" if President Nicolas Maduro's government harms him.
But either way, the debate is about potential harms to a relatively small minority of the American workforce.
First, they can raise awareness about the health harms of drinking what is essentially nutrient-bankrupt liquid sugar.
Additionally, more rigorous testing of drugs for new uses might illuminate harms, hampering drugs' marketability rather than helping it.
She put even more women in harms way and then she goes out and says, 'Oh I love women.
"That undercount, in turn, will translate into a loss of political power and funds, among other harms," Furman wrote.
One can't assume that Obama only objected because he genuinely believed JASTA actually harms American interests, which it does.
She urged attendees to start considering, and finding ways to mitigate, accidental or intentional harms caused by their creations.
So while the current study is worrying, it's also far from a smoking gun proving the harms of vaping.
Critics, many in the financial industry, have said it makes it more difficult to lend and harms smaller banks.
But that story is also much more complicated and interesting as a historical example of who the patriarchy harms.
According to Minor's research, which focuses on North Brooklyn, the closures inflict micro-level harms on a local community.
He said there was no credible evidence that Huawei has a so-called back door that harms U.S. security.
Washington state's arguments, Mr Flentje said, were premised on harms imposed on lawful permanent residents of the United States.
Also, infant behaviors — crawling, touching things, and putting their hands in their mouth — ups their exposure to environmental harms.
Twenty of the 32 species of bats in Texas do not regularly hibernate, and WNS only harms hibernating bats.
Thinning has become popular in the state, but, he says, it disturbs soil, generating silt that harms aquatic life.
Another important way to stem the rise in e-cigarettes is to communicate to young people their potential harms.
As developing countries grow less poor, other harms will dwindle and smoking will start to look deadlier by comparison.
Carson said he was familiar with the harms of lead contamination from his past work as a pediatric neurosurgeon.
Vaping interests, meanwhile, continue to discount e-cigarettes' harms as they've redoubled efforts to fight restrictions on the devices.
But that circumcision actively harms the physical aspects of male sexual function is not backed by science, Bossio said.
He has publicly crusaded against Herbalife, repeatedly calling it a pyramid scheme and saying its business model harms people.
China's system of subsidies and state-directed capitalism harms competing firms elsewhere, and raises questions about surveillance and security.
So why is abuse such a big concern, particularly for a drug that has very few direct health harms?
All of this makes the drugs being sold more dangerous, and the potential harms of using them more serious.
The Laos segment pokes a little at America's foreign policy, and the ways institutional corruption harms vulnerable people first.
You do not have a right to spread falsehood after falsehood that harms society on a private company's network.
Yet its teachings also emphasise that violence harms the spiritual state of the perpetrator, as well as the victim.
Trapped by tightening legal restrictions, government antitrust lawyers are often incapable of proving even the most obvious of harms.
Stroup catches the child, before going down on one knee to get the wailing child out of harms way.
Mr Sadek has ordered his staff to monitor the media and press charges against anyone who "harms national interests".
The authors behind this new paper, published in JAMA, acknowledge the long-standing debate around eggs' benefits and harms.
Instead of fines, changing destructive business models and anticompetitive practices is the only way to lessen the platforms' harms.
This disproportionately harms low-income individuals and helps create a cycle of poverty that often plagues families for years.
This is important because double taxation distorts economic and financial decision-making which, in turn, harms national well-being.
But those under the age of 24 were also more likely to experience these indirect harms in the study.
In short, we have an expensive system that fails to get positive results and harms families along the way.
"It'll take me two nights to lose this smell from my nose," Harms told RTL7, a Dutch TV station.
However, regulation is necessary to allow the sharing economy to grow, as opposed to litigation, which simply harms it.
"I don't really think he cares if it harms or hurts him or hurts his re-election," Chinthala said.
But, while logical in theory, this approach has proved challenging in practice—not least because starvation harms patients, too.
Ordinarily, one who provides funding to terrorists or other harm-causing activities is legally accountable for facilitating such harms.
"There is major, major concern," said Michael Harms, the director of the German Committee on Eastern European Economic Relations.
By a margin of 55 to 39 percent, Michigan voters reject the argument that choice harms traditional public schools.
The point of a wolf pit is that the more the wolf thrashes around, the more he harms himself.
"We just have to get together, love one another, and just persevere," Ken Harms, a history teacher told KTRK.
The causes of these very disparate harms are deep-rooted and wide-ranging, but there is some important overlap.
Wishful thinking describes people's tendency to predict their preferred candidate to win, a behavior that harms individual forecast accuracy.
This, they would argue, harms competition because no one else has yet figured out how to compete with that.
And it's important to remember that the FTC set the precedent for case-by-case enforcement of privacy harms.
And in a country known for its sweet tooth, Dr. Malhotra is outspoken about the harms of excess sugar.
On Monday, he sued to block the deal, calling it an "illegal" combination that harms consumers and stifles innovation.
These critics also argue that activists, in their effort to legalize cannabis, downplay and hide the plant's true harms.
One study found that less than 10 percent of patients were told about the potential harms of cancer screening.
The Daily Caller: Justice Elena Kagan says she worries that politicizing nominations harms the public's perception of the courts.
They focus on the intensity of the general harms and risks and the grave threats climate change could pose.
But if it did, it would likely have tried to minimize and mitigate the future harms it was causing.
In a separate letter, SumOfUs wrote that Bezos' dual role at Amazon "weakens" its governance and harms shareholder value.
Going public without these elements harms the credibility of the security research community, whose insights we support and appreciate.
Ferguson argues that the ban harms state residents, employers and educational institutions by separating families and damaging the economy.
Infection with some strains of shigella can be fatal by producing a toxin that harms the kidneys, he said.
"The fact is any steps short of removing blinds from home can still put a child in harms way."
The report had, in fact, made clear that the harms caused by climate change will increase exponentially without action.
There is precious little empirical data that immigration, for either high or low-skilled workers, harms "native" American workers.
But trying to stamp it out may cause other harms, such as excluding independents who would like to participate.
The reason is simple: At some point, the endless press for ever-stricter environmental regulation actually harms the environment.
Fortunately, judges are starting to rethink class action lawsuits in the digital age -- searching for real harms not inconvenience.
On the Right, advocates argue for reasonable regulations, enforcement actions based on actual consumer harms and working market forces.
You know, a lot of that came from Bill Harms, our lead writer, and Haden Blackman, our creative director.
You know, a lot of that came from Bill Harms, our lead writer, and Haden Blackman, our creative director.
Meanwhile, of course, the harms of exempted and legal psychoactive substances such as tobacco and alcohol are well documented.
If those harms are still present, the conditions should be renewed, or replaced with other measures, such as divestitures.
Whatever harms they've brought to society and general human interaction, few things have made my job easier than smartphones.
"Taiwan society will not accept any treaty that harms Taiwan's national sovereignty and democracy," Tsai told reporters in Taipei.
The move has drawn widespread criticism from international aid groups and health experts who say it harms public health.
"President Trump's eagerness to give the Saudis anything they want, over bipartisan congressional objection, harms American national security interests."
But lead's potential harms to adults and their hearts have gotten relatively little attention among the public and policymakers.
"The potential harms here are as significant as you can imagine," Mr. Saenz said in an interview on Tuesday.
Many hunters are ditching traditional ammunition amid mounting evidence that it harms scavengers and pollutes the food people eat.
"The new Congress could work across the aisle to further limit the harms caused by medical debt," he said.
African swine fever, which harms pigs but not humans, has swept across the country, the world's largest pork producer.
Ms. Harms said Mr. Colyer's vote total was the only number from her county that the state recorded incorrectly.
Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), a physician who has been outspoken about the harms of false online information on vaccines.
"I do not see that there has been a change in relations between Moscow and Berlin," Mr. Harms said.
This harms a society that must find its way through fake news, conspiracy theories, demagoguery and shrill, irrational thinking.
The mistaken belief that addressing these harms is a de-regulatory endeavor is disadvantaging millions of consumers every day.
The goal of health care, as always, should be to maximize the benefits of care while minimizing the harms.
"But we need to think about other ways to prevent some of the privacy harms we saw with Clearview."
A President unable to recognize harms coming our way, and to deploy resources to stop them, energizes our enemies.
In the onerous aftermath of the war, dignitary harms and forced austerity ultimately turned the tide against European solidarity.
But many people use pot — even rationally — for benefits they perceive to be greater than the harms we've listed.
The A.C.L.U. is suing over the practice, arguing that it is a violation of due process and harms children.
When the government harms someone, a 1946 law called the Federal Tort Claims Act generally provides a judicial remedy.
Why risk a study showing that your device's benefit doesn't exceed its harms when cardiologists are already implanting it?
We're more aware now of the potential harms lying beneath our touchscreens, but the fundamental product hasn't changed much.
The current United States family leave policy harms women and men in all stages of life, in myriad ways.
"To all of us, that's the power of video games," Bill Harms, the lead writer on Mafia III said.
It originates from ignorance or misunderstanding and harms those suffering from mental illness by depriving them of their humanity.
The pollution that harms the park also degrades the air quality in the communities like Luray where we live.
Subsidized grazing harms ranchers because they lead people both inside and outside the agencies to view ranchers as freeloaders.
Earlier this year the U.K. government set out a wide-ranging proposal to regulate a range of online harms.
The bipartisan view that Guantánamo's continued operation harms national security is not limited to Presidents Obama and Bush. Sen.
DOJ may be considering two possible types of competitive harms that could be claimed to result from the merger.
As a threshold matter, platforms must accept that they play an important role in addressing the harms they enable.
The policy also traumatized separated children and led to other health care harms, the department's inspector general has found.
States can only challenge the federal government if they can prove that the action harms them in some way.
It taught me the proper ways to use statistics in diagnosis and treatment, and in weighing benefits and harms.
"Each delayed bag affects an individual passenger's travel experience, resulting in inconvenience and other harms," the DOT said Friday.
In response to Mr. Schifter's death, Mayor de Blasio showed little sensitivity to the psychic harms of economic deprivation.
The task force doesn't model costs in its calculations; it models effectiveness and a preponderance of benefits and harms.
Here's what I learned from my son: The real harms of Fortnite do not come from the game itself.
It involves carefully observing doses and looking for any warning signs or harms that pop up along the way.
Myths about medications are likely to reduce help-seeking and reinforce very damaging stigma, ultimately leading to avoidable harms.
We need to talk about monopoly power, and the harms it causes, especially as Trump doesn't take it up.
" It's to say that "I acknowledge that what I have done harms folks indirectly as well as people directly.
Twenty-week bans do real harm to real pregnant people — but those harms aren't well understood by the public.
In addition to calling for gambling law to be applied to the industry's lucrative loot box mechanic, the report calls on games makers to face up to responsibilities to protect players from potential harms, saying research into possible negative psychosocial harms has been hampered by the industry's unwillingness to share play data.
" The government's claims in support of the expansive policy, he said, did not outweigh "the need to avoid these harms.
The question isn't whether pricing carbon harms consumers and businesses; it's whether or not it will reduce climate-change emissions.
"When pharmaceutical companies put profits ahead of people by illegally restricting competition, it harms patients across our state," Schneiderman said.
The AGs claimed that the Trump International Hotel in DC harms hotels and other businesses that the states partially own.
About 21% of women and 23% of men reported experiencing alcohol-related harms, with the most prevalent type being harassment.
Warren, who has made antitrust a cornerstone of her campaign, understands the widespread harms of an economy that lacks competition.
"We need to be more careful about the health messages related to potential harms from use during pregnancy," Roberts said.
Still, Apple has said nothing publicly about so-called "touch disease," which harms both the company's customers and its employees.
"The abortion ban kills and harms women, and in this country it can also put women in jail," Rivas said.
Designating China as a currency manipulator seriously harms international rules, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said in a statement.
This behavior, of course, harms the people who are members of groups that are the subjects of negative implicit bias.
Right now, we know that there are benefits from these products and we don't know if there are any harms.
Conspiracy theorists promote doubting experts, Schimkowitz said at the time, which can lead to bigger harms like denying climate change.
" She also said that Twitter is more focused on combatting misinformation that harms people in "a direct and tangible way.
Hate against anyone -- based on where they're from, how they worship, who they love or how they live -- harms everyone.
There are a number of ways that "excessive use of incarceration," as the report stated, can have public health harms.
It'll be important to work through all possible harms that could come from this data in the future, she says.
If a zoning algorithm disproportionately harms people of color, for example, the city might face a lawsuit under the rule.
That would nonetheless mean that humanity ought to be willing to bear substantial costs now to reduce eventual climate harms.
Further, consider that two studies have emerged this year alone finding that porn helps far more relationships than it harms.
" "As we have shown, we will intervene where we see harms and we remain vigilant in this and other sectors.
The industry cannot let those who perpetuate harms against anyone – especially vulnerable young people – go unnoticed or unchecked any longer.
Her supportive tweets are especially important now, as religious conservatives continue to draft and push legislation that harms LGBTQ folks.
As real world harms triggered by digital activity multiply, technology companies are scrambling to avoid being a conduit for deceit.
But I would argue, with no offense to the elderly, that these potential harms are almost exclusively workplace rights issues.
In past cases, it has repeatedly upheld the government's ability to protect all of us from the harms of discrimination.
He has repeatedly pandered to vaccine deniers, and made public pronouncements about the alleged harms of these life-saving shots.
However, there are potential harms that come with "sharenting" too, that many parents might not recognize, according to new research.
Lobbyist erosion of government antitrust authority has left government lawyers often incapable of proving even the most obvious of harms.
With this regulatory oversight, I also hope that more information about ENDS -- those long-term effects, and potential harms vs.
Let's just be sure we've carefully considered the potential harms and benefits — to ourselves and to science — in the process.
PSAs emphasizing social implications have been found to be more effective than those focusing on physical harms of drug usage.
"BPD's targeted policing of certain Baltimore neighborhoods with minimal oversight or accountability disproportionately harms African-American residents," the report added.
Protestors argue that the Olympics should be banned across the world because it contributes to poverty and harms the environment.
This is called zero-rating, and regulators believe it harms online competition, giving certain companies an unfair advantage over others.
Occupational licensing in its current state harms both consumers and skilled workers with higher costs and barriers to entry, respectively.
The group continued:The case against this merger starts with the manifest harms it would cause wireless consumers across the country.
This part of the ruling "was not narrowly tailored to addressing only the harms alleged," the 9th Circuit panel explained.
"The act of spraying water into water at a fish doesn't seem as if it harms the goldfish," he said.
That meant supporting policies that limited access to birth control, which disproportionately harms lower-income women and women of color.
It invites depression and illness, compels families to move into degrading housing in dangerous neighborhoods, uproots communities, and harms children.
More recently, Warren targeted the concentration of corporate power, which some Democratic economists argue harms consumers and small businesses alike.
This harms competitiveness for Argentine firms selling abroad and hurts ordinary citizens by making it expensive for them to borrow.
Government officials stepped up warnings that they could intervene in currency market to stabilise the yen, whose strength harms exporters.
He also said Schnitzler was not a credible threat, having taken no steps to carry out the harms he threatened.
And Judy Rogg founded Erik's Cause to honor her late son and educate students about the harms of the game.
At some point, when customers and competitive markets seem helpless and the harms become overwhelmingly obvious, governments typically step in.
This social science research on the harms of family separation is backed up by biological research on its physiologic impact.
Courts have generally held that administrative agencies are the more constitutionally appropriate and institutionally competent bodies to address such harms.
A telltale sign of privilege is being able to ignore a system that benefits some while it harms others. 133.
To make matters worse, the very tools available to Americans to protect themselves from these harms are simultaneously being eroded.
"As Attorney General, my job is to hold accountable anyone who harms our families," Beshear said in a press release.
I want to say clearly: This exploitation of Israel's civil policy harms you and we will not stand idly by.
It also creates a culture of tribalism where government lawyers reflexively defend "their team" even when government harms its citizens.
Ferguson argues that the immigration order harms state residents, employers and educational institutions by separating families and damaging the economy.
Ultimately, the president is right — inspiring, even — in attacking a complicated, outdated system that harms American workers and small businesses.
Rescheduling would make it easier to research the health consequences—benefits and harms—and could have implications for marijuana businesses.
To wit, it should always be to blunt or prevent the infliction of substantial military harms upon our own population.
On top of this, recent research shows that scrutinizing online images of oneself and one's peers harms more than grades.
The Federal Reserve would be prompted to further lower interest rates if the trade war deteriorates and harms the economy.
As Justice Sonia Sotomayor explained in her dissent, Ohio's law harms minority, low-income, disabled, and veteran voters the most.
And it has ignored pre-existing, technology-agnostic laws that address many of the purported harms and risks of drones.
As we learn more about the harms social platforms and their users can cause, this disconnect is becoming more troubling.
The pollutant is a component of acid rain, which harms vegetation and wildlife, and is blamed for some respiratory illnesses.
Limiting the availability of lawful goods and services to consumers in an attempt to punish politically disfavored businesses harms consumers.
Congress avoiding taking any responsibility for continuing to send our service men and women into harms way is absolutely shameful.
For instance, heroin harms the glutamate transmitter system, which is important for decision-making, cognition and even reward, explains Hurd.
Unfortunately, most of those people are getting all the harms of the substances they take, but few of the benefits.
It also looked at new evidence on the potential harms of folate supplementation, released since its last review in 2009.
"We are in quite advanced talks with companies," said 41-year-old Harms who has been with VW since 2008.
Government use of spy technology "disproportionately harms already marginalized communities," Nathan Sheard, the Electronic Frontier Foundation's grassroots advocacy organizer, wrote.
This encourages state and local governments to pursue a high-tax, high-spending agenda that harms taxpayers and fiscal health.
Legal cannabis is not just about reducing the harms of prohibition — it can also be about reaping the potential benefits.
The EPA and Department of Justice enforces the law and works with states to ameliorate harms caused by the violation.
If there are anticompetitive harms, he says, the companies should be willing to sell off assets to allay those concerns.
One theme of my Upshot articles is that we should weigh the benefits and the harms in any health decision.
For over 50 years, California has been the undisputed leader among the states in addressing air pollution and its harms.
The research will attempt to track the risks of drinking, but critics say it may not fully capture the harms.
"Much like a car accident, the harms on social media are low-probablility events with extremely variable outcomes," he said.
While the potential tools for redressing the harms vary, a growing chorus is calling for the use of antitrust law.
A ubiquitous bug found in soil and water, S. paucimobilis rarely harms people, usually sickening those with weakened immune systems.
As obesity rates have hit global epidemic proportions, researchers are finding new ways that excess body fat harms our health.
United States officials say the Chinese government's heavy hand distorts costs and prices in the country and harms competitors abroad.
The real question is, will glyphosate prove to be another notorious environmental chemical that we'll later learn harms human health?
The harms include swollen defense budgets, counterproductive military interventions, wasted resources (think: border wall) and demagoguery's toll on democracy itself.
They quickly realize that this would have dramatically negative impacts, far beyond the harms they might be seeking to address.
His noblewoman is headstrong and emancipated—almost a millennial—who dreams of a storybook lover and self-harms in secret.
Most young people would go through the process for no good reason, and some would sustain injuries or other harms.
Because they fear those potential harms, some physicians are hesitant to refer patients to chiropractors or physical therapists for care.
Among other things, researchers examined 103 studies assessing the value women place on the anticipated benefits and harms from screening.
The benefits and harms of medical marijuana can be debated, but more states are legalizing pot, even for recreational use.
The I.M.F. deal promises to deliver billions of dollars in aid to Ukraine, though it harms Mr. Kolomoisky's business interests.
Addressing the diversity of harms created by guns will require a complex suite of interventions tailored to the specific risks.
About 7 percent to 17 percent of workers were exposed to violence, which included both threatened and actual physical harms.
Global health, human rights, LGBTQI rights and women's rights groups submitted comments documenting early harms of the global gag rule.
" These companies, the committee said, have developed a "business model that harms patients, taxpayers and the U.S. health care system.
Mozambique has significant offshore liquefied natural gas projects underway in the north, but these were currently out of harms way.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is working to ban a common pesticide that it says harms aquatic animals and environments.
Liberals say a protection in the amendment against lawsuits for credit bureaus offering free monitoring is unacceptable and harms consumers.
We can save lives immediately by implementing harm reduction practices that have been shown to prevent overdoses and related harms.
Mitigating these harms does not require putting people in prison; what we need are thoughtful, well-resourced public health strategies.
If we were more aware of the harms of blasting loud music, we would reduce noise pollution from the source.
Gay rights activists argued that the policy harms same-sex couples, who often use assisted reproductive technology to have children.
A group of Kazakh intellectuals recently called for Atajurt to be closed, saying the group harms Kazakhstan's relationship with China.
The boycotting states insist the row is not a priority for them while Doha says the dispute harms regional security.
"Unlike hospital mergers or big health insurance mergers, it's less obvious what the harms to competition are here," he says.
The reason given for ditching the plan now is the government says it has decided it no longer makes sense to introduce the age check provision at this stage — given wider plans to introduce comprehensive legislation to regulate a range of online harms, as set out in the Online Harms white paper earlier this year.
Climate change is costly in part because its effects are uncertain, impairing investments and other actions which might mitigate its harms.
"Anyone who spreads a false statement about 'Polish camps' harms the good name and interests of Poland," Tusk said on Twitter.
These harms extend to the states by virtue of their roles as parens patriae of the residents living within their borders.
Any attempt to protect American steel workers from foreign competition thus harms both American consumers and American workers in other industries.
The same goes if the harm is abstract, such as the assertion that insider trading harms the integrity of the market.
"This study provides stronger, more direct evidence that segregation impacts blood pressure and harms the health of African-Americans," Kershaw said.
The conditions we saw this week match previous Human Rights Watch findings on the harms children face in Border Patrol detention.
" He also writes that a false sexual assault allegation "inflicts psychic, familial, reputational and professional harms that can last a lifetime.
High mercury exposure harms the nervous, digestive and immune systems, can lead to impaired vision and hearing, and can be fatal.
Other than harassment, "for men, the driving-related harms were the most common, followed by property damage and vandalism," she said.
That argument didn't seem to get much traction: Purcell said it would not fully address the harms of the executive order.
" Rebecca Harms, leader of the ecologist Greens group in the EU legislature said: "At first I thought it was a joke.
" Lakewood charges that the released environmental report "is an effort by the administration to minimize any of the harms and impacts.
Morgan also noted that the UK is continuing with other plans based on the Online Harms White Paper published in April.
Doctors for Refugees spokesman Richard Kidd told the ABC that the situation was distressing for doctors, and that detention harms children.
Critics said the high court's move harms Native American voters who live on reservations, where residential addresses largely do not exist.
Why it matters: The Trump administration is leading international opposition to the compact, claiming it harms sovereignty and legitimizes illegal migration.
Ackman argued that the company, which relies on distributors, harms undocumented immigrants trying to make a living in the United States.
Some Twitter users saw the series as "trans-bashing", a "transphobia week" and something that "harms the world as a whole".
"Any strategy that is rooted in the criminal justice model is unsatisfactory at reducing the harms of drugs," de Barra explains.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said on Friday that any third-party interference on deals "harms the China-Germany relationship".
Economists try to take account of such costs in other contexts, for example when assessing the harms caused by climate change.
So massive, in fact, that these smaller harms implicate all of us—not just as potential victims, but as potential perpetrators.
Harms and colleagues surveyed 105 surgical trainees at their university about their debt, equity, cash flow, expenses, income and financial education.
The banking industry has been lobbying hard against the regulation, with GOP lawmakers eager to claim it harms the free market.
And all the experts in this area say an informed citizenry is vital in combatting any future harms from this tech.
The harms covered are similarly extensive, from terrorist material and child abuse to more subjective things such as trolling and disinformation.
The group also presented the "Main Street Marshall Plan: From Poverty to Prosperity" Tuesday as possible solutions to harms it foresees.
Yet as harmful as the threat of raids may be, there are many ways to support immigrants and limit these harms.
Pai's frequent remarks about the harms allegedly caused by the Obama-era rules were often contradicted by the broadband providers themselves.
This makes sense, because whenever a woman inadvertently harms a man, she usually bawls about it for a full eight hours.
When cosmic rays hit metallic space structures, the collisions can produce what is known as "secondary radiation" that further harms astronauts.
In this way, sponsored data plans create the same kinds of harms to innovation and free speech as online fast lanes.
It was the largest ever global action against the harms of climate change, and it was pulled off entirely by children.
The aim is to provide a service that lives above public transit but below ownership in terms of affordability, Harms explained.
Despite its popularity in manufacturing, for example, asbestos was eventually banned in many countries after decades of investigation into its harms.
"Burnout comes out of a system that harms its workers and also the people it is trying to serve," he says.
They also have never offered up a solution to remedy the widespread financial (and other) harms that have resulted from this.
Like many drugs, antidepressants fall into a gray area during pregnancy, with insufficient evidence to definitively prove the harms or benefits.
"A wall harms ecosystems, disrupts wildlife migration patterns, blocks vital wildlife access to food and water, and fragments wildlife communities," Sen.
Should regulators be allowed to intervene only after Americans have suffered concrete harms from data misuse, like identity or financial theft?

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