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"inertia" Definitions
  1. (usually disapproving) lack of energy; lack of desire or ability to move or change
  2. (physics) a property (= characteristic) of matter (= a substance) by which it stays still or, if moving, continues moving in a straight line unless it is acted on by a force outside itselfTopics Physics and chemistryc2

749 Sentences With "inertia"

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

Quantized inertia (QI) is an alternative theory of inertia, a property of matter that describes an object's resistance to acceleration.
FALLING INERTIA Conventional power generation from coal, gas and nuclear plants helps stabilise grid frequency because the massive turbines have a lot of inertia.
In November, SHALT shared his second EP for APR in Inertia; its track "Inertia" attempted to illustrate with sound the way bacteria are increasingly able to resist antibiotics.
One stick has the juice boxes at the ends of the stick (high moment of inertia) and one stick has them taped to the middle of the stick (low moment of inertia).
Its products may still be used, but out of inertia.
They know all about inertia in the retirement plan industry.
I would recommend some adjustment for the inertia of laws.
Inertia will persist until something big changes or goes wrong.
That leaves foreign policy, an arena also marked by inertia.
Seems obvious, but the inertia of these systems is considerable.
Scale has its own inertia, impervious to trends and whims.
The bottom line: Never bet against Congress' inertia and deadlock.
When the screenwriters focus on trivia, inertia sets in rapidly.
Often, they don't ask or give, just out of inertia.
Paradoxically, Inertia will capture the changes in landscape and communities.
The international system is prone to inertia and turf wars.
Inertia exists not only in physics, but in politics too.
It piles up through the acquisitive instinct, nostalgia and inertia.
From Silva's perspective, it basically comes down to brand inertia.
"It's a result of tax law inertia," Mr. Pegg said.
The inertia, it is sad to say, makes enough sense.
Complexity and consumer inertia are more significant hurdles to saving.
Again, the Gilded Age has parallels to this government inertia.
Jourdain said the key hurdle to SONIA adoption was inertia.
"The risk of policy inertia applies in spades," Taylor said.
The somnolent pace has amazed even those accustomed to Albany's inertia.
But it's also interesting because sometimes just inertia comes into play.
The insider style doesn't just have inertia on its side, though.
There is an unkillable amount of inertia behind the F-235.
They have reduced the president to sour frustration and even inertia.
Shake the inertia and buy your super early-bird passes now.
Institutional inertia remains a powerful force in a sprawling international body.
You can feel the inertia of the SUV resisting your inputs.
"Those projects have an inertia," said John Kilduff of Again Capital.
But Saperstein lacked the time to reverse six years of inertia.
For a new service to stand a chance, it needs inertia.
We can consider karma as the mysterious inertia of life's puzzle.
"Human beings are by nature subject to inertia," Mr. Peterson said.
New York's law, by contrast, is the product of legislative inertia.
Those kinds of posts can lead to inertia, according to Noriega.
Her mind raged like an infernal machine, or folded into inertia.
But it is slow going thanks to regulation or institutional inertia.
It's hard to break the routine and inertia of a career.
Does any of that fill you with anything but total inertia?
Even at troubled companies, this inertia can be widespread and surprising.
Automatic enrollment counters the natural human inclinations toward myopia and inertia.
Now inertia is feeding doubts that it can happen this year.
Inertia on the issue of cats will lead to further extinctions.
I've experienced the pull of inertia firsthand at my company, Hootsuite.
Headlines Brexit is feeding UK business inertia, says productivity chief on.ft.
YouTube channel The Inertia caught her ride on video (watch above).
The Legislature promised to revisit the issue, but inertia set in.
That's the benefit of user inertia that Google is also profiting from.
Durst told the prosecution "inertia" kept him from going on the run.
From that, you could calculate the change in the moment of inertia.
They're more ethnocentric and tend to have a lot of cultural inertia.
There's just not enough of it, and the government thrives on inertia.
Perhaps inevitably, however, the law has collided with bureaucratic inertia and politics.
And, because inertia favors a lower energy state, the array quickly disappears.
My intuition is that inertia and history play a huge role here.
The LDP-dominated model long suffered policy inertia and stifled policy debate.
In Chernobyl, the problem is terrifying enough to upend the usual inertia.
One is there's a huge amount of inertia and indifference around listings.
Tuck your laces in to reduce the inertia acting on the knot.
Small wonder that moving even an inch becomes a battle against inertia.
As an adult, pride and inertia have kept me on dry land.
Still, Apple has the inertia of its ecosystem to fall back on.
No comparable economy in the world today has endured such extraordinary inertia.
Inertia is powerful, and the industry of hedge-fund boosters is loud.
This inertia leaves one other possibility that is becoming increasingly likely: starvation.
Consider this an extension of the inertia that has gripped US policymaking.
I imagine the grocery store's inertia was compounded by another factor: ego.
Today, through inertia, I still have a landline in my Brooklyn apartment.
The blackened streets ooze with inertia, a dominant populationUnaware of their privilege.
No, the hatchet caught on the inertia of a feeling already gone.
Proponents are working not just against organized special interests, but simple inertia.
Finally, there is also the simple reason for perpetuating overwork: cultural inertia.
And, of course, inertia — doing nothing — is always the easiest thing to do.
Inertia, like love, makes the world go round, and keeps it going around.
For too many years I felt resigned and in a state of inertia.
What's stopping us is political inertia, which means the solution is political action.
The old guard have a force that may be just as powerful: inertia.
But banks would be unwise to depend on customer inertia and regulatory caution.
It is not just inertia and coercion that work in favour of English.
All roller coasters basically involve Newtonian physics 101: inertia, gravity, acceleration, and friction.
More weight means less acceleration, longer braking distances, less agility and more inertia.
White urged politicians worldwide to overcome their "inertia to act" on climate change.
The French government had finally decided to demolish it after months of inertia.
But the resolution does nothing to address the inertia that's squeezing teacher pay.
And he says that the five-year stretch was governed by inertia anyway.
Once in space, and headed the right direction, inertia will do the rest.
They're in turn bolder, egged on by the ineptness and inertia of Washington.
Today, the biggest obstacle standing in the way of reform is sheer inertia.
At the same time, inertia often does cause companies to underinvest in cybersecurity.
Second, policy under Powell is likely to display a fair amount of inertia.
Powell's background as a Republican is another reason to expect inertia in policy.
Overtaken by the return of business as usual, by inertia, old habits, expediency.
These children depend on the programs currently in limbo due to congressional inertia.
At times, however, the protagonist's inertia slows the narrative pace to a shuffle.
Often the most powerful force encountered when considering the entrepreneurial path is inertia.
For someone who was accustomed to being independent, the sudden inertia was maddening.
Past experience proves the budget's inertia; change creates losers, and losers mobilise to resist.
From Smith's data-driven perspective, a solution was desperately needed to break Hollywood's inertia.
Dr. Eden sees it differently for Tucson where, in her view, inertia loom large.
It was time to overcome inertia and restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, he said.
"The socket's not a shock enough," he sings, trying to shake off the inertia.
His lasting legacy won't be administrative inertia, but the corruption of the presidency itself.
Steve Schooner, from George Washington University, says there's a certain inertia to government contracting.
The AU leadership often has been criticized for its inertia and lack of decisiveness.
Get some inertia going on a flat roadway before you take on the hill.
Both the central and local bureaucracies are hobbled by corruption, inertia and conflicting regulations.
There's an inertia that will leave it in its position for years to come.
Growth has been slowed by war in neighbouring Syria and years of political inertia.
The ubiquity of this view may account for the inertia of mainstream political parties.
The American auto industry is their ultimate example of failed thinking and undisrupted inertia.
The result was political inertia and a total loss of credibility with the voters.
President Trump must not allow bureaucratic inertia to block his efforts against Iran's threat.
Politics aside, the Congressional "inertia" is now in overdrive due to the election year.
This is meant to counter bureaucratic inertia in spectrum management, blocking dynamic market forces.
People are capable of doing extraordinary things in the season of inertia and gloom.
And inertia and plan complexity are powerful obstacles to getting participants to make changes.
Following the EP's title, "Inertia 1" is carried by a sense of unpredictable, off-the-radar propulsion, definitely evoking a speculative, almost sci-fi idea of "opposite" inertia, in which a basic principle of physics as we know it might not exactly apply.
The moment of inertia tells you how difficult it is to change its rotational motion.
How does one adjust the course of a curriculum that's been gathering inertia for decades?
He explained this concept to the Guardian in 2014: Inertia is an incredibly powerful force.
Previous reform attempts led by Saudi's aging rulers faltered for lack of will or inertia.
But while politicians argue themselves into inertia, business lacks the luxury of waiting for resolutions.
Repurposing an existing word is harder; the inertia of the older meaning must be overcome.
No, but it's heartening to see these rather inertia-bound companies finally embrace the future.
You can (usually) always recover from a bad decision; it's inertia that will get you.
The public isn't particularly gung-ho about it, but there's a fair bit of inertia.
With no impetus for wider prescribing from doctors, patients or governments, inertia and bureaucracy rule.
This time spent awake in bed allows sleep inertia to fade before you start moving.
"New York's specialty is a zest for inertia," New York magazine quoted him as saying.
Newton's universe was governed by inertia and motion, a clockwork cosmos run by inviolable laws.
Inertia within Congress and the executive branch makes reducing the scope of federal activity difficult.
Jake Bernstein: There's a lot of bureaucratic inertia and timidity in the IRS for sure.
The strong, sad inertia of her journey is at once gripping and sickening to watch.
For Anohni, the evils that surround us are ambient, the products of inertia and indifference.
As some observers have pointed out, a measure of denial and inertia is at play.
Moore gives you a lot to chew on here: workplace ethics, geographic inertia, family loyalty.
Congressional politics, a volatile Arab world and sheer inertia will preserve it in some form.
Her master class in the danger of organizational inertia was the GM ignition switch crisis.
Moreover, the sheer inertia of existing costs, prices, budgets, and administrative systems cannot be doubted.
Out of inertia or confusion or both, the audience didn't applaud until he stood up.
This is in part the result of bureaucratic inertia and a lack of political interest.
The result is an impossibly large, hard-to-steer organization with a lot of inertia.
Sure, unexpected cross-seeds are sown that might push back against collective amnesia and inertia.
Inside the EU the alternative to fudge is not frictionless decision-making, but gridlock and inertia.
Speaking to CNBC on Monday, Marine Le Pen, claimed that Merkel is a "force of inertia".
Then, the introduction of a person in an astronaut's suit, which makes the inertia terribly strange.
But institutional inertia and high cost of equipment mean VR trainers are still not widely used.
Asians have to wean themselves off their age-old inertia of relying on export sales - i.e.
Will the forces of change ultimately be enough to overcome the inertia of the current system?
The protests have shattered years of political inertia and unsettled Algeria's opaque but powerful security establishment.
"QI explains inertia for the first time," McCulloch said at a TED talk earlier this year.
Horror stories of long waits for treatment, bureaucratic inertia, fraud, incompetence, cover-ups and politics abound.
In the face of such inertia, the World Bank has withheld a separate package of support.
My point is that sometimes you need incremental pieces of legislation to overcome the institutional inertia.
While the Iron Man armor may protect Tony from impacts and penetration, it can't stop inertia.
Donio said the biggest challenge she faces at Axiom is the "inertia" within the legal industry.
I close the folder slowly, letting the inertia of my hand smooth over the cardstock cover.
People are free to opt out, but inertia is on the side of the preferred outcome.
In other words, what's going on now goes beyond the inertia and stagnation of the past.
We know how inertia has rattled her nerves, but the risks she takes are staggeringly dangerous.
Inertia and ignorance are among the reasons many do not enroll in employer-sponsored retirement plans.
But the combination of inertia and ego inside presidential campaigns usually stops these kinds of arrangements.
So could inertia; sinking millions of state dollars into census outreach is a fairly new idea.
And there's likely a fair amount of inertia to see the indictment process play out further.
"We had to overcome that Soviet inertia and make people believe in themselves," Ms. Gluckman said.
In an off-season of inertia for many teams, the Nationals have sprinted to spring training.
Many rappers who partake in this mode have also indulged in torpor and a sodden inertia.
Even as people mock the inertia in the TV advertising business, it exists in digital as well.
Such terms persist, he said, due to factors including simple inertia and the human propensity for benchmarks.
Perhaps the ships use an inertia field of some kind to prevent everyone from experiencing high accelerations.
While both parties speak of an urgent need for immigration reform, inertia tends to win the day.
The fight against corruption may have scared officials, but even fear is no match for bureaucratic inertia.
In the end, the obstinate forces of tradition and inertia stymied the administration's move from Bankova Street.
The defence minister has battled against all sorts of inertia in her bid to modernise the Bundeswehr.
Still, frustration with the inertia of Google's self-driving car looks to be hitting its own ranks.
Once enough gravitational inertia is acquired, the probe would retract its sails for the long journey ahead.
All this is intended to ensure that Mr Prayuth remains prime minister, despite his inertia and ineptitude.
Numerous undertakings have explored these problems, but past projects have faced inertia in working to implement changes.
But it has dismayed officials, many of whom have responded with passive resistance and fear-driven inertia.
Tragedy has a habit of compelling its survivors toward a kind of obliterating inertia or relentless activism.
Again, this is not the fault of individual teachers — but of political pressures and management-by-inertia.
Because the ethical, business and financial reasons for change are finally poised to overtake the industry's inertia.
Legislation that would slap new financial penalties on Russia is running into a familiar obstacle: congressional inertia.
Still, if the play's characters suffer from inertia, its themes gather beautifully and stick to the ribs.
"One of the most powerful forces in government is inertia," Mr. Pai told the group in April.
And though this seems like an obvious conclusion, how often are we writers victims of indoor inertia?
For those keen to hit the market now, there are ways to get around the legislative inertia.
"This troubling matter was raised with Fox five weeks ago but was met with inertia," he said.
It's the product of the angular velocity (how fast it spins—represented with the symbol ω) and the moment of inertia (using the symbol I). I think most people are OK with the idea of the angular velocity—but the moment of inertia thing is a bit more complicated.
The sheer inertia slowing changes to all this, so easily underestimated by commentators, is why politics needs Roundheads.
Frankly, it's unclear how they've been able to secure any more money at all other than sheer inertia.
Oh, to make things more fun I gave the higher moment of inertia stick to the stronger girl.
So turning to the January employment situation report reminds us that the economy has inertia on its side.
He is engaged in the same struggle that Mr Lou waged, against the vast inertia of local officialdom.
The message of the state's inertia seemed clear enough: some lives, and deaths, deserve more dignity than others.
Unfortunately, given inertia, we may have to wait for the intentional Chernobyl to take place to get action.
It's Sur-sha (rhymes with "inertia") Row-nin — as the Ladybird star has explained on Saturday Night Live.
Of course, it's not just inertia that will keep the diaspora of Snapchat talent within L.A.'s orbit.
This was a lot of fun to make because there was a lot of inertia in the process.
It's not time to panic: Apple remains a healthy company and could survive on inertia alone for years.
Agencies will also need incentives and clear direction to overcome institutional inertia and prioritize spending for new systems.
Zindel tells TMZ ... "This troubling matter was raised with Fox five weeks ago but was met with inertia."
Britain is the "pen holder" on this file at the Security Council and has no excuse for inertia.
It's just one example of path dependence in energy — choices, once made, tend to perpetuate themselves through inertia.
I was always half-kidding, but jokes have a way of dressing up inertia in a glossy armor.
It's an approach that serves the band well, as their own natural inertia seems to keep everything together.
For decades, an uneasy mix of politics and journalism have led to management problems, turf battles and inertia.
The best argument in its favor is simply inertia: Any reforms might backfire, with unforeseen and adverse consequences.
Germany is also an interesting case study in the inertia of sexism, despite the symbolism of Angela Merkel.
Operating since 2015, the system uses grid electricity to accelerate the flywheels, which maintain their speed through inertia.
However, that sometimes benign inertia is not what the people who coined that term meant by deep state.
These actions, disagreement between states over financial burdens, and inertia by authorities are also slowing related grid expansions.
The kids of Stoneman Douglas Elementary school did not bust inertia in Congress over changing federal gun laws.
Thus, Congress and the president share concurrent authority unless Congress, by "inertia, indifference or quiescence," fails to act.
For various reasons — including bureaucratic inertia and penny-pinching — many railroads still don't have functioning systems in place.
I would like to be, but Cesare Marchetti's evidence of the inertia inherent in energy transitions haunts me.
"You need a movement to fight the inertia of the system," he said, sipping a can of Coke.
Yet, I had let the inertia of doing take deep root without realizing what was happening to me.
It also means that for the sake of inertia if nothing else, many states will stay within Obamacare.
One is just inertia — that this is the system that we have and we have to accept it.
Every moment of the hands-on preview felt like a never-ending free fall into pure inertia and exhilaration.
Their absence compounds the failure caused by an absence of strategy, leaving these agencies adrift, driven mostly by inertia.
Growth and state revenues have been low for years, undermined by war in neighboring Syria and domestic political inertia.
My instinctive answer with regard to both E3 and the Oscars is that it's simply a matter of inertia.
Angular velocity and moment of inertia are the two concepts at work here, and they have an inverse relationship.
But even less controversial harm-reduction policies are being stymied by governmental inertia and a misunderstanding of the evidence.
The Museum's inertia has turned the screw, and we refuse further complicity with Kanders and his technologies of violence.
Inertia will keep some clients from moving, said Edward J. Kohlhepp Sr., owner and president of Kohlhepp Investment Advisors.
But we can't infer from Congress' inertia that the President lacks authority to take today's actions on his own.
Critics say his presidency has been marred by inertia and little progress has been made on those key policies.
Only 3 percent of consumers and 4 percent of business customers change banks in any year due to inertia.
Tin's inertia is all the more remarkable because it is a metal with an underlying narrative of supply deficit.
This series, called Inertia, continues Steve Giovinco's landscape work, and will take place largely at dawn, twilight, and nighttime.
It makes it feel like the software on the screen has real weight and inertia, and I love it.
Amirpour is still dealing in long, pregnant pauses, and in the struggle between attraction and repulsion, inertia and action.
But Ricard had inherited "a very, very heavy structure in terms of inertia and culture", the same source said.
Without full-time committed, competent and credible senior-level support, bureaucratic inertia can and will cause progress to falter.
Japanese politics once symbolized gerontocratic inertia with the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) wielding monopolistic power virtually unchallenged since 1955.
But in the case of climate, this deliberation has been accompanied by inertia born of bureaucratic caution and politics.
On "Sullen Girl," Apple explores the sense of inertia she felt after being raped at the age of 12.
Given the state of inertia among key Democratic leaders, it might not happen for this or any other reason.
However, inertia and policy perversity block this in both energy and carbon removal, the former making the latter problematic.
Intense agitation may be the most visceral way that the human body can react to the shattering of inertia.
Further delays and inertia in Albany promise that more New Yorkers will suffer from the horror of wrongful conviction.
Growth and state revenues have been low for years, undermined by war in neighbor Syria and domestic political inertia.
Inertia is equal parts laziness and complacency … and in the end it's a surefire way to kill your business.
The president is constrained by layer after layer of checks and balances, veto points, entrenched interests, and institutional inertia.
It moves, maybe some progress is made if we're all lucky, but it's the law of inertia, I guess.
I just think she feels a sort of inertia that is inescapable, that she's recommitted to this marriage countless times.
Currently, he is restrained only by the lingering professionalism of public servants and a few thin threads of institutional inertia.
The inertia and momentum of the government does not naturally lend itself to new methods of communication, thinking and negotiation.
Traditionally that role has been played by "spinning reserves," plants that are already running (have inertia) and can ramp quickly.
Beyond curating your alarm clock noise, there are a few habits that have been shown to help reduce sleep inertia.
"There's an inertia in family spending habits, these are routine decisions," said Angel Laborda, an economist at think tank Funcas.
Many Republicans expect more retirements are coming soon, as Republicans grow frustrated with a toxic political environment and congressional inertia.
And it will take effort to cast off the idle inertia and fear of awkwardness that keeps us from communicating.
In part, the opposition is down to bureaucratic inertia and the safeguarding by Vatican bigwigs of their powers and privileges.
Its courts' reputation has been built over many years, and the forces of inertia stop people from changing contract terms.
Inertia, after all, is the chief reason why America's president still gets to pick people like him to run one.
Heavier materials act like miniature flywheels, adding inertia, but they only work if both sides are the exact same weight.
If you don't give customers sufficient reasons to make a change, you will encounter too much inertia to close business.
Inertia is particularly strong in Congress, which will also be working through massive policy shifts on health care and immigration.
In response, McCulloch proposed the quantized inertia theory, which accounts for an object's inertial mass independent of its gravitational mass.
It's a compelling theory, but it presents a kind of chicken-and-egg problem akin to the law of inertia.
There are also times when that urge to quit comes from frustration or fear, or even a sort of inertia.
Even if the armor offered protection from impact, the inertia of those movements would turn Tony Stark into chunky stew.
As an example of how insidious institutional inertia can be, my company requested data from the Commerce Department in 2011.
Creativity requires us to break out of the inertia of day-to-day tasks and think about the big picture.
One issue is simple inertia — for years advertisers have followed research that says the mother is the main household purchaser.
The boldness and urgency of a proposed Green New Deal has shaken Washington's longstanding "inside the beltway" climate change inertia.
Forces that would normally slow the conflict's inertia are absent, allowing it to continue far longer than it otherwise would.
For some reason, you're still there, grinding your teeth hours later, light pouring in, nailed to the dancefloor sheer inertia.
This estimate did not include overcoming non-technical barriers to efficiency, such as limited information, institutional inertia and market imperfections.
They don't discuss or refine; Hannity nudges Trump on something like a political swing set and inertia does the rest.
Buhari's extended leave could hurt already-shaky confidence in his administration amid criticism that the government is gripped by inertia.
Otherwise you'll fall into the inertia of sitting at your desk all day and never leaving the house at night.
An enduring symbol of Greek bureaucratic inertia is the vast Elliniko area in southern Athens once occupied by the airport.
Unfortunately, political and institutional inertia has prevented us from putting in place the policies needed to effectively combat this epidemic.
Prevent the problem Of course the best way to tackle sleep inertia is to prevent it in the first place.
I tend to think of it as lagging the inertia in our political system, combined with a lack of trust.
If you want growth and evolution — that is, if the monarchy wants to modernize — emotional inertia can't be an option.
The war continued unabated, as if an odd inertia had set in without anyone realizing the end would ever come.
But those people are up against institutional laziness and inertia that they eventually learn to accept as immutable and absolute.
The self-inflicted chaos, suspicion and inertia—and the brutal self-interest that lurks beneath—acidly capture the national mood.
But I worry that the flip side of this capacity for resilience is inertia in the face of doomsday warnings.
So it's not clear that simply replicating inertia is the way for Democrats to appeal to a new generation of voters.
I came offstage bobbing in a sea of emotional inertia and physical exhaustion, my brain and my body screaming for stability.
Driver's performance serves as a masterclass in making passivity and inertia into drama and profundity — for an actor, it's practically alchemy.
Sometimes in modern Washington, even the threat of a terrible price to pay cannot shake the capital out of its inertia.
British government efforts to make it easier to switch bank accounts have had limited success due to customer inertia, for example.
When you start the machinery of the U.S. military in motion, sometimes inertia just takes you the rest of the way.
Saoirse Ronan, Sur-sha (rhymes with "inertia") Row-nin, the Irish actress nominated for Best Actress for her role in Brooklyn.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the general objective remained in Russian scientific circles, driven on, perhaps, by institutional inertia.
"Brazil has become undoubtedly a superpower in surfing," said Zach Weisberg, founder of The Inertia and former editor of Surfer Magazine.
Criminal justice reform is moving again at the federal level after more than a year of inertia and disappointment for advocates.
William Siemer, the acting deputy inspector general of the USPS's inspector general's office, indicated it was a case of institutional inertia.
A more subtle problem also lies behind the Fed's inertia: it is hard to tell how loose monetary policy really is.
After 50 years of inertia, since creating Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, the ACA was a first step in this direction.
So is inertia: In a global capitalist culture, excess stuff arrives all but unbidden and then proves almost impossible to unload.
Momentum may eventually build up for national level reform, but in the meantime, despite inertia in Washington, real action is happening.
Newton's law of inertia tells us that an object going straight will keep going straight until something makes it change direction.
Unlike his predecessor, this Major League Baseball commissioner is not bound by inertia as if it was its own unwritten rule.
As Chancellor Merkel saw it, the alternative to sending back the refugees was political inertia at best, political cataclysm at worst.
They found that the inertia created by swinging your feet forward whips the loops and loose ends of the laces forward.
With little plot or dialogue, this farcical novel about inertia sustains momentum by the wit of its quirky Rube Goldberg prose.
Wang is looking to break the inertia by making it cheaper to recycle plastic -- and not just some plastics, but all.
Any longer than that and you're likely to wake up with sleep inertia, which will leave you even groggier than before.
Within days of the killing, the investigation fell into the sort of inertia that plagues many homicide cases in the Bronx.
In the case of the rotten watermelon, we see three of the worst entrepreneurial bad habits converge: inertia, ego and fear.
Donald Trump owes his (relative) resilience to the inertia of medium-information voters enjoying a decent economy, not to YouTube radicalism.
Otherwise we may find ourselves — indeed, already find ourselves — in wars without rationale and policies driven by nothing other than inertia.
On a day of inertia and theatrics in Washington, the partisan disconnect fueling the deadlock was on full — sometimes absurd — display.
But as it does so, it is inhibited by the inertia of masses in movement, the other 26 European Union states.
The result of this increasing tension is an implosion, or a kind of negative creation through which velocity acquiesces into inertia.
It has an immense amount of inertia, we are all stuck in it, and it preys on our laziness as consumers.
It's tough to overcome the inertia of political incumbency, and these are districts that elected moderate Republicans in the first place.
If there's a hero to the Painted Ruins excavation, it's probably Chris Taylor, who salvaged the band from potentially fatal inertia.
A variety of factors can lull us into relationship complacency—compatibility, friendship, shared interests, inertia, fear of being single or low expectations.
The major hurdles to accomplishing that, Moulin and others told me, are a mix of stigma, misconceptions about addiction, and institutional inertia.
But many primary care doctors simply refill the opioid prescription for another 30 days or longer, a phenomenon Barnett calls clinical inertia.
Conventional power generation from coal, gas and nuclear plants helps stabilise grid frequency because the massive turbines have a lot of inertia.
Old habits die hard, so when an entrepreneur sets out to disrupt the status quo, can the fight against inertia be won?
The agreement also moves the department away from the habit of keeping terrorism investigations open through inertia for years, never bringing charges.
Conventional power generation from coal, gas and nuclear plants helps stabilize grid frequency because the massive turbines have a lot of inertia.
In South-East Asia, by contrast, cronyism and inertia are consequences of an economy that is unfair to those at the bottom.
To change that future, to raise that trajectory, requires an active act of will to overcome the inertia that all businesses face.
This results in a natural urgency toward innovation, as opposed to the inertia prompted by layers of bureaucracy and entrenched government politics.
Emotional inertia will never be as bad as the threat of rape, domestic violence, disappearing reproductive rights, or the lingering pay gap.
We've seen similar rants from other unregulated companies as they run headlong into the red tape and inertia inherent to the establishment.
He rode down the valley, too full of a deadly inertia of spirit to find satisfaction in the sight of his land.
An absence of deputy leadership in areas such as acquisitions, human capital and agency budgets, could lead to inertia in these areas.
Granted, inertia is only partly to blame for why you're not prone to give your benefits package the fine-tooth comb treatment.
His inertia is such that he is incapable of making a plan, but it "generally happens" that he masturbates twice on Saturdays.
Then the front went down, the back, the front, the back, and then you lose forward inertia and come to a stop.
"There's no reason other than old colonialist inertia to continue using a Russian spelling for a Ukrainian city name," Dr. Shevchuk said.
"After many years of inertia, we are finally close to a definitive solution to protect both the lagoon and tourism," he said.
Inertia and a strong faith in company leadership played a role in holding on to company stock, but so did company policies.
"They're not available here because of government inertia, and it's unconscionable," he says, speaking with characteristic speed, enunciating every syllable for emphasis.
The public dialogue on immigration tends to be a mess, albeit a mess that helps explain the inertia that has enveloped policymaking.
It was a generator of misery and paralysis on an epic scale — lives wasted, hopes quashed, youths reduced to idleness and inertia.
"This feels harder than 2013; it feels like a steeper hill to climb because of the inertia driven by the president," Rep.
He found his beginnings in screamo, punk, and hardcore with cult Italian bands such as Endless Inertia, Revolution Summer, and Smart Cops.
There's a lot of inertia tied in here, that feeling of being surprised yet not being surprised at all, due to circumstances.
Janison: A Sanders-like "enough with the centrism" on issues; Crowley inertia, long term changes in the district, and Trump-baited energy.
Even with favorable economics, human and institutional inertia is such that the remaining coal plants could take a long time to die.
Ninety percent of the time, I ended up writing more than three sentences because inertia took hold and I just kept writing.
"The demonstrations broke the state of silence and inertia among Gazans and showed the reality of Hamas," said Mr. Abed, the activist.
The proven way to boost participation for 401(k) plans is to automatically enroll employees, combating the inertia that defines human nature.
Part of the work of the next few decades is to imagine and build a better future rather than letting inertia reign.
Inertia and ego aside, a big part of the reason the store wouldn't slice up the watermelon was probably simple risk-aversion.
I always found it frustrating, but now that I'm on the board I can see why the process has so much inertia.
Basically, the moment of inertia is a property of an object that depends on the distribution of the mass about the rotation axis.
It is a product of the moment of inertia and the angular velocity—which is a measure of how fast something is rotating.
Tanabe used nothing but tiger bamboo, and the work's four ascending tubes stay in place with sheer inertia and a couple of hooks.
The belief that court approval was needed meant doctors often felt absolved of responsibility for decisions, which led to "inertia", says Ms Kitzinger.
Much of their reluctance can be put down to bureaucratic inertia—and the sheer difficulty of the process of tracking who gets what.
Your spending habits start getting engrained and you get a job and the career path often has a kind of inertia to it.
"Agencies are very aware of the need to change," he says, but are burdened with a busy schedule — plus many decades of inertia.
You will have to estimate the mass and the moment of inertia for the Navoo (or you could assume it's a hollow cylinder).
And today they're back with a new ripper, "Arrow," as well as the news that they've signed to Inertia Music and Partisan Records!
Partly it was inertia: I'd got those pages and folders arranged to the point where app locations were embedded in my muscle memory.
Doing so means pushing against elements of human nature, the greed of wealthy incumbents, and the sheer inertia of anachronistic mechanisms of governance.
Therapists then help patients break free of the bonds of their inertia and passivity by helping them re-engage in normal, everyday activities.
Woodward says inertia results through the gravitational attraction of all the objects in the universe, whose gravitational force is related to their mass.
The physics community is deeply divided on the reality of quantized inertia, but they won't have to wait much longer for a resolution.
Now that immediate passion has faded, the inertia of our daily desires—the "lust" of the song's title—return us toward the familiar.
The inertia of the climate system means that even if carbon emissions were halted tomorrow, the sea would continue to rise for centuries.
Presidential advisers, cabinet secretaries, and department heads come and go in a Twitter-fueled tizzy, sowing confusion and institutional inertia in their wake.
To make warm biology out of cold physics, organisms had to evolve their own laws to counter the inevitabilities of inertia and decay.
Likewise, residents in cities that are run by essentially one party tend toward inertia, since the stakes in local elections seem relatively low.
Drawing public support for this legislation will help overcome the inertia and indifference that so far has stalled the bill's passage through Congress.
Just one year ago we could, and he explained friction and inertia to my son, letting him push on his wheelchair to demonstrate.
She strode around her classroom with the purposeful gait of a seasoned performer and an animation that contrasted with her students' sleepy inertia.
Most advocacy groups are trying to be patient, chalking the delays up to the inevitable inertia of a giant bureaucracy forced to change.
This bill is intended to overcome the inertia in the industry and to ensure that TV storytellers are as diverse as TV audiences.
For more than a year, the British public had shown increasing signs of hostility toward Germany and disaffection with the prime minister's inertia.
Very large objects—house-size or larger—have enough inertia to punch through the atmosphere and hit the ground without losing much speed.
Unlike the United States, China doesn't have to overcome the inertia of a robust and entrenched nuclear industry with a 70-year history.
This lack of high-level diplomatic appointees able to manage the complex situation adds to the inertia and silence on the US end.
So the mythmaking continues, institutional inertia persists and the Pentagon keeps issuing deployment orders to maintain a 13,000-person presence in the country.
Whispers of a shake-up partly explain a sense of inertia as Airbus lost on orders to Boeing at last week's Paris Airshow.
And since abandonment entails both effort and risk, the law ought to provide enough encouragement to overcome the inertia of automatic copyright protection.
Virtually everyone (except the subsidized industries) recognizes their folly by now, but inertia and political influence peddling have kept them stumbling on like zombies.
Windfarms, solar generators, distributed generation, and interconnectors with neighbouring grids in Scandinavia and continental Europe do not provide the same inertia and frequency stabilisation.
Sleep inertia typically lasts for up to 30 minutes after waking and has been shown to extend for two to four hours, McFarlane says.
"It's all about the change in moment of inertia," says John Di Bartolo, an applied physicist at New York University Tandon School of Engineering.
Discounted fixed-price fixed-term contracts are designed to attract new business, or prevent defections, while the standard variable rate tariffs exploit customer inertia.
Windfarms, solar generators, distributed generation, and interconnectors with neighboring grids in Scandinavia and continental Europe do not provide the same inertia and frequency stabilization.
So far, it mostly hasn't worked, a tribute to institutional inertia and the integrity of the men and women working at the relevant agencies.
But today in the age of cable and the Internet, it is a simply another dinosaur protected by elite special interests, nostalgia, and inertia.
But people who have left said projects are more likely to die because of organizational inertia — not because their leaders kill them off themselves.
"When I returned to Italy I found a certain inertia when it came to China," Geraci, a former economics professor, told Reuters last month.
In this case, we have different definitions by different stakeholders sowing inertia and a disunity of effort, with the taxpayer picking up the tab.
"This process has given us the time to choose who we want to be as a party, not let inertia decide for us," Rep.
Gregory's Inertia 30 makes it easy to stay hydrated while commuting with its easily accessible water tube, ample interior storage, and comfortable shoulder harness.
Ms. Goodman said gridlock and inertia were bad because they discourage innovation in the marketplace, which could make mortgages more widely available to consumers.
A door opens, a mother (Sarah Adler) collapses and a father (Lior Ashkenazi) stands by in shocked inertia as soldiers tend to the woman.
For now, most media outlets are unwilling to make a change if no one else is, creating an inertia loop whereby inaction begets inaction.
For now, most media outlets are unwilling to make a change if no one else is, creating an inertia loop whereby inaction begets inaction.
It was all empty, of course, but the message was very much a reaction against all of the staleness and inertia I'm talking about.
The House's formal impeachment inquiry is just 10 days old, but has swiftly transcended D.C. inertia and swept in huge swaths of America's government.
We, the young people organizing and participating in a global strike this Friday, will not sit around and allow ignorance and inertia to win.
Every camera setup is a study in inertia; every other cut is a beat or two behind where a punch line needs to land.
York-based producer SHALT today shares a vigorously germinating new track in "Resistant," off his forthcoming Inertia EP on Los Angeles' Astral Plane Recordings.
Where there has only been increasing environmental destruction and political inertia, this would certainly pressure the federal government to rethink its stance on weed.
In his review of the 1974 version, Roger Ebert praised that film's comic sensibility, which kept its cramped, character-heavy story from succumbing to inertia.
Moment of inertia is a term physicists use to describe a body's tendency to resist rotation; the smaller it is, the easier an object spins.
FIGHTING INERTIA For consumers trying to figure out where to keep their cash, the first thing to consider is what your savings rate is now.
" Parkland shooting survivor and activist David Hogg also expressed his regret at inertia regarding gun control legislation, but also his willingness to continue the "fight.
"We remain very disappointed not only with the sales numbers but by the inertia within the business," said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail.
"The inertia and lack of definition of a security strategy by the government has allowed regional armed conflicts to spin out of control," Ernst said.
What will occur if either inertia or procrastination dominates decision making, and what is the best and worst that can result from such a choice?
Greenpeace suggested two possibilities: that the directives may still apply to the UK if it stays part of the energy single market, and simple inertia.
"After I'd lost my dad, I had this horrible [paralyzing] inertia — and no one in my family was capable of dealing with it," he said.
Mach's principle–the idea that local inertia is determined by distant masses and the structure of the universe at large—could be a starting point.
It doesn't quite feel that way to me, but perhaps the differences come down to how the different operating systems tune their inertia on scrolling.
The Tacx NEO 2 Smart Indoor Trainer features dynamic inertia, which compensates for incline, speed, and weight to provide a smooth and realistic ride feel.
And avoiding bad press that stems from regulatory issues is especially critical in Australia, as consumer inertia is already higher than in more competitive markets.
Inertia. The annual survey found only 210% of U.S. adults have a will or living trust, and that number is much lower among younger Americans.
British workers in can choose to opt out of automatic enrollment, but fewer than 10 percent have done so because inertia is a powerful force.
Both explanations involve a lot of wishful thinking, fueled by a lack of understanding about the inertia in the physical, technological and political-economic systems.
Nonetheless, due to institutional inertia, US politics still gives geographical spread enormous weight, so despite getting fewer votes, Republicans now control every branch of government.
It was crucial that the terrifying inertia Offred projects had to remain at the forefront of Hulu's TV adaptation of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.
Inertia alone suggests that millions of Americans with hearing loss will get better access to assistance within the three-year time frame of the legislation.
You have to think that what can be automated, likely will be now, given that we've had a lot of inertia through the good times.
While Mr. Jones just arrived from Alabama, most of the others have been venting their frustrations over the polarized nature and inertia of the Senate.
"This process has given us the time to choose who we want to be as a party, not let inertia decide for us," Moulton added.
Letter To the Editor: "Labor Shortages Slowing Growth of U.S. Economy" (front page, May 22) demonstrates how industries get caught up in their own inertia.
Sleep inertia can also happen when waking from a daytime snooze that went long, well past the 20 minute power nap that might refresh you.
Attributing it to inertia, boredom, or technology is a lightweight cop-out, not to mention that all of those are just screens for deeper issues.
Werwath left our conversation with a clarion call and a strong position again inertia and his city's history of keeping its head in the sand.
If I don't roll out of bed immediately, inertia will set in and after that it's anybody's guess as to when I'll actually get moving.
Given the obstructionism of congressional Republicans, and the inherent inertia of the legislative process, not using pen and phone would simply have meant fewer achievements.
If leaders answer the inertia question with a nod and a prayer, the voters will have their chance to make their views known in November.
Her untethering from reality is echoed in the film's matter-of-fact departure from realism, and her inertia is the expression of an overwhelming sorrow.
Maybe entering my 40s is the root here, but suddenly I'm a little more receptive to being told to end a period of sustained inertia.
And restrained, reserving its most powerful sound for dramatic effect, which added a sense of theater to a piece whose plot often verges on inertia.
But the inertia behind the Electoral College is strong, which is why it needs vocal opponents making their case as loudly and often as possible.
In addition to political inertia, the restrictionist argument that "219,000 charming children will all too quickly grow into 20,000 ugly adults" was simply too strong.
But sadly, the DOJ and DEA are playing politics with science and lives, and instead big government inertia and red tape are blocking critical research.
Inertia is also a factor: Some traditional pollsters are relatively unfamiliar with voter files or have little capacity to handle and model very large data sets.
Given the originality of her oblique style, near-documentary fascination with large families and taste for depicting provincial inertia, Ms. Martel both excites and confounds viewers.
Or you could look at the inertia and incompetence of the Trump administration and say our institutions are holding the line and checking Trump's worst instincts.
Jeff Flake, one of the leaders of bipartisan negotiations in the Senate that failed in February, said the House passing a bill could break the inertia.
It has incredible inertia, with buyers and sellers both gravitating back to it because it aggregates the most supply and demand, despite its lack of features.
"The market in Asia is basically anywhere between $5.50-$5.80, its pretty wide and nobody exactly knows ... there's a lot of inertia," one trading source said.
Most states of emergency and constitutional dictatorships eventually end, but the war on terror, as the book's subtitle suggests, rolls on with a seemingly unstoppable inertia.
All of which is to say that despite the larger demographic inertia, there's potential for progress within different categories that could help set a new tone.
Friedman's own time at the Pumpkin is filled with a sense of inertia and pointlessness — like the trench warfare of World War I, he often notes.
FDA's and FTC's inexplicable inertia, to date, in this area essentially gives organic marketers a green light to continue turning consumer ignorance into fear and profit.
The inertia has deeply frustrated government watchdog groups who have repeatedly gathered in the Capitol to push for anticorruption measures, and did so again on Tuesday.
Postwar Italy was fragile, torn between the West and Communism, between "scaling the Alps" and succumbing to the Mafia-suffused inertia of the south, or mezzogiorno.
The swiftness and near-unanimity with which the repeal passed suggests the regulations had remained in place not out of necessity but out of pure inertia.
There was, God knows, much that was insane about our relationship to the statue: the compulsive selfies, the inertia of the Italian bureaucracy, the DAVID MANIA.
Sometimes, the relationship starts out great but erodes over time or lingers for years without inertia, or you call it off for small, Seinfeld-y reasons.
Instead, we find them stuck on the same sofas, cruising the same struggling streets and hamstrung by the same old obstacles (rap sheets and general inertia).
So props to "Alone Together" for finding a new kind of pairing, even though that pairing is more of a listless inertia than an actual bond.
Whether through political inertia or the influence of Big Oil, the industry has been getting a sweetheart deal from taxpayers for, well, about a hundred years.
Clearly, Ms. Churchill wants the audience to endure in real time the inertia that stifled change in 1647 and so much human potential over the centuries.
Take "The Lazy River," in which a first-person narrator considers the pool attraction at a resort in southern Spain as a metaphor for modern inertia.
Trump's frustration with Fed inertia boiled over into a late-August presidential tweet, howling at who was the bigger "enemy": Powell or Chinese President Xi Jinping.
As the scale of the theft sank in that weekend, the Fed's reliance on SWIFT messaging, its lack of alternative communications and its inertia became apparent.
"The global growth trend will slow, policy inertia and tighter credit will intensify the weakness in liquidity and geopolitics will remain at the forefront," he added.
Behind the panels are sensors and all the stuff that makes the VR magic happen, including an "accelerometer, gyroscope and IMU [inertia measurement unit]," Reveley says.
Two court decisions are further throwing the DACA timeline into limbo and helping feed Congress's inertia, where lawmakers frequently wait until deadlines to tackle any legislation.Sen.
We could build on evidence showing the remarkable power of inertia, and facilitate state adoption of "auto IRAs" that automatically enroll workers in a saving plan.
This is the second time they've seen each other face-to-face: Exactly one year ago today, Polar Inertia made his successful debut at the antro.
But for any large, complex, manufactured item, you have an entire supply chain, and that supply chain has on the order of six months of inertia.
In state and county government offices, emails show mounting concern over the outbreak, but bureaucratic inertia even as people like Ms. Taylor were fighting for their lives.
Too scared to take a chance on anything, he uses his mother's sudden death, and his father's alleged reliance on him, as an excuse for his inertia.
If you have more mass further away from the axis of rotation, the moment of inertia is larger than if that was was close to the axis.
Based on previous work, the researchers already knew that when a water droplet hits a surface, its inertia creates both an air bubble and an air cavity.
Too many of his other reforms have yet to take effect, although in some cases that is because of the inertia Mr Renzi is trying to overcome.
There's a tendency here, in part because of our Cold War inertia, to see Putin as this creature with his tentacles in every part of the country.
It's been stoked over the years by misinformation and rumor, fertilized by inertia and cowardice, co-opted for malevolent agendas that have nothing to do with justice.
But a looming budget crisis and debt repayments, coupled with political inertia, may prevent the 22014-year-old premier-designate from escaping the fate of his predecessors.
For instance, employees who are auto-enrolled into plans at a low rate may succumb to inertia and be less inclined to increase their deferrals over time.
This is the senseless design inertia that the UK's Starling Bank is rowing against with its newly unveiled portrait card design, which was spotted by Brand New.
It attracted only 30,000 subscribers and failed to meet its targets, which analysts attributed to customer inertia and tight competition from existing telcos in the small country.
Inertia can take on a life of its own; a body at rest tends to stay at rest, after all, which leads to feeling that much droopier.
If an object's mass changes during acceleration because some of the force is temporarily stored in object, so too does its inertia, or resistance to that acceleration.
Hitomi had two ways to determine its position in space: a star tracker, which measures the positions of stars, and a sensor that measures the spacecraft's inertia.
The Pentagon culture tends to reflect an inbuilt inertia that militates against the introduction of new systems until there is no alternative, which is now the case.
And so things that get in the culture, unless you really look at them and say, "Okay, we have to change," the inertia will keep them there.
Incapable of either radical reformulation or new creativity, they survived by inertia, even if there are still some today who, anachronistically, would like to propose [them] again.
But after a while, all that consistency can start to feel claustrophobic; a lack of upward growth can give way to a feeling of inertia and dormancy.
At a certain point, you might start trying to consume your fellow players, either by cornering them or splitting yourself in half for a predatory inertia boost.
In July, Van Wagenen criticized the Mets for "inertia" and suggested that deGrom should be traded if the team did not want to give him an extension.
If not even Trump can fully bend the Republican base to his will at this point, it is because doing so would buck decades' worth of inertia.
In experiments of our own, we were able to tease apart these two alternatives, and we found that the evidence was more consistent with the "inertia" explanation.
A series of election defeats, coupled with legislative inertia through much of the year, has made him the target of criticism, primarily from outside the White House.
During a weeklong visit to the Papua New Guinea island of Manus late last year, where more than 800 men fester, I found rampant desperation and inertia.
The result is a movie with an unmatched sense of awe, where you marvel at not just the vastness of our world but also its unstoppable inertia.
The trade war has broken that inertia, and many businesses have started moving their supply chains elsewhere to avoid new tariffs or the prospect of still more.
Part of the problem, he argued, is a tradition of inertia, begun during Saddam's dictatorship, in which officials live in fear of being penalized for taking initiative.
"They have inertia on their side, with a long-tenured customer base that is generally satisfied with their product and very satisfied with the service," he said.
Safety is paramount, obviously, but landlords' cheapness and contractor inertia should not be allowed to condemn New Yorkers to the eternal darkness of the pointless sidewalk shed.
And while the season concludes with a cheating-related breakup, their relationship was perhaps doomed from the beginning, by his inertia, his unemployment and their economic insecurity.
"Inertia tends to benefit early movers and market leaders and is likely to help pricing growth and costs to potentially drive margin expansion over time," he wrote.
" Trump fires back: His 15 nastiest zingers on Clinton Painting Clinton as the candidate of inertia and the unsatisfactory status quo, he called her message "old and tired.
The primary reasons for the dollar's continued dominance are inertia and the lack of viable alternatives, neither of which U.S. policymakers should find comforting for the longer term.
Yet it would surely be wrong to allow politics or institutional inertia to interfere with essential co-operation in justice and home affairs, international policing or counter-terrorism.
Robert Icke's inventive adaptation of Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya," which opened this week at the Almeida Theater, is a slow, suffocating study in hostility building beneath layers of inertia.
To study price inertia, for example, they dismantled the consumer-price index into its constituent parts: thousands of prices, stretching back to the Great Inflation of the 1970s.
Big data is hardly new at this point — nor has it wrought anywhere near its potential effects on many companies and institutions insulated by inertia and red tape.
If it flounders, it is likely to drag the Fix NICS Act down with it, returning America to its normal state after a slew of mass shootings: inertia.
Airports are the hubs for worldwide travel, busy with arrivals and departures, and the shuttering of this place means a kind of terrible inertia for an entire country.
Start-ups like Funding Circle will look to fill lending gaps created by institutional inertia, and this pattern will be replicated across fintech as nimbler companies outmanoeuvre incumbents.
The Pentagon is not an agile software team but an enormous, slow-moving beast, hobbled with the inertia of outdated technologies and strategies, as we reported last week.
The government had planned to ease the movement of goods and issuing of business visas delayed by corrupt officials but little had been approved amid inertia under Buhari.
While the individuals on the other side of the table acknowledge the challenge and the need for an overhaul, the force of institutional inertia appears to overwhelm them.
When I finally realized it too, I felt nauseous—like all the inertia and momentum that had seemed to propel me toward my destiny had instantly fallen apart.
There's also the issue of morning grogginess, known medically as sleep inertia—this happens whenever you wake up but is often worsened by repeatedly smashing the snooze button.
Osinbajo and his aides often hold meetings which has enlivened a presidential villa criticized for inertia — but he still seeks approval from Buhari or his chief of staff.
Simple inertia and the human tendency to prioritize short-term gains have played a role, but the fossil-fuel industry's contribution has been by far the most damaging.
A football game that is for one reason or another lifeless, either because it's officiated into inertia or over-coached or just poorly played, is a fucking atrocity.
There, it'll be competing with messaging apps like WeChat, and a successful app like Kuaishou will provide even greater inertia for Facebook or Snapchat to become popular there.
Veteran Spanish producer and one half of Exium, Tensal, announced a new EP today called Opposite Inertia on Berlin imprint Kynant Records and has shared its lead track.
He published his findings in Nature and demonstrated how the cat splits its body in two and uses the inertia of its own body weight to spin around.
Mr. Tuncak said he was "deeply disappointed" by the inertia of the United Nations in tackling the case, which he said put the organization's integrity on the line.
And yet, there are too many ways in which our current laws do treat service members like second-class citizens, often for no other reason than historical inertia.
It survives by inertia; it is almost inconceivable that anyone would propose a system like this if we were designing one from scratch in the twenty-first century.
" Ms. Iglesias, the academy's president, said that Elcano had long been neglected "through inertia" and that it was "time to teach and talk a lot more about him.
First, inertia is a very powerful force: It's a pain in the neck to switch banks, for what seems like a minimal amount of compensation to do so.
The Afghanistan Papers also appear to prove that many well-educated, well-trained and otherwise responsible adults simply gave into inertia with regard to U.S. involvement in Afghanistan.
The other source of ballast/inertia in the modern economy stems from consumer spending, which is holding up well at the moment but also shows signs of decelerating.
The power of inertia, the power to preserve the status quo, has suffocated a myriad of legislative solutions on both issues over the last quarter century or so.
Dr. Thorpe does not relish the idea of a divorce, and the pair drone on in limbo, paralyzed by those twin gods of failing matrimony, Fear and Inertia.
He was scared out of his "fatally complacent, and willfully deluded" inertia when he became immersed in the awful truth and, his book suggests, you can be too.
And the left has grappled with how to deal with its own role in America's "endless wars" and the inertia that tends to prevail in US foreign policy.
Right now, the habits and patterns of decision-making shaped by low VRE penetration still have inertia, exacerbated by the lingering doubt Trump has imposed on power markets.
Presenting Ronan with the New Hollywood Award at the Hollywood Film Awards in November, Gosling said, "It's Ser-sha, like inertia" – and suddenly, people started pronouncing her name correctly.
"It is deeply disturbing that the searching spotlight of truth has become the flickering flame of bureaucratic inertia and costly political posturing," he wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
There's enough ecosystem and brand inertia in the mobile market for us to already know that both Apple and Samsung will sell hundreds of millions of phones this year.
Guangming Daily, a Communist Party mouthpiece, published an online article which accused the local government of "inertia and carelessness" in the issuing of warnings and the evacuation of residents.
All too often, they fail to adapt, largely because of the inertia that derives from earning so much for doing the same things the same way for so long.
After an embarrassing fourth-place finish, preceded by dreary campaign events and small crowds, Joe Biden is grappling with the reality that he won't win the nomination through inertia.
Snoozing can result in sleep inertia, a feeling of grogginess and disorientation that occurs after you wake up from a short period of sleep and can last for hours.
Bailey admitted that much of what has kept both states in the time zone has simply been tradition, saying inertia was a large factor in the failure to change.
In March the IMF warned that "breaking inflation inertia will be a lengthy process", which will depend largely on the central bank's control of growth in the money supply.
On top of such concerns, any kind of reform is often delayed in Algeria by heavy bureaucracy and inertia, but bankers are keen to push ahead with the idea.
The chess-players had the full weight of the establishment and English inertia behind them; and in any case, besides a few crusting old nationalists, nobody actually wanted this.
He says that the more you become successful at something — like he was as a VC — and the more you build a brand, the more inertia develops around that.
But the longer Congress waits to act on a broader level, the more entrenched the technology becomes and the harder it will be for opponents to overcome its inertia.
A potential Palestinian leadership crisis, the continuing, slow-moving criminal investigation of Prime Minister Netanyahu, and a general acceptance of the status quo are inertia blocking the peace process.
I understood that so much of school segregation is structural — a result of decades of housing discrimination, of political calculations and the machinations of policy makers, of simple inertia.
It's such a basic skill that we don't consider the vast amount of information that is used to make these predictions — concerning gravity, inertia, the nature of pratfalls, etc.
The so-called weekly moving average convergence-divergence (MACD) of the S&P is pointing to positive inertia that could smooth the way for the market to push higher.
The legs alone were carrying an extra 15 to 18 pounds, so the muscles had to work that much harder to overcome inertia to set the legs in motion.
He says that even if the costs are minimal, making improvements to refugee resettlement processes in the US is stymied by two things: institutional inertia and the political climate.
The report painted a picture of a perfect storm of bureaucratic inertia, rapidly worsening security in Libya and inadequate resources in the months that led up to the attack.
Observing that inertia limited participation in beneficial programs, like retirement savings plans or school lunch programs, Professor Thaler proposed that governments and employers should make participation the default option.
"The force of inertia is strong, and other presidents cannot believe this is possible to fix," William Moses, the managing director of the Kresge Foundation's Education Program, told me.
In Thursday's ruling, the court said that the cardinal had shown "inertia" in failing to report the abuse, despite being aware that several victims had not yet come forward.
So you sit, barely even concealing your petty irritation and inertia, scrolling through the litany of Ryanair flights to nowhere that you've scrolled through time and again and again.
And I've seen how a spirit of unity, born of tragedy, can gradually dissipate, overtaken by the return to business as usual, by inertia and old habits and expediency.
In "cold" states, by contrast, we misjudge how much our preferences can change over time and, subject to the pull of inertia, forgo treatments we later wish we'd had.
In others, investigations spur an otherwise reluctant legislature – occasionally, even one controlled by the president's partisan allies – to overcome its institutional inertia and check a wayward commander in chief.
But its imagining of Morrissey as a self-pitying narcissist, a curiously passive intellectual who can't get out of his own way, soaks the movie in a wearying inertia.
Irina, Masha and Olga are each at a different stage of life, marked by deepening regret, evaporating hope and an inertia that grows less comfortable with the passing years.
Fighting a sense of inertia, Bouteghmès and the Élan Populaire Courneuvien decided to organize a grand débat for the banlieues, five days ahead of the first round of voting.
Bureaucratic inertia is a formidable foe, but the environment will never be better than it is now to embrace new change and protect our hard earned advantages in space.
The study's authors alluded to "clinical inertia" — the belief among follow-up physicians that if the emergency room doctor's prescription did the trick, they might as well refill it.
Regulators rightly want to make sure consumers are adequately protected, while also ensuring that new opportunities for those same people are not snuffed out by bureaucratic inertia or inflexibility.
South Korea was reeling from poverty, and sank into a chaotic state of political and social inertia as it adapted to its postwar status as a U.S. client state.
As for the generals, they're not advancing a grand ideological program in foreign policy, although they may be loyal to the ghost of one simply by force of inertia.
A federal appeals court ruling in a case between Collins' Computer Identics and Southern Pacific Company, which the railroad won, lays out a somewhat depressing case of corporate inertia.
Alas, HTC's sales continue to plummet, showing the inertia of a market that no longer trusts the Taiwanese brand, but that just makes me root for the U11 even more.
I can't swing the controllers around in Beat Saber without accidentally hitting the grip buttons, and when I'm moving quickly enough, inertia threatens to pull them out of my grasp.
Whether it's risk-aversion, inertia or any number of rationalizations among voters for not making a change midstream, the last quarter-century has demonstrated a remarkable stability in the presidency.
There are concerns that following years of inertia in a salty and corrosive maritime environment, volatile gases have built up in the storage tanks — increasing the risk of an explosion.
Just multiply how much force is required to change an object's motion (rotational inertia), by the rate at which it turns (angular velocity)— say, the number of revolutions per second.
"What I'm seeing most is this feeling of inertia and overwhelm based on potential future possibilities," said Michael Liersch, head of wealth planning and advice at J.P. Morgan Private Bank.
Inertia, fears that changing providers is complex, and a fuzzy idea of potential savings may explain why regulator Ofgem found that less a fifth of customers switched suppliers last year.
A mixture of institutional inertia, lack of training and a fear of being seen to abandon ground to the Taliban has helped keep hundreds of ineffective checkpoints open, observers say.
Against this backdrop, a generation of young, tech-forward companies have a lot to offer in a space that is often bogged down by the inertia of large-scale incumbents.
These complexities "are surmountable, but they are not surmountable in unrealistic time frames — in time frames that just do not mesh with the overall inertia of the system," O'Sullivan said.
The present situation is the product of combining the opportunities opened up by Google's Android operating system with the inertia of a mobile industry that was in need of renewal.
But if you can harness the whims of social media, can you overcome the inertia that often accompanies such issues, and motivate people to stop double-tapping and start marching?
The experience from the launch of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, has been that exploring and implementing meaningful payment policy innovations has been fraught with political complexity and bureaucratic inertia.
The transition from sleep to awake will feel much less abrupt, and a 2014 study in The European Journal of Applied Physiology demonstrated these alarms make sleep inertia less damaging.
After Buhari spent five months in Britain last year being treated for an undisclosed ailment, opposition critics said he was unfit for office and his administration was beset by inertia.
"The inertia comes as the nation braces for a mounting crisis of dwindling hospital staff as health-care workers contract the virus and are forced to quarantine," Alex Horton reports.
Instead, with remarkable ingenuity, technicians have relied on a host of physical forces and states such as temperature, friction, gravity and inertia to keep energy locked up for later release.
Prizing innovation over inertia, and pushing boundaries over precedent, Prada has become, under Miuccia Prada's leadership, one of the most beloved and recognizable brands that people actually buy and wear.
In cutting interest rates to a new low of 5.00% last month, the central bank warned that "inertia" in the economy could help keep inflation lower than it would like.
That type of policy inertia is what bitcoin enthusiasts Kaye and Flux co-founder Nathan Spataro say inspired them to explore alternative systems that better represent the world of 2016.
PERSONAL INCOME The other source of ballast/inertia in the modern economy stems from consumer spending, which is holding up well at the moment but also shows signs of decelerating.
He'd have a lot of inertia to overcome: Insiders refer to a continental drift occurring where some of the divisions have become less "Googley" as they develop their own cultures.
The idea underlying work requirements — that there's a large number of people on public assistance who should be working and aren't because of laziness or inertia or whatever — just isn't true.
JOÃO CARLOSRio de Janeiro Climate change* You were right to criticise political inertia for holding back efforts to rethink and reshape existing energy networks ("In the line of fire", August 4th).
And then for larger entities — say those handling 1,000 freelancer invoices per month — it will be facing the inertia of traditional business processes and the established grip of centralized finance departments.
The problem for Sensenbrenner is that the inertia would likely be strengthened by some Republican colleagues who are keenly aware of how civil asset forfeiture has been abused in the past.
However, the corollary of prioritising political stability over economic reforms, at least for now, is that complaints about government inertia, low wages, high prices, shortages and deteriorating services have become routine.
It's up to us to insist on a better, more humane social media experience — and not let the inertia of our everyday surroundings dull us back into our usual, templated routines.
"Due to the industry's high inertia, the long cycle from investment to the start of production, we estimate that the real effect (of underinvestment) will show up from 2022," he said.
The fact that Palmer was willing to put up with it despite literally having the job title of "banking expert" just goes to show how much inertia is at work here.
How hands—one pressed firmly against a tanned back with red fingernails, or four, gathered together sharing a plastic cup and browning banana—can be thick with history, inertia and metaphor.
As they campaigned for the governor's office, each promised to cut through what they called partisan nonsense, bureaucratic inertia and dodgy dealing to get real results for residents in their states.
There is often a high inertia factor of just wanting to stay at one's current bank and a degree of discomfort at not having access to a local branch, Horymski said.
If you want to spend the next four years glazing over and drifting into a sloppy inertia, that's your call; but this isn't just about survival, it's about resistance and defiance.
It opens with the relief of coming "Up to the Surface" and out of inertia; it ends with him trying to figure out his fate and thinking about a higher power.
You try showing up a dojo with the exact same skills and knowledge that you had five years ago and see how impressed your sensei is by that level of inertia.
"There's been a worrying inertia from ministers in tackling the VW scandal and they should decide whether to take legal action," Mary Creagh, chair of the committee, said in a statement.
He's planted tea gardens in Assam and planned parks in New Delhi, but he has never tried to investigate his mother's disappearance, and the mystery behind his inertia is never solved.
And to launch such a campaign would require overcoming strong inertia: a waning public health apparatus, countervailing politics and a collective amnesia over the havoc the diseases in question once wrought.
Here, ultimately, lies the Gordian knot at the heart of Britain's predicament: To shape from our current inertia a meaningful future, we need to address the brutal reality of the present.
The decision ends months of inertia around the national team program, which continues to play exhibition games and test new players even as it does not have a permanent head coach.
The story of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre shows how public outrage can create meaningful reform when the political and economic costs of inaction outweigh the inertia preserving the status quo.
And if he doesn't do that, you're going to see inertia and you're going to see this resistance from more of the establishment senators that he needs to curry favor with.
But Ms. McGrath's victory showed that many campaign conventions might not apply this year with a restive electorate angry at the inertia in Washington and the turbulence of the Trump presidency.
But the most striking is the inertia and clumsiness at the New York Fed, the most powerful of the U.S. central bank's 12 regional units and a mainstay of global finance.
This is the environment in which change can happen, and it is critical that we do not allow bureaucratic inertia, the true enemy of progress, stand in the way of success.
Every day I wake up with this issue, like we all do, with a sense of optimism when I see an exciting innovator, and pessimism when I feel the weight of inertia.
In Moscow, it has become fashionable to sneer at the EU's sluggish and hesitant foreign policy initiatives, constrained as they are by both bureaucratic inertia and a culture of consensus and conciliation.
For the diplomats at Munich whose first port of call to the United States is often through the State Department, the inertia is surprising -- particularly given the rapid rate of executive orders.
For one thing, inertia is a powerful force, and the durability of the status quo is compounded by established institutions and bureaucracies populated by people who do not share the President's worldview.
The game doesn't really get much harder, but its hand-to-hand and shooter-boss battles emphasize the clumsy inertia of your character in a way that's far more frustrating than fun.
"There is an inertia about new technologies," said Paul Voutier, Singapore-based director at Grow Asia, a World Bank funded organization that works with small farmers and other stakeholders to improve productivity.
But National Grid as the system operator may also need to purchase more frequency regulating reserves and sources of inertia to reduce the risk of rapid frequency changes, unacceptable excursions, and blackouts.
"Including machine learning, econometrics, psychology, bioinformatics..." Goldbloom notes that as a mathematical tool it can be "brittle and not very powerful," but academic and industry inertia means it's not going anywhere soon.
The Sacramento Bee says Brown, a former Jesuit seminarian, told the audience that human greed, indulgence and inertia are contributing factors to climate change and people must transform the way they live.
What was supposed to be a model for the rest of the sea has become mired in some of the complications and inertia that have plagued restoration efforts here from the beginning.
"As for willingness to invest, the inspection teams effectively force lower-level officials (who have often being accused of inertia during the anti-corruption campaign) to carry out their duties," Goldman said.
It has not been easy to fight against the inertia that has been passed down for so many years, but after all, if the future is female, what's the point in waiting?
If Mr Mallaby faults Mr Greenspan for inertia on regulation, he is no less critical of the inflation-targeting that Mr Greenspan ultimately adopted, albeit without proclaiming this objective at all clearly.
The problem with awarding Santos the Nobel Peace Prize is that it makes things very simple, boiling the conflict down to a champion of peace battling the forces of inertia and darkness.
Somehow, Kero Kero Bonito have managed to squash so many textures of suburbia—inertia, comfort, a content sleepiness, something you want to resist because it's boring as hell—into a new album.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) recently awarded a $1.3 million contract to an international team of researchers to study quantized inertia, a controversial theory that some physicists dismiss as pseudoscience.
But high-paying public sector jobs that demand little of workers have led to bureaucratic inertia and an absenteeism culture that governments turned a blind eye to during the Gulf's boom years.
Even those that are not enemies of the U.S. may be enemies of success—corruption, bureaucracy, lack of accountability, and the inertia plaguing the Middle East—are strong impediments to Pax Americana.
Liars and hypocrites and demagogues, of course, but also their fellow travellers in cynicism, inertia, and sloth... Seen it, done it, been there, go the t-shirt, had a banana. No-brainer.
First, expanding federal authority over state elections is an initiative from the Obama era, cooked up by former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and sustained in the Trump administration through bureaucratic inertia.
And once engaged, the 18-pound drag had very little startup inertia, or a smooth transition into spooling, or paying out line, making fighting and retrieving fish as smooth as can be.
Although proving himself a rare exception with remarkable political longevity, even Abe recently began to show signs of inertia as his support rate steadily declined since his return to power in 2012.
The short list of early Amazon reviews for this somewhat new product sing its praise for withstanding the harshest of equatorial climes, and surf-centric blog The Inertia raved about it too.
Because "Lodge 49" is a dreamy, gentle series about human hope and the inertia of loneliness, I was worried it would be too precious for this world and meet a swift cancellation.
That Mr. Tillerson missed such an important signal coming from the White House was emblematic of a tenure punctuated by inopportune comments, bureaucratic inertia and frequent and public disagreements with Mr. Trump.
He didn't test as an explosive jumper, so I guess the numbers evaluators have concerns about his zero-inertia burst, but when he gets going he'll make some linebackers and safeties hurt.
"Until religious leaders from every part of the world and every denomination are engaged, we will not be able to move aside the huge rock of indifference, complacency and inertia," he said.
With a more loyal team in place, he hopes to make more progress on initiatives that have been slow-walked by institutional inertia or resistance like tougher rules on trade and immigration.
We have arrived at this point because too much of our defense spending is driven by failure to prioritize, the inertia of struggling weapons programs, and privileging special interests over American security.
"Wheat has been an inertia market ... and as we keep making new highs, I think some speculative buyers keep piling into new length," said Dan Basse, president of AgResource Co in Chicago.
He believes, just as he did in Burlington, that the only way to break the back of Congressional gridlock and inertia and neoliberal entrenchment is by putting your faith in the people.
Thanks to the huge thermal inertia of the ocean, current models show there's between 22019 degrees and 0.6 degrees of warming on the way, even if emissions were capped at 2000 levels.
When I look at ourselves through a romantic lens, I see a pathetically passionless couple, held together by habit and inertia, and I start fantasizing about eloping with a more ardent lover.
Through tender, intimate documentary photographs, Jarousseau shows families stuck somewhere between hyper-mobility — many travel long distances for work, or work as truckers and drivers — and economic inertia that leaves them trapped.
The biggest problem facing efforts to reshape water use in an era of climate change, population growth and fiercer competition is inertia - a reluctance to abandon old ways of doing things, Gleick said.
But being an intimate witness to India's 2014 general election as a writer for Quartz taught me a big lesson on political inertia: At any time, we are capable of creating any outcome.
The report paints a picture of bureaucratic inertia, rapidly worsening security in Libya and inadequate resources in the months preceding the deaths of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three colleagues on September 11, 2012.
To begin with, the clash gels with the President's political sweet spot, setting him up as the frustrated agent of change taking on a crusty exemplar of Washington inertia and the political establishment.
The scheme had attracted both fanatical supporters, who believe unconditional transfers are a necessity as robots start to steal jobs, and detractors who fear handouts will cause inertia, budget blowouts and intellectual stagnation.
Drops in the energy and energy-related stocks can add inertia to the drops in other types of stocks – even those that really should be going up as energy prices are going down.
Efforts to place the children have been frustrated by long waits at government offices in France, an absence of interpreters and volunteer official intermediaries, and Home Office inertia and insistence on DNA testing.
While it can be hard to find and maintain the motivation to make a habit stick, experts have some motivational secrets to propel you through the quicksand of inertia to achieve your goals.
In the weeks since, the inertia in each state has continued to fuel more of the same in the other, with even staunch proponents of legalization seemingly resigned to waiting until next year.
Not only Republicans are to blame for the inertia of voting reform in New York, according to Wendy Weiser, the director of the Democracy Program at New York University's Brennan Center for Justice.
We had been together four years and, although we never explicitly discussed it, there was an understanding that we would get married and ride the inertia of conventional family life into old age.
The US still has security interests in the region, there are still risks, but it's also true that the way in which we are protecting against these risks has developed inertia over time.
Mr. Kelly and others in a similar living situation insist that they do not stay together out of passivity, inertia or, necessarily, economic imperative, though in some instances codependency cannot be ruled out.
Perhaps the most encouraging thing about the parliamentary elections on Sunday in Lebanon is that they were held at all after years of delay and political inertia, corruption, economic stagnation and foreign meddling.
"For a long time, if you lived in the broader tech sector, there was inertia that brought you to Silicon Valley," said Julie Samuels, executive director of Tech: NYC, a nonprofit industry group.
Instead of swiftly implementing austerity measures to stem Brazil's ballooning fiscal deficit, Dilma displayed a degree of inertia that exacerbated the country's problems and alienated her from opponents and even allies in Congress.
"It was just it was this weird experience that FTP sites, especially, could have an inertia of 15 to 20 years now, where they could be running all this time, untouched," Scott added.
"You have to trust yourself that it's interesting enough, cinematic enough — trust the power of thought and that you can sustain it," he said of portraying the nuances of repetition bordering on inertia.
But much in the same way that leaders on both sides have reneged on their social contracts by neglecting to protect their followers, the writers have punished viewers with inertia and bitter nihilism.
After enduring nearly a century of systematic resistance to the Fifteenth Amendment, Congress might well decide to shift the advantage of time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil to its victims.
As the proportion of generation from conventional sources declines, inertia is declining and the system may be becoming more vulnerable to rapid changes in frequency, increasing the risk of frequency excursions and load shedding.
He especially liked the "accelerometer system as a proxy to determine the role of the inertia of the loop and free end of the shoelace in the unknotting," he told Gizmodo in an email.
When he is out early, that initial inertia is an extraordinary waste of resources in a format in which sides are expected to score at a rate of more than a run a ball.
In its first successful test, DARPA got its drones flying autonomously at the desired speed and also tested the drone's ability to "see" obstacles using cameras, inertia measurement devices, and LIDAR and sonar sensors.
"McCulloch's speculative conjecture about the origin of inertia depends on the appearance of electromagnetic waves in accelerating reference frames, a conjecture first proposed more than 20 years ago," Woodward told me in an email.
According to Woodward, if inertia is explained by electromagnetic waves, then the neutron should be only two thirds the mass of a proton because of the way the electromagnetic field couples with electric charges.
It may be that despite all this energetic effort, Mr Macron's ambitions for "European sovereignty" are frustrated from within by a combination of European divisions, Brexit, German inertia and lingering suspicions of the French.
If everything is rigged, then all is fair, not just in love and war but on the banks of the Potomac, where we can look forward to four more years of inertia and ugliness.
It is expected to announce measures to claw back lost tax revenue at its federal budget in May as inertia on its part could lead to a damaging downgrade of its top credit rating.
Rhye: Blood (Loma Vista/Hostess) On Rhye's 2013 debut, the evocatively titled Woman, torch singer and heartfelt romantic Mike Milosh bravely captured the essence of true intimacy, and it sounded a lot like inertia.
To increase the speed of a flip as they fall toward the water, divers crunch their bodies into compact balls to reduce the "moment of inertia," or the tendency to resist accelerated, angular momentum.
There's a lot of inertia in decision-making in Washington, DC. There are always powerful interests that continue to have power as incumbents long past when structural changes start to occur in the country.
Still hard-wired with bourgeois codes of academic and professional achievement, he nonetheless feels himself "nailed by birth to a destiny of exclusion and resentment," paralyzed by a bitter sense of futility and inertia.
While political motivations may be at the heart of the inertia that has slowed down or impeded efforts to sanction white supremacist groups as terrorists, there could be other explanations for the stalled effort.
While that might not be literally true — Earth, much like its wealthiest inhabitants, moves forward through sheer inertia, a kinetic inheritance bestowed at its creation — money undeniably does make things go around the world.
The problem is not just the resources but institutional inertia: traditionally a source of pressure on the private sector to curb business with target countries, today the office is charged with opening the taps.
"Once you stop spinning -- because you have these sensors that have fluid in them -- the fluid actually keeps moving because of its own inertia, and that gives a false sense of motion," Cullen said.
"Someone sent me a photo two weeks later of a cinema in Minnesota, and on the sign in the front it said "Brooklyn" and then underneath it said, 'Ser-sha, Like Inertia,"' Ronan tells PEOPLE.
It's as if he's aiming for the kind of spiritual rapture that comes with dazed inertia, settling into a peaceful stillness because stillness is the precondition for the sudden rush that will whisk him away.
Less defensible reasons are mere inertia or, even worse, the belief on the part of a few judges that cumbersome formal language is needed to give jurors a sense of the majesty of the law.
" Ray mentions a song that didn't make Fucking Lifetime as a way of explaining this turn away from inertia: "There one line on it, which is actually something a friend of mine said to me.
Defaults signal to people what they should do and since most people, due to the inertia of life and the burden of decision-making, will do nothing, most people will go along with the default.
Systemic erosions go unnoticed in the daily chaos of reacting to Trump, and amid this broader state of inertia, they also do not figure in any macro way as part of Pelosi's theory of change.
"It puts the government in a very uncomfortable spot," said Yoaz Hendel, a former aide to Mr. Netanyahu who put the current impasse down to the inertia of successive right-wing governments on the issue.
What pulls against the relentless momentum of biography is the sweet inertia of life, a lot of which is spent drunk, in bed, on the road, hanging out with friends or all of the above.
She found the premise of work requirements — the presumed existence of a large number of people on public assistance who should be working and aren't, due to laziness or inertia or whatever — just isn't true.
But those behind the statehood movement say they will not be deterred and acknowledge it will take dedication and perseverance to overcome the resistance and inertia standing in the way of statehood for Puerto Rico.
" After his victory on Saturday, he said after invoking the name of God: "With more than 41 million of your votes, you have pulled out the history of our country away from inertia and doubt.
Whatever the case, we need answers before we simply pretend that there is some sort of political inertia pulling us forward and that the Trump agenda is an inevitable consequence of a suspect election. No!
You evolved this new arm called "autoplay the next video," and it works, and suddenly people watch, let's say, 230-153 percent more videos, just because you autoplay the next video, and you create inertia.
Two people are already there—it's only 003:200 AM—but a couple from Bogotá have, like Gómez and Peña, come from Bogotá to see how Polar Inertia musically strips down at the club's altar.
LONDON, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Several Angolan cargoes changed hands on Thursday, after a week of inertia, while trade in Nigerian crude remained subdued as a high volume of unsold cargoes kept buyers reluctant to step in.
Trump's bet represents his most audacious risk yet in a presidency built on his own conviction that his superior negotiating skills can unlock an era of congressional inertia and pass laws that will reshape the nation.
"Consumers get confused or default to inertia because they don't understand which solution out of the wide range of offerings in the marketplace fits their specific needs," said Laura Varas, CEO and founder of Hearts & Wallets.
The findings painted a picture of a perfect storm of bureaucratic inertia, rapidly worsening security in Libya and inadequate resources in the months that led up to the killings of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three colleagues.
Given the upheaval and price-cutting that online shopping has brought to the rest of the retail world, this is at the very least odd, and seems unsustainable, were it not for the power of inertia.
Yatom also voiced concern about "the inertia in the diplomatic sphere, which is leading us toward a bi-national state (with the Palestinians), which would spell the end of (Israel as) a Jewish and democratic state".
Spot prices for June delivery rose to $5.70 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), a 20 cent jump over last week, but traders cited sharply divergent views on pricing, saying the disagreements contributed to market inertia.
This status has persisted for decades, largely due to sheer institutional inertia from a war on drugs that amped up under late President Richard Nixon (hmm) and has only recently started to lose any real momentum.
Critics say the inertia in the Red Bull heir's case is just another example of longstanding privilege for the wealthy class in Thailand, a politically tumultuous country that has struggled with rule of law for decades.
"By the time we got into it, it [the hoverboard name] had so much inertia," Bob Hadley, Razor's research and development manager, told me this week at CES, where Razor was showing off its Hovertrax hoverboard.
We use Uber because of pure inertia, because of its first mover status, because its app is slightly less clunky than its local competitors, because it has substantial political clout, because its rides are (temporarily) subsidized.
In other words, much like Newton's law of inertia: investors in the West tend to stay in the West, VCs near the ocean tend to invest near the ocean — unless they act upon outside market forces.
If Johnson can't get a posthumous pardon even when more or less everyone agrees he deserves one out of sheer bureaucratic inertia, what hope is there for causes that face actual opposition from organized interest groups?
"Someone sent me a photo two weeks later of a cinema in Minnesota, and on the sign in the front it said "Brooklyn" and then underneath it said, 'Ser-sha, Like Inertia,&apos" Ronan told PEOPLE.
"This creates an environment where inertia is the norm, which allows automakers which may otherwise disappear to continue to survive for decades," said James Chao, Asia-Pacific managing director of research at IHS Automotive in Shanghai.
"I know how he feels," Trump said before quickly making clear he did not blame himself for the congressional inertia, instead singling out GOP senators, such as John McCain, for voting against the health care bill.
One common source of this "sleep inertia" is that your brain is confused because you've disrupted your circadian rhythm, says W. Christopher Winter, president of Charlottesville Neurology and Sleep Medicine and author of The Sleep Solution.
What's fascinating is that Camille's old friends do have those resources, and some combination of inertia, fear and the pride they take in being at the top of the social order keeps them frozen in place.
EN: It's certainly more likely because they're not at the point where Ford and GM and Chrysler were when they faced that challenge — they already had tens of thousands of workers and faced much more inertia.
It turns out that money is not what the art world should fear most; what we should fear is inertia, and we should combat it with the tools Ms. Prada herself wields: discipline, rigor, gravity, style.
A former journalist, Gove is perceived as keen to shake things up in the world of politics, and was reported to have referred to what he saw as the bureaucratic inertia of government as "The Blob".
Automatic enrollment uses Americans' inertia to their own advantage, by enrolling workers into 153(k) plans and deducting a portion of their pay for retirement automatically if workers do not take any voluntary action to save.
Abe quickly ran into huge problems with Beijing and Seoul, but, following an apparent trade inertia driven by long-term contracts, and Japan's strong sales efforts, exports to China held up well in 403 and 2014.
In 2015, the authorities uncovered a shadowy Jewish terrorist network known as the Revolt, after the title of its manifesto, whose young extremist settlers rebelled against what they viewed as the inertia of the Israeli establishment.
We created a government of servants of and to the people to ensure our collective liberty — inspired by duty and sacrifice and the ironclad conviction that we could only stand against the inertia of history together.
Nevertheless, the ultimate decision rested with Ru, who has seen both Sasha and Peppermint excel throughout the entire competition, with Sasha having an edge of consistency and Pepper riding a wave of late-in-the-game inertia.
Despite the inertia, Lloyd's will be reluctant to push too hard by imposing sanctions for non-compliance at such a sensitive time for the industry, which is grappling with lower premiums globally, City of London sources said.
Critics blame their disappearance in part on what they see as bias and bureaucratic inertia at the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission, which must sign off on plans for the future of the space where St. Nick's stood.
That many former Google employees worked in the administration of Barack Obama may have contributed to this inertia, but the real reason is America's forbidding jurisprudence, says William Kovacic of George Washington University, a former FTC chairman.
The U.S. military has long held a lead in both spending and technology — but the physics of inertia threaten to keep it stuck making incremental improvements to the 20th century tech that pushed it to the top.
This method of space-based transportation is extremely slow to get started, but thanks to the inertia-free medium of outer space, it could be an extremely energy-efficient way for research craft to travel long distances.
"Saying that we're going to have the Mexican drug cartels end up paying for the wall, that may very well be something that is powerful enough to get the institutional inertia in the Senate overcome," Sensenbrenner said.
"The UK's advantage as a hub for trading using fiber-optic cables, combined with institutional inertia, suggest that any relocation of trading after Brexit, if at all, would likely be gradual," the ECB said in its study.
Even the best of secret servants would be hampered by a pervasive culture of inertia, lack of imagination, smug self-satisfaction, and that infectious curse of the bureaucratic mandarin, the incessant need to CYA: Cover Your Ass.
The news flows that sparked trade activity last year now lead only to "inertia and paralysis", according to Wolf, who concludes that for base metals such as copper and zinc "the risk reduction has already taken place".
Mr. Nielsen of the Altinget website said that damage could be done to the economy if the increased spending was not financed, and he warned that heading a minority government could leave Ms. Frederiksen vulnerable to inertia.
As someone who has never held executive office before, Mr. Khan will quickly realize that electoral promises of quick fixes and transparent government aren't easy to realize in the face of bureaucratic inertia and shrinking fiscal space.
Alexey Kokorin of environmental group WWF Russia said climate experts would likely criticize the strategy but it "honestly and openly speaks about problems in Russia, including inertia of its economy, (which is) highly dependent on fossil fuels".
The central force for eliminating bad habits, according to Wood, is "friction": if we can make bad habits more inconvenient, then inertia can carry us in the direction of virtue, without ever requiring us to be strong.
Former Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis attributed the destruction of the Chania War Museum to the inertia of Greek bureaucracy and, in particular, to the fact that the Ministry of Defense had to abandon the historic building.
"Behavioral economics teaches us that inertia works against complicated products like this, so a very small number of people open them," said Jeremy Smith, director of the Retirement Savings Initiative at the Aspen Institute's Financial Security Program.
" Nicholas Pinter, the associate director of the center for watershed sciences at the University of California, Davis, said the challenges to "overcoming social inertia" are so high because of "the intense sense of place that people have.
"First, the lagged reporting of inventory data and OPEC's own inertia create risks that the group exits the cuts well after inventories have normalized," wrote a team led by Jeffrey Currie, Goldman's global head of commodities research.
Blaming everything but guns But the forces in politics and society pressing toward the usual inertia remain strong, personified by LaPierre's speech and other remarks by officials in the NRA, which wields significant influence in Republican politics.
The inertia in the climate system means that not even the most radical cuts in emissions—nor, indeed, a dimming of sunlight brought about by means of solar geoengineering—will stop sea levels dead in their tracks.
Though the status quo of big, bland, car-centric subdivisions retains enormous inertia, there is now a real counter-movement of urbanists trying to reclaim the virtues of pre-car towns and cities: scale, character, and walkability.

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