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544 Sentences With "runs the risk of"

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

Every biographical show runs the risk of sliding into hagiography.
Either option runs the risk of failing the Hastert Rule.
And then the law runs the risk of being inexact.
At worst, Mr. Styles runs the risk of being unfashionable.
The issue runs the risk of dividing moderate and progressive Dems.
Musk's claim runs the risk of confusing consumers — and frustrating regulators.
"The iPhone 7 runs the risk of disappointing investors," he said.
However, Scott certainly runs the risk of taking it too far.
Without those pressure valves, any system runs the risk of explosion.
The social distancing runs the risk of perpetuating that yet further.
"Amazon runs the risk of becoming too big," Mr. Kekre said.
Makeup, particularly heavy products, runs the risk of further aggravating the situation.
"Erasing names, however, runs the risk of whitewashing history," the editorial said.
And if it gets too cold, it runs the risk of breaking.
If he waits, he or his message runs the risk of irrelevance.
But the new design runs the risk of encouraging hand held videos, too.
Such a project runs the risk of ending up mired in pseudo-profundity.
All this vagueness runs the risk of Mrs Merkel's language seeming too bloodless.
But in doing so, it runs the risk of making lazy, irrelevant comedy.
If he does, then he runs the risk of getting injured as well.
Not including an issue runs the risk of the court's deeming it waived.
To delay further runs the risk of having the decision made for him.
Talking about climate change during a disaster always runs the risk of insensitivity.
Yet focusing on exclusion runs the risk of defining black art as a rarity.
"Indoor runs the risk of being obsolete quickly — the tech could change," she says.
But the design also runs the risk of making the headphones bulky or uncomfortable.
For one, it warms up pretty quickly and runs the risk of boiling off.
If financing is secured, whoever provides it runs the risk of not getting repaid.
This change runs the risk of hobbling some companies with multi-national supply chains.
Trump's impromptu campaigning also runs the risk of alienating those outside the Republican base.
An album like this runs the risk of creating a distraction, or a disruption.
An album like this runs the risk of creating a distraction, or a disruption.
Zuckerberg's testimony runs the risk of further exposing Libra to potentially fatal political pressure.
The 21st century economy runs the risk of leaving much of rural America behind.
Plus it runs the risk of a rival launching its own bid for Generali.
This runs the risk of putting us on a path back to the future.
It becomes performative grieving, and it runs the risk of just being literal lip service.
Any hot snack which has got pepper in it runs the risk of causing troubles.
But spending too many words on it runs the risk of diluting your stronger issues.
She runs the risk of causing sorrow unknown when the person is, in fact, innocent.
And any candidate not in the race by now runs the risk of getting lapped.
But this approach runs the risk of missing the most illuminating contributions to art law itself.
However, in the long run, it runs the risk of eating up the economy's growth potential.
"Germany runs the risk of looking like a banana republic," Mr. Weimann said in an email.
He added not doing so runs the risk of having to tighten more abruptly later on.
The amendment could bolster support among conservative members, but it runs the risk of displeasing moderates.
Talk of "banality," in my opinion, runs the risk of turning merely into a linguistic provocation.
With its focus on the examined life, In Transit runs the risk of becoming trite pablum.
Roku "runs the risk of new entrants aiming to encroach on their newfound success," Hayes said.
A trade war between them runs the risk of embroiling large swaths of the US economy.
"Striving for originality for its own sake runs the risk of producing a caricature," he writes.
Anyone who attempts to report on what's happening in Pakistan now runs the risk of disappearing.
When asked if any company today runs the risk of using AI in this manner, Musk paused.
Treating disease serves the public — but enhancing our cognitive abilities runs the risk of only serving some.
Now, pretty much every show runs the risk of becoming wildly embarrassing to watch with your parents.
Like Twitter's toxic tweets, allowing hoaxes to mushroom runs the risk of turning off members and brands.
But Buttigieg also runs the risk of further splintering the party just six weeks before the vote.
And it runs the risk of destabilizing the Obamacare marketplaces, several of which are already somewhat precarious.
It always runs the risk of isolating forms of artistic expression from what is happening around them.
Not presenting it thoroughly enough runs the risk of the court's deciding that it wasn't fully presented.
Environmentalists say that loading or unloading materials like edible oils or chemicals runs the risk of spills.
In doing so, he runs the risk of being blamed for problems in the health-care system.
Of course, because it's so comfortable, it also runs the risk of being monopolized by unintended users.
Papa John's runs the risk of shuttering more stores if franchisees are unable to pay for ingredients.
He may be right but his scorched earth "fake news" campaign runs the risk of getting tiresome.
Just as all populists, Donald Trump runs the risk of being a captive to his own populism.
Mr Corbyn runs the risk of overplaying his hand by politicising the Grenfell tragedy with such ruthless efficiency.
Exploring something as horrifyingly real as rape in such philosophical terms runs the risk of insensitivity, even sensationalism.
By testing now, Pyongyang runs the risk of muting what could become serious discord between it two neighbours.
But this thing is pretty suspect and runs the risk of taking vulnerable people for a ride.[Engadget]
I get that highlighting dangerous drug interactions runs the risk of implying the ones not mentioned are safe.
Allowing too many private add-ons runs the risk of unraveling the universal nature of single-payer coverage.
One is whether combining left and right to confront nationalism runs the risk of lending such forces legitimacy.
And overhyping the dangers of certain substances clearly also runs the risk of doing more harm than good.
Inviting tech into your bedroom runs the risk of emphasizing the performance rather than the experience of pleasure.
But Mr. Hughes runs the risk of having the restrictions restored when the next update is beamed down.
Trump has long been a flamethrower and anyone who gets too close runs the risk of getting burned.
"There's certainly a 'Myspace risk' there," he said, meaning the company runs the risk of becoming too commercialized.
Given this animosity, Pelosi's dalliance with Trump runs the risk of backfiring, convincing progressives that she's a sellout.
Anyone who does let it get to them runs the risk of it affecting their career and income.
Unchecked power always runs the risk of doing things the average American would consider an abuse of power.
But such high-level monitoring runs the risk of breaching trust with teens at a crucial developmental time.
Doing anything less runs the risk of appearing to defacto accept a North Korea armed with nuclear weapons.
Sovereign debt default "runs the risk of banks suffering large write-downs on their balance sheets", he said.
Applying that label to the alt-right runs the risk of making them seem like exotic cartoon villains.
The material is soft and comfortable, but often runs the risk of overheating or sticking to your skin.
Because otherwise it runs the risk of getting to where the social democrats in Europe are right now.
This runs the risk of obscuring a basic point about authoritarianism: it can happen to the best of us.
Handing out goods rather than cash runs the risk of spending money on things people neither need nor want.
Your phone runs the risk of overheating on a hot day, especially if it's sitting out in direct sunlight.
This runs the risk of having the economy overheat and of thereby having the Fed lose control over inflation.
It runs the risk of breeding a generation of youth with deep trauma and abhorrence for the United States.
The prospect of too many investigations runs the risk of a backlash against the Democrats, as Pelosi herself acknowledges.
"Every time he targets his most ardent supporters, he runs the risk of further alienating everyone else," he said.
It runs the risk of missing a goal of lowering emissions in 2020 by 40 percent relative to 1990.
Without intervention, experts say, Africa runs the risk of having no one to replace its farmers as they die.
Even worse, such an informal ban runs the risk of solidifying the anti-Korea sentiment already brewing in China.
McNamee's insistence that Facebook and Google engage in "malicious behavioral modification" runs the risk of sounding like conspiracy-speak.
AT 28 MINUTES 7 SECONDS "Symphonie Fantastique," Berlioz's early masterpiece, regularly runs the risk of overexposure and irresponsible interpretation.
Flying larger aircraft, something that's been considered, he says, runs the risk of getting caught up in red tape.
By changing its billing requirements, the company runs the risk of users asking themselves whether this service is worth renewing.
Microsoft also runs the risk of running into the most classic of Windows problems: backwards compatibility holding back future development.
But Xiaomi runs the risk of alienating users if it fails to live up to its goal of "unobtrusive" ads.
While the measure could help keep otherwise healthy companies going - it also runs the risk of propping up unhealthy ones.
"A traditional wait-and-see stance runs the risk of unintentional tightening of monetary conditions," ING economist Carsten Brzeski said.
He added that his influence "runs the risk of the hearing being as much about me as about" the nominee.
Transferring jurisdiction from trained scientists and public lands professionals to local politicians runs the risk of parochial and misguided decisions.
The risks of 'runaway stimulus' But too much stimulus runs the risk of adding to China's already worrisome debt levels.
That course of action runs the risk of locking in losses and then buying when markets are at their peak.
"Generally speaking, any website that has been compromised runs the risk of getting turned into an infection portal," he said.
Critics of Honduras and Guatemala say direct U.S. government assistance runs the risk of being lost to corruption or worse.
It runs the risk of prioritizing our identity as consumers, at the expense of our identities as workers and citizens.
From the moment he re-enters the public stage, Comey runs the risk of playing directly into President Trump's hands.
This runs the risk of audiences getting used to waiting for content, rather than paying to see it in person.
But some Democrats say she runs the risk of being seen as out of touch and too intellectual and offbeat.
It runs the risk of creating a secondary health crisis in terms of depression, isolation, suicide, addiction and so on.
But a VAT hike runs the risk of adding a heavy financial burden to the daily lives of the poor.
Once revered for unseating one of Africa's most brutal leaders, Museveni himself now runs the risk of becoming a dictator.
SoftBank runs the risk of scaring off future founders, but a bigger one of WeWork blowing up Vision Fund 2.
The move runs the risk of implying that Jesenská was as romantically invested in Kafka as he was in her.
"Every scenario involving military force runs the risk of triggering a brutal war or even a nuclear exchange," she told Refinery29.
The skills crisis runs the risk of slowing economic growth, leaving employers without the workforce they need to sustain economic stability.
Hitting him hard enough to prevent such horror runs the risk of provoking Vladimir Putin, Russia's leader and Mr Assad's protector.
"QE is joined by fiscal policy or helicopter money or it runs the risk of being discontinued altogether," he told CNBC.
But flashes of anger from Castro at the news conference illustrated how Washington runs the risk of being accused of meddling.
The ubiquitous nature of Ring cameras runs the risk of capturing behavior unrelated to the crimes they are supposed to deter.
The band's dream-pop is immaculate, but it's almost too effective; it runs the risk of sending its listeners to sleep.
If the Bachelorette runs the risk of ruining her engagement by going on another reality show, then so does the Bachelor.
Until it's put into place, the report says, "the government runs the risk of maintaining systems that have outlived their effectiveness."
Brazil, the region's most linguistically diverse country, runs the risk of losing a third of its 180-plus languages by 2030.
However in sports, deception runs the risk of alienating fans or drawing a penalty, so players face pressure to deceive sparingly.
The entire northeast of the country, where much heavy industry has been concentrated, runs the risk of being left badly behind.
He runs the risk of appearing shallow, but he projects leadership which is what many voters look for in a president.
But in the greater game of geopolitics, meddling in another country's political processes runs the risk of doing far greater damage.
But on Friday, good news will emerge about a member of the Jackson family that runs the risk of being overlooked.
Any military action on the Korean peninsula runs the risk of kicking off a nuclear engagement between the US and North Korea.
House Republicans have called for a hearing, but House Democrats have said the proceeding runs the risk of becoming a partisan circus.
Any Migos project runs the risk of having songs blend into each other so seamlessly that you forget they are separate tracks.
That may be a tall order: Facebook runs the risk of alienating a sizable portion of its user base by filtering news.
If it cannot forge a more tolerant laïcité, it runs the risk of estranging a generation of its own young Muslim women.
The pontiff argues that "useful and dignified employment" opportunities have dwindled, and implies that technology runs the risk of overriding human decency.
Such allegory runs the risk of becoming laboured, and the play's overarching metaphor is made to do a lot of heavy lifting.
Now professional security is required for any gathering of over ten people and anyone hosting unsanctioned parties runs the risk of expulsion.
The bet might pay off by expanding the Democratic Party, but it also runs the risk of losing many traditional Democratic voters.
Pitchfork's distinctive voice runs the risk of being swallowed up by the fashion, posing and nonsense that inflates other popular music magazines.
That means Thune runs the risk of rankling fellow Republicans if he's seen as too eager to cut a deal with Democrats.
But if too many shares flood to market, the company runs the risk of not having enough buyers to meet the supply.
But setting Apple's legal fight alongside a new set of iPhones and watchbands runs the risk of driving home the government's point.
"Even if you try to put the team colors on the shoe, it still runs the risk of a fine," he said.
Worse, an empty bench means that the administration runs the risk of being flatfooted if a serious crisis on the Peninsula erupts.
She runs the risk of people taking second looks, giving [Sanders] second chances and the chance of people liking what the hear.
By further damaging Clinton ahead of the general election, he runs the risk of being seen as a Ralph Nader–like spoiler.
But, any young girl who is catapulted into the spotlight runs the risk of letting her newfound popularity go to her head.
This is Donald Trump's party now, and any Republican not willing to kiss the ring runs the risk of getting Pawlenty-ed.
If she demands a big salary, she runs the risk of losing the role to a woman who will work for less.
But if it makes money just by endlessly recruiting new salespeople, it runs the risk of being designated as a pyramid scheme.
Yale University law professor John Morley said Fidelity runs the risk of losing investors by competing with the funds that serve them.
"Just closing the doors on any particular commodity runs the risk of moving to another commodity or another producer," he told Motherboard.
Now, AMC has its own subscription service that's pretty reasonable, and MoviePass runs the risk of giving the whole model a bad name.
But this approach, which fails to think beyond the marketplace, runs the risk of missing the most illuminating contributions to art law itself.
"He runs the risk of appearing to have overplayed his hand in terms of what's possible in reaching out to Pyongyang," Rinna continued.
The only catch to using password-cracking software is that it runs the risk of erasing (or corrupting) all of the phone's data.
Because the CFPB's single director structure runs the risk of engaging in "extreme departures from the president's executive policy," the Justice Department argued.
A lack of regulation also runs the risk of laypeople massively increasing environmental hormonal pollution, with detrimental effects to plants, animals, and us.
The US runs the risk of being blamed if the conflict spirals out of control — and the worst may be yet to come.
Clinton also runs the risk of alienating some progressives who are unhappy with Obama's choice — many who may back her rival, Bernie Sanders.
"We think the new rewards plan runs the risk of alienating the core customers," Bernstein analyst Sara Senatore wrote in the research note.
Make this story too specific to human beings, and it runs the risk of being preachy or of having its message shrugged off.
Still, Gessen's critique runs the risk of becoming a facile pox-on-both-your-houses approach that is at odds with the facts.
The president, seen for months as an asset bolstering many Republican candidates, runs the risk of becoming an unwelcome drag in key races.
The United States has always been the land of opportunity, but an outdated immigration system runs the risk of us losing our footing.
He explains that a culture without trust runs the risk of experiencing the backlash Facebook is receiving now over its data privacy issues.
Deploying American troops also runs the risk of changing the dynamics of the contest while fueling the jihadist narrative and assisting terrorist recruiting.
But Congress runs the risk of infuriating investors if a cogent plan doesn't materialize, says Greg Valliere, chief financial strategist for AGF Investments.
If Cassini doesn't crash into Saturn, it runs the risk of potentially contaminating one of Saturn's moons with debris and microbes from Earth.
A plot about underprivileged girls in India runs the risk of sounding morally self-important or, worse, voyeuristic, particularly when written in English.
Wehner said these excuses for the President's behavior and rhetoric are "complete hypocrisy" -- and it runs the risk of derailing the evangelical message.
It's a bit of a dishonorable bargain, and it runs the risk of ending in some kind of massive war or other catastrophe.
Hell, some might even be so bold as to call them Big Cheeses, but that runs the risk of sullying cheese's good name.
In California, though, this runs the risk of adversely affecting key endangered (and legally protected) species like the Pacific fisher and California spotted owl.
On Monday, San Francisco Fed President John Williams said the Fed needs to raise rates gradually or the economy runs the risk of overheating.
Yes, you can only set reminders, check in on activities, and view your own timeline, but anything else runs the risk of being distracting.
Heavy federal borrowing to pay for new infrastructure, for example, runs the risk of boosting interest rates, which would put a damper on growth.
The rise of artificial intelligence and chatbots means that in the not-too-distant future, Centricient's technology runs the risk of being rendered obsolete.
Defining extremism might sound like a good idea, but for freedom advocates, almost any definition proposed runs the risk of silencing the merely eccentric.
"I think many folks would say that runs the risk of marginalizing the poor," said Allie Bohm of the public interest group Public Knowledge.
The review, much like music itself, runs the risk of becoming an artform diluted by the internet's shameless pandering to its lowest common denominator.
Analysts have warned that New Delhi runs the risk of getting hit with U.S. sanctions if it pushes ahead with the S-400 purchase.
A film bursting with funny folks runs the risk of becoming a comedy cacophony, but fortunately, The Next Cut has two new secret weapons.
"I think any organization that doesn't keep their eye on what's happening with its customers runs the risk of becoming obsolete," Ms. Bowman said.
The Tennessee Republican had repeatedly expressed opposition to adding to the deficit, something the Senate's version of the plan runs the risk of doing.
The strategy also runs the risk of angering the immigrant rights activists pressing Democrats to use every tool they've got to solidify DACA protections.
But that kind of "old economy" thinking runs the risk of reinforcing the false promises that Trump made about restoring a bygone industrial age.
But speculative fiction that imagines a perfect world, with near-perfect people, runs the risk of losing us in increasingly troubled and ugly times.
A group of British lawmakers has warned that unless the country raises spending on defense, it runs the risk of being "outgunned" by Russia.
Sending an army to meet these unarmed migrants runs the risk of escalating what seems to be a fairly unremarkable group approaching our border.
"By visiting North Korea when there has been no progress in denuclearization talks, Xi runs the risk of only strengthening Kim Jong-un's position."
If he stresses the prosperity he claims to have generated, he runs the risk of removing the impetus to stick with his nativist crusade.
It's not a great look, at least at first glance, and broadcasting it runs the risk of scaring lower-income applicants away from applying.
If a video is considered too violent for advertisers, even if it's fine by YouTube's standards, it still runs the risk of being demonetized.
The danger for Biden in this race is clear: He runs the risk of coming off like Don Draper in a Peggy Olson world.
Mista said she runs the risk of getting tired and not being able to care for her daughter without a full-time desk job.
Based on the recent pace, the Trade Ministry may need to increase its forecast or it runs the risk of being outperformed by reality.
If he flips that message, strategists and experts say, he runs the risk of losing supporters, particularly if the death toll continues to grow.
But it is to say that if Gilead doesn't feel tethered to our reality, the show runs the risk of becoming full-blown fantasy.
That runs the risk of making Nora and those who join her in being unable to "get over" the Departure seem all the more unbalanced.
His lawyers say the case runs the risk of facing unfair trial due to political pressure and media scrutiny, according to The New York Times.
Does this mean it runs the risk of getting flack from, let's say, "hardcore" gamer types for being a title made mainly for casual gamers?
For Amrich, the replication of the Form line's shapes, but at a lower price point, runs the risk of cannibalizing the Form line's existing market.
While this is certainly a movement toward a more progressive view of gender, it runs the risk of diminishing women representation at the awards show.
That runs the risk of backfiring, as Trump's tougher approach on the border has so far coincided with an increase in migration from Central America.
Proponents of these laws argue that litigating a case based on events from the distant past runs the risk of lost evidence and faulty memories.
If Cassini doesn't plunge into Saturn's atmosphere, it runs the risk of potentially contaminating one of the planet's moons with debris and microbes from Earth.
If it doesn't give credence to popular but disreputable websites like the Daily Caller, it runs the risk of angering Republicans who use the platform.
"Any pandemic like this runs the risk of exceeding our health care capacity, and we must acknowledge that," Azar said at the White House briefing.
A pathogen that doesn't get a person sick enough runs the risk of also not getting passed around if the person isn't sneezing or coughing.
If he does so, he runs the risk of losing more of his air force and the major advantage it gives him over the rebels.
World powers, including Turkey's Western allies, fear its incursion into northeast Syria runs the risk of Islamic State prisoners escaping from camps amid the chaos.
World powers, including Turkey's Western allies, fear its incursion into northeast Syria runs the risk of Islamic State prisoners escaping from camps amid the chaos.
It also runs the risk of removing any urgency his top trade negotiators may need to bring Beijing to the table on remaining tougher issues.
President Trump runs the risk of "seeming irrelevant," Dan Rather said Wednesday, addressing the president's recent trip to Texas in the wake of Hurricane Harvey.
The new policy doesn't apply to advertisement guidelines — if a video is considered too violent for marketers, it still runs the risk of being demonetized.
Trying to create overmatch but only focusing on grand strategy runs the risk of continuing to emphasize the same capabilities that currently provide military preeminence.
Building a technical solution without doing the user-research to see what people really need runs the risk of reducing credibility and further eroding trust.
"Your signature block for work runs the risk of seeming a little clunky if you're writing your kids or an old friend," Mr. Shipley said.
But his history of representing large corporations runs the risk of alienating Obama allies looking to gauge his still-developing record on key liberal priorities.
Almost anyone who has been in politics in Brazil for a while runs the risk of being ensnared in scandal because undeclared donations were the norm.
But as more experienced financial experts join in, the cryptocurrency runs the risk of slowing down when it comes to the mammoth returns it can offer.
If Vizguerra leaves, she runs the risk of being apprehended, the pastor said, though even within its walls, she's not necessarily immune to action from ICE.
If the spacecraft doesn't plunge into Saturn's atmosphere, it runs the risk of potentially contaminating one of the planet's moons with debris and microbes from Earth.
But while false reporting is far from common, the ability to input an allegation anonymously and online runs the risk of declaring men guilty without verification.
By restricting access, Free Basics can provide more people with access to basic services, even as it runs the risk of creating a multi-tiered internet.
GoPro has hinted that more is coming, but until features like this are added, it runs the risk of being just a slightly better Google Drive.
Any country that, for whatever reason, is not able to do so, runs the risk of setting back the local community because 5G cannot be launched.
This debate, occurring among a small cohort of conservative writers who agree on most issues, runs the risk of being about the narcissism of small differences.
Selling your business to fund retirement runs the risk of being financially underprepared at a point where there isn't much time to invest in your savings.
If he backs Cuomo, a fellow Democrat, Murphy runs the risk of isolating the progressive voters that have emerged as a key part of his coalition.
But as the company tries to raise the profile of its services business, it runs the risk of causing regulators to focus on these services, too.
An overt military strike on Iran might deter it from further actions but runs the risk of escalation or Iranian retaliation anywhere from Afghanistan to Israel.
"The pangolin runs the risk of becoming extinct before most people have even heard of them," Prince William said in an anti-poaching video in 2014.
"India runs the risk of being caught in the middle of the trade spat between the U.S. and China," said Hugo Erken, senior economist at Rabobank.
"Any European or Asian bank that does business on behalf of (sanctioned Iranian entities) runs the risk of being cut off from the United States," he said.
And as Cruz keeps one eye trained on Indiana he runs the risk of being seen as marginalizing the five states that vote a week before it.
By distributing the plans for the 3D-printed weapons, Wilson runs the risk of being held in contempt of court — something that the anarchist appears to relish.
Sawyer's work runs the risk of being repetitive in places, making the point about masks in many images that comes across equally powerfully in any given one.
I think it runs the risk of creating long periods of uncertainty with no obvious route to a simpler world than the one in which we operate.
U.S. support of an enemy of Turkey is making the Turkish public uncomfortable and runs the risk of alienating one of the U.S.'s most strategic allies.
BERLIN (Reuters) - NATO needs to grow and change or else the alliance runs the risk of becoming obsolete, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday.
The iconography has not yet had the desired effect; this season's Sunderland team runs the risk of becoming the worst side the Premier League has ever seen.
To campaign against Trump, rather than his party more broadly, runs the risk of making the election about a subject on which public opinion can't be budged.
And for us to have a fair fight in Georgia, we have to ensure that no one runs the risk of being denied the right to vote.
"Well, we really should run kind of a contest," Clinton joked (an idea that runs the risk of Bill Clinton being nicknamed "Saxophone McPresidentface," or something similar).
And at very least runs the risk of bad PR if you're outed as deliberately offering a lower privacy standard to your home users vs customers abroad.
A California court warned the two their divorce case runs the risk of being dismissed if they don't file court documents before their court hearing on Oct.
Partnering with Moscow -- ironically on resolution of conflicts that it started -- runs the risk of going soft on its human rights violations and breaches of international law.
It is a path the current White House is following now as it "runs the risk of alienating a legislative body" that could help build a legacy.
That runs the risk of alienating people from the protests, since "disrupting traffic or a transit system could impose costs on a lot of people," Merriman adds.
Acquazzino also noted that Prince has a catheter that connects to a main artery near his heart and runs the risk of life-threatening infection without proper care.
Improving the assumptions underlying its pension scheme gives a company more freedom to raise dividends or expand, but runs the risk of future problems unless caution is applied.
They also point to the fact that even this article runs the risk of being sucked into the QAnon vortex and just adding more fuel to the fire.
When he does, he runs the risk of provoking another country to take action against us or our allies – possibly involving real missiles and other weapons of war.
But if the world does not focus on long-term solutions to crises including better aid and better access, 2018 runs the risk of being much, much worse.
" Soehnlein echoed this worry: "One stray kiss or a moment of my husband and I holding hands runs the risk of someone saying something awful or being attacked.
Congress now runs the risk of further being seen as conducting a witch-hunt against the president by calling a witness who clearly has nothing further to add.
Such silence runs the risk of "normalizing hate," Vanita Gupta, the president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said in an emailed statement.
Environmentalists say that the industry runs the risk of hurting its image with car buyers if it is perceived as supporting a broader rollback of clean-air rules.
"Continuing to neglect these issues runs the risk of collapsing the force," the Department of Defense warned in a 1996 briefing document presented to a congressional sub-committee.
By barricading the doors of power to the Five Star Movement, the establishment runs the risk of exacerbating the anger of its supporters and helping it gain steam.
It regularly stages colorful protests at Ms. Merkel's rallies, but runs the risk of making itself a political gadfly rather than the kingmaker it had hoped to be.
"Unless the new administration moves quickly to pass a credible fiscal programme, Brazil runs the risk of following down the same path as Argentina and Turkey," they said.
But giving out goods and services can be tricky and costly, from a logistical perspective, and runs the risk of giving people things they don't want or need.
It is tempting to say that every painter, alone in the studio, runs the risk of seeing the promise of a blank canvas sink into a recalcitrant emptiness.
In Basic Instinct, Michael Douglas runs the risk of being gruesomely murdered with an ice pick just to get his so-called "fuck of the century" from Sharon Stone.
If only male programmers are helping shape the digital fabric of this online world, it runs the risk of excluding viewpoints and considerations important to half the human populace.
If you use a high volume developer on your natural hair, it runs the risk of being over processed at a faster rate than hair that is less dry.
His presence in Arizona, which has long been ground zero in the political and culture wars over immigration, runs the risk of inflaming tensions between his supporters and Latinos.
The show has been moving forward — or lurching, anyway — relentless from the beginning, but while the constant conflict has been productive, it runs the risk of sinking into formula.
But Molly is never really asked to reconsider her aloof, judgmental behavior—she only reneges on her bossy ways because she runs the risk of losing Amy for good.
Between the lines: The program's new delay runs the risk of having it bump up against Congress' $8 billion spending cap, which would require a reauthorization from Capitol Hill.
Such an interpretation runs the risk of creating a slippery slope to infringe on the free speech of potential defendants to criticize witnesses and make public their own defense.
But until the Trump administration starts making more noise — and bigger policy moves — about A.I. being a priority, it runs the risk of losing first place in the race.
More sympathetically, however, I think that Wilmarth's Space Age aesthetic — once trailblazing — today runs the risk of looking like contemporary commercial design: clean industrial lines and tall glass windows.
If the point of art might once have been found in its pointlessness, this attempt to infuse it with purpose runs the risk of rendering it even more irrelevant.
"I think [Trump] runs the risk of creating enormous confusion because there's going to be competing voices here saying different things," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.
But doing so runs the risk of backfiring, especially in such a large field where voters can be put off by perceived negativity — as some candidates have already discovered.
Macron warned that if someone suggests that far-right nationalists are less threatening nowadays than they were in the past, one runs the risk of becoming complacent toward them.
Getting rid of Dodd-Frank or just clipping the wings of the CFPB runs the risk of returning to the Wild-West days that cost so many so much.
Though Shiffrin's serial success runs the risk of making her less relatable to current students, Berlack, a longtime coach at Burke, believes there are still lessons to pass on.
Our thought bubble: A march won't likely change peoples' positions on scientific issues that have become entangled with identity and politics (and it runs the risk of further polarizing people).
By investing the total bonus all at once, a person runs the risk of buying at the market's peak, which can be unsettling for a more emotional and conservative investor.
And while the new design — which is admittedly adorable — is supposed to make the device more approachable, it also runs the risk of encouraging people to shoot 360 video handheld.
If that special sauce becomes less special — if someone else has that information — then Netflix runs the risk of becoming an undifferentiated catalog of TV shows (and a few movies).
But with reports that Samsung has exclusively secured Qualcomm's initial supply of the 835 for its upcoming Galaxy S8, LG runs the risk of being perceived as a generation behind.
Howie harkened back to legends like Richard Pryor -- who were revered for pushing the envelope -- but said anyone who tries that today runs the risk of destroying their whole career.
As entertainment struggles to keep up with our rapidly changing world, filming any remotely topical storyline runs the risk of becoming outdated far before it actually airs, usually months later.
But it runs the risk of creating new challenges for itself, in particular how a more confrontational relationship with Pakistan will hover like a dark cloud over its global ambitions.
Mining runs the risk of suffering what happened to the oil industry, where international majors went from a dominant position to one where state companies produce the bulk of crude.
If the vetting drags on, it runs the risk of delaying those people from taking their jobs until sometime this fall, complicating Trump's plan to reshape regulation of Wall Street.
This uncontrolled media violence has negated the possibility of meaningful dialogue, and any artist who wishes to engage the issues runs the risk of being immediately labeled this or that.
He also brings a life story that adds a poignant depth to the production; whenever the show runs the risk of being too cerebrally, frustratingly abstract, Mr. Alston grounds it.
Rating agencies have warned that Pemex, which had debt of $2.53 billion at the end of 2018, runs the risk of having its investment grade credit rating cut to junk.
In particular, while dwelling on Trump's racism is probably smart in some parts of the country, it runs the risk of implicitly conceding that Trump is on white America's side.
The strong dollar has posed a dilemma for the Federal Reserve: halting interest rates hikes runs the risk of pushing down the real exchange rate and pushing up inflation. (tmsnrt.rs/2Awgzge).
When asked about the prospects for a new administration that runs the risk of heightening trade tensions with major players like China, Krzanich said he actually sees a lot of opportunity.
With all of these disparate threads, Nineteen Nineteen runs the risk of either collapsing in on itself with too many nodes or spinning off kilter with a surfeit of unrelated ideas.
With the disappointing results, Sonos runs the risk of finding itself on a path that's already been traveled by other once-celebrated niche hardware makers before it, like GoPro and Fitbit.
Yet the government runs the risk of fighting the last war in its effort to quell the epidemic, because the causes and victims of drug overdoses in America are changing fast.
The significant uncertainty in the accuracy of the current data runs the risk of directing scarce industry and government resources to address a problem that may not be what it seems.
But any perception of undermining the independence of any central bank runs the risk of undermining its effectiveness at keeping the economy on even keel and preventing inflation from taking off.
While increased transparency about a news organization's funding source may provide valuable information for viewers, the label runs the risk of conflating editorially independent public broadcasters with state-sponsored propaganda machines.
As substantively defensible—even virtuous—as dealmaking can be, taking this tack runs the risk of confirming the public's worst fears about Clinton: that she's dishonest and lacking in core conviction.
But it also means that the company doesn't have a whole lot of time between fueling the vehicle and takeoff, since the propellant runs the risk of warming up too much.
Without any tech allies by his side, Dorsey runs the risk of becoming a punching bag for House GOP lawmakers have a long list of grievances against Silicon Valley in general.
Officials have worried that continuing to keep rates low runs the risk of creating financial imbalances like asset bubbles, and gives the Fed little wiggle room to handle the next crisis.
It does mean, though, that Kim runs the risk of unrest and dissent, even from his own top advisers, if he fails to follow through on his new version of juche.
North Korea's participation in these Olympics runs the risk of rewarding bad behavior and handing Mr. Kim a diplomatic victory that he will brandish as proof that his strategy was right.
A measure more abstract than is usual for "The Walking Dead," this dimensional fold runs the risk of alienating viewers committed to the gore, on which this episode goes decidedly light.
The Virginia lawmaker argued that the directive runs the risk of compromising sensitive voter information, which could both violate the law and lead to a purging of voter rolls in elections.
Congress' oversight power has dangerously eroded over the past few decades, and by rushing this impeachment process, the House runs the risk of diminishing its oversight power even further going forward.
" Stéphane Dujarric, a spokesman for Guterres, said the U.N. "runs the risk of depleting its liquidity reserves by the end of the month and defaulting on payments to staff and vendors.
But the appointment runs the risk of putting an American stamp on an office whose strength has been in building consensus among North Atlantic Treaty Organization members over controversial intelligence matters.
Otherwise, it runs the risk of hindering complete eradication by perpetuating existence of poliovirus in the environment through human excrement and continuing to introduce new vaccine-derived cases of the disease.
While doing so could give them a bargaining chip, it also runs the risk of provoking the White House's national security hawks and making Mr. Trump take an even harder line.
Without any tech allies by his side, Dorsey runs the risk of becoming a punching bag for House GOP lawmakers with a long list of grievances against Silicon Valley in general.
An EU referendum in France, one of the founding members of the economic bloc, runs the risk of undermining the euro, the currency shared by 19 of the EU's 28 member states.
The big problem for Trump is that a leader who plays the game of casting doubt on the motives, methods and standing of others runs the risk of having the tables turned.
In the aftermath of the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, it runs the risk of inviting other assaults on journalists both here and across the world where they often face far greater threats.
By trying to find a middle path, Chrome runs the risk of falling behind as users look for browsers that protect their privacy today — especially now that there are compelling alternatives again.
Having a person who's been famous more or less her entire adolescence and adult life talk about how she tries to recreate her childhood at least runs the risk of being interesting.
Hong Kong runs the risk of losing its special customs status with the U.S. if its autonomy is seen to be eroded with the contentious proposed extradition bill, according to one analyst.
The country's biggest bank collapse still haunts its financial system three years on as Novo Banco still runs the risk of being liquidated if an agreed sale to U.S. fund Lonestar fails.
In abandoning his previous stand for perceived political advantage, Mr Couillard runs the risk of stoking inter-communal tension and creating bafflement among those whose job it is to apply the law.
If he doesn't, he runs the risk of having a permanent domestic violence restraining order issued against him by the mother of his child, which could jeopardize his custodial rights, Melcher said.
"Face recognition technology runs the risk of making Oakland residents less safe as the misidentification of individuals could lead to the misuse of force, false incarceration, and minority-based persecution," Kaplan said.
When our most important diplomatic voice is not truthful or trusted, the US runs the risk of becoming no different from Beijing, Moscow, or any other regime ridiculed for its preposterous claims.
WASHINGTON, Sept 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday warned that anyone around the world who helps fuel Iranian vessels blacklisted by Washington runs the risk of being designated as well.
Though the new technique can identify suspects near crimes, it runs the risk of sweeping up innocent bystanders, highlighting the impact that companies' mass collection of data can have on people's lives.
A man standing as tall as Gustafsson, winding up his uppercuts and dropping his hands to do so, runs the risk of getting clotheslined each time he steps in to attempt it.
In a climate where troubling or seismic news seems to break every day, a weekly news show like John Oliver's runs the risk of missing essential stories or glossing over the details.
Radically reshaping the economy toward clean energy and away from fossil fuels — as the Green New Deal and other similarly transformative plans resolve to do — runs the risk of worsening existing inequities.
Increasingly isolated at home, Morales won friends in Washington by aligning himself with Trump, although he runs the risk of backlash from Arab countries which import the costly spice cardamom from Guatemala.
In opting to locate its consideration of social practice in its catalog and outside of the gallery, Walls Turned Sideways runs the risk of withholding its most powerful moments from museum-goers.
On the other hand, the NEO and the Scorpio may be positioned as premium, better-performing devices in order to appeal to wealthier consumers, although this runs the risk of alienating existing customers.
Analysts and investors have said the fund could potentially make the companies more efficient, while others have expressed concern over the appointment of the fund's management which runs the risk of being politicised.
The show is Freaks and Geeks minus the Apatowian whiteness — it should be an iconoclast, but Netflix's deluge of content, it runs the risk of being buried under the Next Next Big Thing.
Analysts and investors have said the fund could potentially make domestic companies more efficient, while others have expressed concern over the appointment of the fund's management which runs the risk of being politicised.
If you don't want to be bombarded with memes — which, yes, runs the risk of turning into obnoxious spam — simply turn off your AirDrop or set it to contacts only (Settings > General > AirDrop).
If Ontruck sets the price too low it runs the risk of either reducing its own margin and potentially even losing money or having no one on the supply side accept the job.
Without proper safeguards, such an app runs the risk of data breach and sharing information with third-parties, which can further ostracise an already marginalized community, said Ambika Tandon, a cyber security expert.
But as a religion whose adherents are drawn to it because of their passion for social justice, and desire to advocate for the vulnerable, TST also runs the risk of alienating its members.
But in running an ad on the global crisis, the Bloomberg campaign also runs the risk of appearing to exploit an epidemic, and all of the anxiety that accompanies it, for political gain.
Without proper safeguards, such an app runs the risk of data breach and sharing information with third-parties, which can further ostracise an already marginalized community, said Ambika Tandon, a cyber security expert.
MILAN, March 1 (Reuters) - The Serie A season runs the risk of not finishing if more matches are postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak, Inter Milan's chief executive Giuseppe Marotta said on Sunday.
Trump's silence speaks volumes here and elsewhere -- defending human rights, whether in Hong Kong or on mainland China -- isn't something he's willing to do if it runs the risk of derailing trade talks.
Consequently, when one starts unreflectively internalizing and accepting the norms that dominate elite college campuses and upper-middle-class workplaces, one runs the risk of reinforcing a culture that excludes people like oneself.
But in a time when, as Casiraghi puts it, "everybody loves midcentury," the craftsmanship of this sofa runs the risk of getting lost in rooms entirely decorated in the popular, seemingly universal style.
A life of "adhering to political liberalism in the public sphere but social conservatism at home or at the mosque very easily runs the risk of creating severe cognitive dissonance," he told me.
More than two-thirds of the work is by North and South Americans, and most of this focuses on identity politics and autobiography, which runs the risk of falling into self-involved parochialisms.
For the moment, the voices that speak the loudest inside the GOP are solidly behind Trump, and any politician who publicly dares to disagree runs the risk of becoming the next Jeff Flake.
He could stand still and move his head or cover up but in doing this runs the risk of being overwhelmed or having the fight stopped because it looks like he is being overwhelmed.
The tea party empowered some of the most ideologically extreme elements of the Republican Party; a liberal tea party runs the risk of doing the same and further alienating the left from moderate voters.
But the company runs the risk of walling off much of the rest of the smart home ecosystem from the Nest ecosystem, providing customers with fewer choices in their smart home setups than before.
Lawyers may hope to control a story about their client or place pressure on prosecutors by sharing information with reporters, they said, but that runs the risk of upsetting the prosecutors — or the judge.
Along with the fact that this situation runs the risk of screwing up a child pornography case, for Best Buy, it could alienate regular Joe customers who don't trust the company with their privacy.
Transform it into a business that's knocking out more shows across more genres all in the name of feeding the hungry corporate content gods, and it runs the risk of losing that high ground.
But introducing this "non-traditional" information to credit scores runs the risk of making them even more biased than they already are, eroding nearly 22019 years of effort to eliminate unfairness in the system.
By loosening the inter-agency guidelines in an attempt to boost America's share in the global marketplace, the Trump administration runs the risk of fueling the civil wars currently bringing misery to millions worldwide.
If the crew determines that a customer is causing conflict on the aircraft, the customer will be asked to deplane, especially if the crew feels the situation runs the risk of escalation during flight.
Some economists have called for tighter monetary policy, warning that the economy runs the risk of overheating from double-digit credit growth, a rapid increase in investment, and the stellar pace of economic expansion.
" Donohue said that the Trump administration's "approach, however, runs the risk of erasing the recent economic gains it worked so hard to secure through tax and regulatory relief without even solving the underlying problems.
That may be optimistic, and the bill still faces the same hurdles as its predecessors, in that any concession to either moderates or conservatives runs the risk of losing the support of the other.
Any message -- direct or indirect -- to the Russian government that the sanctions are up for debate runs the risk of implying that Russia can continue pursuing its expansionist goals in Eastern Europe without recourse.
While that might have been a useful model when the organization was smaller, at 80,000 employees it runs the risk of being inefficient, and could easily lead to many missed business opportunities for Publicis.
Potential complications include:Easily treated flu complications:sinus infectionear infectioncroup (common in children)bronchiolitis (common in children)Potentially life-threatening flu complications:pneumoniaheart problemsencephalitismeningitissepsismulti-organ failureThe flu also runs the risk of making underlying medical issues worse.
A further problem is that maintaining today's emissions path for too long runs the risk of doing irreparable damage to the earth's ecosystems — causing harm that no amount of technological innovation can make right.
I'm not surprised that the judge was unwilling to give them more direction on the concept of "reasonable doubt," since any explanation runs the risk of changing, rather than elaborating, the reasonable doubt standard.
The flurry of deal activity and a lack of American regulatory response spurred a Sanford C. Bernstein analyst, Mark Newman, to say that the United States "runs the risk of being asleep at the wheel."
All that weight — tons upon tons — hanging at an incline runs the risk of capsizing a ship because of the duress placed on it by its own heft, which means it could then potentially sink.
It also runs the risk of making this whole Artemis program a partisan issue, which is something that NASA has mostly been able to avoid as political divides have grown stronger during the Trump administration.
Their relationships to the story have to be directly connected to their relationships to the new characters, or else the new work runs the risk of spiraling into an endless vortex of pointless fan service.
But either way: should this pattern continue, Dark Phoenix also runs the risk of telling Jean's story from the point of view of the men in her life, further robbing her of her own agency.
"Time will tell if there is room for coexistence, but Tesla investors must understand that as the addressable market expands, the company runs the risk of encroaching deeper into hallowed and competitive turf," Jonas said.
Morrison's openness to recognizing Jerusalem and moving Australia's embassy there comes four days before a by-election in Sydney at which his center-right coalition runs the risk of losing its tenuous hold on power.
The people, it seems, are tuning out the president—a sensible enough reaction to Trump's dysfunctional and embarrassing term in office, but also one that runs the risk of undermining a cornerstone of America's democracy.
If the changes are not made expeditiously, Mr. Carter runs the risk of leaving office with an unfulfilled promise to a small, but important, segment of Americans who want to continue serving their country honorably.
"This runs the risk of undercutting the progress Republicans have made with these independent, suburban women who were already turned off by some of the President's rhetoric," said one Republican strategist working on midterm races.
But Trump encouraging people to go back to work runs the risk of allowing the virus to spread out of control at a time when places like New York are already struggling to contain it.
Mr. Yang "runs the risk of destroying evidence" if he is not arrested, Myeong Jae-kwon, a judge at the Seoul Central District Court, said on Thursday while issuing an arrest warrant against Mr. Yang.
And the fearful rush to protect Ashkenazi culture, fixating on the mortal wound it was dealt by the Nazis, runs the risk of treating it as a culture already dead and just finishing the job.
Politicians will be tempted to bend the rules for the public plan with special subsidies or other favors, but that runs the risk of taking choice away from the voters — and alienating powerful insurance companies.
"An approach that combines all activity together runs the risk of encouraging some institutions to meet expectations primarily through a few large community development loans or investments rather than meeting local needs," Ms. Brainard warned.
While this warns would-be partners what to expect, Miss Manners recognizes that it runs the risk of your coming under suspicion later if you turn out to be the best player in the room.
As Austal transitions into the lead role building Independence-class ships, it runs the risk of losing any advantage it once had over Lockheed Martin in the race to win future LCS and frigate contracts.
Until the script is flipped, the resignation about Social Security on the part of millennials runs the risk of becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy and is not a focal point today of politicians running for office.
If popularized, Android Instant Apps runs the risk of threatening these three monetization pillars: Why would someone want to pay for an app if they can access it quickly and ad-free via Google's mobile browser?
Why it matters: Scaramucci's aggressive entrance rattled West Wing staffers, and, like any aide representing President Trump on TV, he runs the risk of upstaging POTUS, who insists on being the star of his own show.
BENGALURU, July 23 (Reuters) - An increase in government borrowing runs the risk of flooding the debt market, while making it expensive for companies to borrow, according to outgoing Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Viral Acharya.
The interviewer runs the risk of plagiarizing the interviewee's books ( The Psychic Soviet, Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock 'n' Roll Group, and Censorship Now!), or at least adding redundancy to the lives Svenonius' readership/fans.
Although Katz says the overall reception for the PEA has received has been "very positive," any change this drastic runs the risk of system shock for longtime fans accustomed to a certain way of doing things.
It's important to provide a corrective to male-dominated narratives, and yet such an account runs the risk of being seen as an appendix to the mostly-male sweep of history, rather than the core text.
For Trump, the dispute runs the risk of blunting the economic benefits of his tax overhaul, which is at the center of congressional Republicans' case for voters to keep them in power in the 2018 elections.
The moon collection didn't lose its luster in the 20 minutes I had with the game, but it runs the risk of becoming a bit monotonous if it doesn't keep things fresh throughout the game's kingdoms.
In attempting to stunt NAFTA negotiations, Speaker Ryan runs the risk of subjecting NAFTA to the same fate as the Trans Pacific Partnership, a multilateral trade agreement that the U.S. exited shortly after President Trump's inauguration.
As such, drinking dead cheap DIY booze runs the risk of giving you the worst hangover of your life—or damaging your optic nerves, destroying your pancreas in one go, or generating a long-term illness.
In this context, any politically sensitive investigation, whether of Hillary Clinton's emails or Donald Trump's ties to Russia, runs the risk of appearing to be no more than another way to score points against the enemy.
It's a little concession from Ms. Yi, perhaps, that her art is often more evolved than we are; that in its futuristic appeal to our noses, it runs the risk of passing right over our heads.
Parent We Company is hoping that it can kick off its IPO in October after updating its earnings with a strong third quarter performance, but runs the risk of weak demand towards year end, Reuters reported.
Also, as other countries like Brazil and Argentina ramp up their capacity to produce more soybeans, the U.S. runs the risk of being displaced in the global market the longer a trade war with China lasts.
Mickey noted that such a development runs the risk of encouraging more unilateral action from Trump, a kind of "constitutional hardball" that contributes to a concentration of power in the presidency, itself a democratic risk factor.
Still, the Nigerian government runs the risk of exacerbating the problem if it takes a hard line, said Olanshile Akintola, another research student at Oxford who also interacts with Nigerian youth, told CNBC in a separate interview.
"Any system to enable easier enforcement of copyrights runs the risk of creating a chilling effect with respect to speech online," the ACLU wrote in a letter to lawmakers on Monday urging them to oppose the measure.
"The problem is if you overvalue Open Fiber, CDP runs the risk of seeing its stake in TIM shoot up, forcing it to launch a takeover bid - which CDP would never consider," one of the sources said.
Tasha: Generational shift for a franchise is rough, and it runs the risk of looking blatantly commercial, especially when it's too obviously about abandoning expensive, famous, in-demand legacy actors in favor of cheaper, prettier new replacements.
Still, much bigger exports of pork to China threaten to drive up prices in the United States, which would hurt U.S. consumers and runs the risk of backfiring on Trump as he seeks re-election, Friedrichs said.
During the hour-long conversation with Axelrod, Schiff warned that President Donald Trump runs the risk of appearing to be a "paper tiger" by taunting North Korea with threats he probably cannot — or should not — back up.
"It runs the risk of becoming outdated, because what we see is national policies are moving forward with or without the UN," said Hannah Hetzer, the senior policy manager of the Americas at the Drug Policy Alliance.
OSLO, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Norway runs the risk of becoming too dependent on money from its $900 billion sovereign wealth fund even though the government on Thursday recommended a tightening of spending, the central bank governor said.
As in the US, UK, and elsewhere, Brazil has also recently taken a hard turn to the right politically with the election of Jair Bolsonaro, whose presidency runs the risk of leaving cities like Recife further behind.
"His continued membership runs the risk of bringing the honors system into disrepute and, moreover, sending the deeply troubling signal that our government does not take women's voices or allegations of sexual harassment seriously," the letter said.
"The administration runs the risk of damaging its credibility by continuing to prompt people to buy stocks if there is no clear bottom in sight," Scott Minerd, chief investment officer of Guggenheim Investments, said in an interview.
It's true that emphasizing individual responsibility runs the risk of letting people off the hook too quickly, that the satisfaction of doing something right can make it all too easy to ignore everything else they're getting wrong.
Mr. Hollande warned this week in interviews with six European newspapers that the bloc runs the risk of an explosion if some states are not allowed to progress more quickly in areas like defense and monetary policy.
Unfortunately, the predictable hand-wringing from liberals in response to the Jerusalem decision runs the risk of reinforcing some of the most damaging and self-serving myths about what is happening on the ground in Palestine/Israel.
Italian soccer teams and Serie A's governing body are squabbling with each other about when to play games, with Inter Milan's chief executive, Giuseppe Marotta, saying the season even runs the risk of being unable to finish.
A sale to Kone runs the risk of a lengthy regulatory review, even when taking into account a plan to sell Thyssenkrupp's elevator assets in Europe, where overlap is biggest, to CVC to try to resolve antitrust risks.
Matt Damon's fourth turn as Jason Bourne runs the risk of feeling, literally, like an afterthought: In 2007's Bourne Ultimatum, you'll recall, the rogue special-ops hit man finally pieced together how he was brainwashed and trained.
Now, Kentucky's new law runs the risk of deepening that mistrust among the state's miners, as three out of the five remaining physicians who'll still be able to evaluate claims have worked for coal companies or their insurers.
It's a moment that, like any other trend, runs the risk of getting really tired, really fast but the "Who Run It" challenge could help give Herbo the spark of wide-ranging anticipation that Humble Beast was missing.
" In their filing, the groups say the parents and children have a right to be together during this process, and that the "deliberate break-up of the family unit" runs the risk of "irreparable harm and further separation.
Either it allows Britain to sail away quietly and thus runs the risk of setting a precedent: The political and economic success of a country that left the European Union would be clear evidence of the union's noxiousness.
On the other, additional depreciation might invite Trump to accuse China of starting a currency war — and it also runs the risk of triggering a reprisal of the capital outflows that followed the yuan's surprise depreciation in 2015.
Wonky Hillary, of course, runs the risk of playing into another pop-culture stereotype, that of Tracy Flick: the ambitious, cutthroat know-it-all who sits in the front row and raises her hand a little too often.
Applying these principles out of order, let's say by putting law first, doesn't provide any clear benefit, but most certainly runs the risk of prematurely and blindly excluding solutions that might otherwise clear the engineering and financial hurdles.
The photo-sharing service had been criticized for not checking kids' ages, which potentially runs the risk of exposing younger users to inappropriate content and also allows Instagram to collect data about kids under the age of 13.
"The economy is very fragile and runs the risk of falling into recession ... but the central bank's goal is inflation," she said, noting that the central bank is caught between the weak economy and political uncertainty surrounding reforms.
He emphasized the value of choice, while Warren warned that any plan that preserves private insurance runs the risk of people discovering in a moment of need that their insurance doesn't cover as much as they thought it would.
"Such a one-off decision runs the risk of hurting the climate for foreign investment," BDI manager Stefan Mair said, highlighting that the laws introduced last year stated that security concerns arose only when a shareholding exceeds 25 percent.
By offering predominantly white museum audiences a photo of victims of military violence in a third world country, this curatorial decision runs the risk of feeding into the Western perception that tragedy is inevitable in "underdeveloped" or "backwards" countries.
We all know that art museums can feel austere, and that outside of education programs for children, a visit to the museum from a kid's perspective runs the risk of seeming primarily about the observance of rules — don't touch!
"If there was a scenario where the plurality leader was denied because a lot of moderates get together, it runs the risk of splitting the party and hurts our chances of keeping the House and the Senate," said Rep.
The two delivered a joyous halftime show at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, bringing energy to a gig that frequently runs the risk of coming off as snoozy and being drowned out by the cavernous arena and occasion.
And while her 1980s looks were fresh in their contemporary context, dolling up a young woman in the same layered bob and boxy jackets now runs the risk of turning her into a cheap impersonator at a vintage party.
N) said on Monday the United States runs the risk of missing out on setting the terms for international trade by not approving the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and said the company is lobbying members of Congress to approve the deal.
" While the video's not-quite-human animation may instill feelings of the uncanny valley, and it runs the risk of perpetuating an idea that there is a single refugee experience, the most compelling part is when Sofia says, "I'm not real.
"We expect oil price to eventually move higher in Q13 as OPEC+ potentially runs the risk of over-tightening the market by maintaining its current course of action," Harry Tchilinguirian, strategist at BNP Paribas, told the Reuters Global Oil forum.
"We expect oil price to eventually move higher in Q2 as OPEC+ potentially runs the risk of over-tightening the market by maintaining its current course of action," Harry Tchilinguirian, strategist at BNP Paribas, told the Reuters Global Oil forum.
They are pressing the agency to declassify far more information about her career so the public can see it, and have suggested that the C.I.A., in its zeal to promote Ms. Haspel, runs the risk of seeing its campaign backfire.
Icahn claims in the letter that he is not being overly dramatic and warns the EPA that it runs the risk of being "the perfect scapegoat" in allowing the continued transfer of wealth from one group of companies to another.
The currency also runs the risk of being dumped around the presidential election if Republican Donald Trump reverses his current trend of losing ground in the polls, or if either he or Democrat Hillary Clinton ramps up anti-trade commentary.
For a fashion blogger, who must keep up with the demand of creating new content, or a reality TV star, who runs the risk of being captured by paparazzi in the same clothes, Fashion Nova's uber-trendy gear provides a solution.
With polio on the brink of eradication globally, the WHO wants to see a worldwide switch from the traditional "live" oral polio vaccine, which runs the risk of spreading the disease, to an inactivated vaccine that needs to be injected.
And now that he's accepted an appointment from a man his office is investigating, his race runs the risk of being an ugly one, especially if the investigation permanently stalls, just as many Alabama political insiders and journalists assume it will.
Mickey noted that Democratic control over a house of Congress runs the risk of encouraging more unilateral action from Trump, a kind of "constitutional hardball" that contributes to a concentration of power in the presidency, itself a democratic risk factor.
"As long as Trump stays out of the way and doesn't overshadow Hillary's comment, her 'basket of deplorables' comment should dominate the media in the coming days and runs the risk of negatively defining her campaign," said Republican strategist Doug Heye.
The former mayor of New York continues to represent many foreign clients in his private practise while also serving as the president's private lawyer, an arrangement that runs the risk of violating federal ethics laws, according to a Washington Post report.
Also, the data in the study was self-reported from questionnaires, which runs the risk of a 14-year-old not accurately remembering or revealing the amount of time spent playing a game or watching a video on social media.
This fight, like the 'prime Lyoto' versus 'prime Anderson' dream fight which you don't actually want to see after thinking about it, runs the risk of being a stinker because of the conservative nature and striking style of both fighters.
Perspective is incredibly important to a movie like 'Harriet' and as is, it is a very uplifting and powerful story; however, it runs the risk of being an overly Hollywoodized retelling, and this falls to the audience to know their expectations.
Without freedom to roam the country, looking for evidence of a second uranium enrichment facility that the C.I.A. believes exists but cannot prove, or for hidden mobile missile launchers, any agreement runs the risk of falling apart — as previous ones have.
But if the French government doesn't adequately address the legitimate, or at least reasonable, concerns of the Gilets jaunes, it runs the risk of pushing them, as well as other French people, toward the pitfalls France has avoided so far.
Similarly, if Trump doesn't have clear objectives and realistic expectations and comes away unsatisfied with the results, it runs the risk of him turning around and saying diplomacy didn't work, at which point, the talk of preventive war may resume.
And without extending these boundaries to meet the needs of queers of color and trans people, a space designed to provide temporary liberation from a hostile world runs the risk of inflicting that same hostility on minorities within the LGBTQ community.
I'll be the first to admit that telling a story this way runs the risk of trying certain viewers' patience — especially if it never adds up to anything concrete (and Twin Peaks is not really known for adding up to easy explanations).
" OPEC and Russia's readily available spare capacity to meet cuts in Iranian oil exports should maintain short-term balance in the oil markets, he suggested, but the Trump administration's aggressive stance against Iran "runs the risk of aggravating tensions in the Middle East.
"If there is a close relationship at the top level, the risk management function by junior staff runs the risk of becoming clouded and subordinated to the views of senior management," he wrote in a note to clients, flagging an 'underperform' rating.
"If an employee is expected to make their number available for text-based communication, it runs the risk of blurring the boundaries such that the employee can get the message they are expected to always be on," said Monique Valcour, an executive coach.
But Modi's Make-in-India drive runs the risk of conflicting with U.S. President Donald Trump's America First campaign under which he has been pressing for companies to invest in the United States and create jobs instead of setting up factories abroad.
The fact that you can power it or connect anything from each of its four USB-C ports is neat, even though Apple now runs the risk of being called "The Dongle Company" for all the connectors those ports are going to require.
While it's possible to fly under the radar of a mainstream payment processor's acceptable use policy, any sex worker making use of one of these platforms always runs the risk of having their account frozen and their finances seized with no notice.
Despite all that, however, the United States should not back out now, experts said, or it runs the risk of a completely failed state — which in turn is a green light for terrorist organizations to grow, and oppression and corruption to spread.
Washington (CNN)The Trump administration's new National Defense Strategy is insufficiently resourced and the US runs the risk of a military defeat by China or Russia, according to a report by a congressionally mandated panel of bipartisan experts that was released Wednesday.
Not only will eliminating methane pollution mean more product for companies to send to market, but the entire oil and gas sector runs the risk of losing its social license to operate if it refuses to immediately address its contributions to climate change.
It runs the risk of being perceived as a wink-of-the-eye to those who would push the limits of discriminatory tactics, and a cold shoulder to those vulnerable populations who have counted on the federal government to have their backs.
But I feel that with a lot of those topics—you know the pretty sentimental and personal ones – if you're going to sit down and do it, just by default it runs the risk of turning into this slow like ballad-y thing.
We have numbers on almost everything, and while that no doubt makes for smarter―or at least more informed―onlookers, it runs the risk of giving us a false sense of precision, a feeling that we know what's most likely at all times.
Read more " _____ Margaret Hartmann in New York Magazine: "The ongoing dispute over Trump's treatment of Gold Star families runs the risk of overshadowing a more significant concern: More than two weeks after the attack, we don't really know what happened in Niger.
On the global trade front, President Trump is expected to announce the opening salvo in what could become a far-reaching investigation into Chinese trade practices — but he runs the risk of alienating Beijing just when he needs help with North Korea.
They say the change is a political decision aimed at shifting the balance of power -- and that it's no coincidence administration officials made the push to add a question that runs the risk of significantly undercounting immigrant, minority and low-income populations.
However, it runs the risk of coming up against weak IPO market demand because many fund managers become more risk-averse in the fourth quarter, as time runs out to make changes to their portfolio before they close their books for the year.
However, it runs the risk of coming up against weak IPO market demand because many fund managers become more risk-averse in the fourth quarter, as time runs out to make changes to their portfolio before they close their books for the year.
If an outlet takes a stand and dares to say, for instance, that President Donald Trump is a racist, it runs the risk of appearing "biased"—or worse still, alienating the faction of its wealthy conservative readership with sympathetic views of the administration.
While Apple is clearly pitching this as a just-right balance, it runs the risk of losing some of its privacy points while still not getting the kind of data it needs to truly rival Google and Facebook in the machine intelligence game.
Artwork this soft and delicate runs the risk of being overlooked in an assertive large city like Los Angeles, and to embrace the simple words "pencil on paper" is unusual in our time of mega installations and larger-than-life art-entertainment experiences.
"As such, they do not see it as a willful attempt at currency manipulation, a policy that, given the Bundesbank's aversion to inflation, they would be very unlikely to attempt as it runs the risk of higher inflation," Bergsen, the EIU's lead Germany analyst explained.
"Today's print does not detract from the fact that sequential growth still remains entrenched in negative territory and the economy still runs the risk of a technical recession in the fourth quarter," Weiwen Ng, an economist for ANZ, said in a note on Thursday.
She said Yellen's recent indication that it might be OK to let inflation overheat a little to give the economy more traction contrasts with Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer's view that the Fed runs the risk of causing an overheating that could hurt the economy.
And, looking at the states with the largest percentages of people under age 65 with pre-existing conditions, if the GOP's high risk pool plan goes south it runs the risk of more adversely affecting those in states that voted for President Donald Trump.
If a Pokémon is stored in a ball that it would not normally be caught in, or if it knows a move that it can't learn in unaltered versions of the game, that trainer runs the risk of getting hit with the ban hammer.
The ghost of "Dusty in Memphis" hovers over much of the album, and while there are worse problems to have, it runs the risk of putting Ms. Bishop in the same corner where a Leon Bridges passes as an acceptable stand-in for Sam Cooke.
Some will be swift to point the finger at Islam as a whole for being responsible for Masood's actions, a view that is not only deeply misguided, but runs the risk of feeding the narrative of the very extremists we are seeking to defeat.
The writing runs the risk of being somewhat on the nose—but nothing in this game feels out of place or anything other than an earnest attempt to examine the role of protest and freedom of the press in an increasingly toxic and authoritarian landscape.
Here — so the argument goes — was the most reformist government in the kingdom's history; and then it did this stupid, awful thing; and now the U.S. runs the risk of making matters worse "in a fit of righteousness," as one observer recently put it.
Seeking justice for Syria's war victims at the hands of President Bashar al-Assad at this time runs the risk of a conflagration between Russia and the United States, which have become enemies as surrogates of the pro- and anti-Assad protagonists in Syria.
Wired editor-in-chief Nicholas Thompson recently described to the Information his dilemma in partnering with Apple for its news subscription service, which runs the risk of either not providing sustainable ad revenue or being successful enough that it decimates its own paid subscriptions.
I met with her and all of her command staff, and I told her that she could have hired five extra guards for $500 when she spent $700 on pepper spray, which runs the risk of people panicking and thinking they're being gassed and somebody getting trampled.
But if any rap album I listen to runs the risk of making fun of my eyes apropos of nothing, that's an issue; the pervasive pattern presents an undeniable portrait of a slanted perception, in which Asians are othered and associated only with an altered state.
Mr Johnson argued that Britain runs the risk of ending up in "a sort of anteroom of the EU" and blamed this unhappy prospect on a combination of insufficient will on the part of the prime minister and strong resistance on the part of the establishment.
But its one-sided sexual stimulation experience (created by viewing and virtually touching these women through a screen) runs the risk of continuing to promote female sexual pleasure as something to be achieved rather than cooperated, intuited rather than asked about, and perfected rather than made genuine.
The point is it really works for them, and that any attempt to expand it into a bigger audience is not ... runs the risk of upsetting those people and/or those people are too loud in Twitter's head when they try to make those changes. Yeah.
The Paveway deal with the Saudis also includes the co-production of the so-called smart bombs, an aspect that has raised concerns among lawmakers who say it runs the risk of giving the Saudis access to sensitive technology to produce their own version of the bomb.
The Paveway deal with the Saudis also includes the co-production of so-called smart bombs, an aspect that has raised concerns among lawmakers who say it runs the risk of giving the Saudis access to sensitive technology to produce their own version of the bomb.
But where Lister had to retreat to her diary, the one place where she can feel safe, Gentleman Jack, gives Lister a marquee, and a forum in which she is undeniably the smartest person in any room, and it runs the risk of making her look smug.
In a separate opinion piece in the pro-government newspaper Daily Sabah, Erdogan's spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said Turkey's efforts to solve the crisis with diplomatic methods had been dismissed by the Trump administration, warning that "the U.S. runs the risk of losing Turkey" as an ally.
My one concern here is that Serena is so focused on Nichole that the show runs the risk of reducing all of her motivations to "she really wants a baby and can't have one," which would be sexist and unfairly dismissive of a complex character's motivations.
Today, however, pensions have gone the way of the dodo, and investing heavily in an employer's company stock runs the risk of a painful double whammy if the business goes bust: You lose your job and a large chunk of your savings at the same time.
Yet iron ore prices slumped on the news of Trump's tariffs, not because of the expected immediate impact on demand, but rather on the concern that the U.S. government is prepared to wage a beggar-thy-neighbour trade war than runs the risk of sparking the next global recession.
Even with her identity concealed in court records and the FACE report, Doe runs the risk of her name being leaked by Sheikh's supporters, a nightmare for young women in conservative religious circles — Muslim or otherwise — where such gossip can hurt a family's social standing and limit marriage prospects.
Yet iron ore prices slumped on the news of Trump's tariffs, not because of the expected immediate impact on demand, but rather on the concern that the U.S. government is prepared to wage a beggar-thy-neighbor trade war than runs the risk of sparking the next global recession.
The premise of an app built with precisely this use-case in mind may seem like a godsend for any Gcal-overloaded caregiver, but Cozi, which bills itself as an app that can "simplify" family life, also runs the risk of contributing to the problem it attempts to solve.
The sprint to a markup comes as lawmakers are trying to craft a bill that can pass both chambers of Congress and receive the president's signature, and hopefully get done in the next few weeks, before the island territory runs the risk of a disruptive default on its debt.
And it runs the risk of playing into the Iranian government's narrative that American efforts are aimed at regime change rather than a change of behavior — and has echoes of "Operation Ajax," the C.I.A.'s recently acknowledged role in supporting a coup in the country in the mid-1950s.
"Given concerns that the Afghan air force and special mission wing may not be able to fully use all 159 aircraft when delivered, the Department of Defence runs the risk of wasting U.S. taxpayer dollars to purchase aircraft the AAF and SMW cannot fly or maintain," SIGAR said.
Past performance is no guide to future returns, as investors are so often told, but the French electorate runs the risk of creating a crisis worse than the fall of Lehman Brothers if it follows the U.K. in instigating a referendum on EU membership, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank.
As a character choice, it runs the risk of feeling just a little too precious as first, but as the different timelines unfold, Jane's umbrellas and the ways in which they interact with the rain pick up unexpected resonances that make you catch your breath in delight: Of course, you think.
That runs the risk of undermining the credibility of programs like PBS News Hour at a time when public broadcasters are under threat of defunding, and when trust in all news organizations is at an all-time low in part because citizens have trouble distinguishing fake news from independent reporting.
The Paveway deal with the Saudis also includes the co-production of the so-called smart bombs, an aspect that has raised concerns among lawmakers who say it runs the risk of giving the Saudis access to sensitive technology they can use to produce their own version of the bomb.
"To immediately put a stranglehold on by limiting the country's ability to export oil day one (after the vote) runs the risk of creating a power vacuum and thereby increasing the possibility that Venezuela becomes a security threat in the region," said Christian DiClementi, emerging markets debt portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein.
And Senate leaders will face the same difficult dynamic that House leaders confronted: Any move to ease the concerns of moderate Republicans or senators from Medicaid-expansion states runs the risk of alienating conservative hard-liners, especially Senators Rand Paul of Kentucky, Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah.
Any move to change the terms of NAFTA or withdraw from the deal also runs the risk of being met with retaliatory tariff hikes in other countries -- meaning the cost of goods shipped to the United States could become higher for American consumers, and US companies could lose access to key foreign markets.
"While we expect that increased Model 3 production will provide a meaningful injection of liquidity on a number of fronts, Tesla runs the risk of requiring financing over the next few quarters, particularly if Model 3 production continues to undershoot expectations," Nomura Instinet analyst Romit Shah said in a note on the results.
Spain runs the risk of fines for not implementing a raft of European Union directives, such as one regulating the sale of explosives, and it has yet to approve its participation in high-profile projects such as a new China-based development bank or the Paris agreement to curb climate-warming emissions.
The Alabama legislature, in which the House speaker enjoys almost supreme power, has repeatedly underfunded the state's Medicaid program, to the point that it now runs the risk of losing its federal matching funds, which would leave millions of Alabama residents without even minimal health care and imperil the state's entire medical system.
An exhibition such as Strange Currencies should remind viewers of the importance of making art outside of established methods or venues; the irony, however, is that by stamping the work as historical, the show runs the risk of suggesting that these Mexico City artists have always held the status of museum recognition.
"When you have Qatari (military) planes being scrambled near a civilian airliner, it runs the risk of an incident that, even unplanned, could result in the loss of lives and escalate this into an situation Gulf countries have never had among each other," said a Western diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity.
If social media's biggest contribution to the industry has been to level the musical playing field, allowing artists without label backing to market their output themselves, then an app running promotional deals with the majors runs the risk of using the veil of digital meritocracy to mask a system that is innately rigged.
In an exclusive sneak peek at Wednesday's I Am Jazz, the transgender teen has completed the hormone-blocking procedure, and a doctor gives the Jennings a status update – an implant partially broke, but he was able to recover it, and Jazz still runs the risk of infection (though it's unlikely, according to the surgeon's experience).
But if the US takes this unique step, labeling the military branch a terrorist group, it runs the risk of making the IRGC a "hero in the eyes of probably most Iranians for 'resistance'," said James Durso, a former US Navy officer and staff member on the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Without the context that the findings of an F.B.I. investigation could provide, the Senate hearing planned for Monday pitting Brett Kavanaugh against Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused him of sexual assault, runs the risk of being seen as little more than Kabuki theater, or, more pointedly, a gesture of appeasement to the #MeToo movement.
"Allowing a non-lawyer to enforce a fee sharing agreement that violates (ethics rules) runs the risk of being a disservice to the client, either because the non-lawyer's influence impairs the quality of professional services or collusion between the lawyer and non-lawyer achieves a result inconsistent with the client's best interests," the bar brief said.
And by mirroring the trauma-as-superpower trope in both the kidnapper and Casey, the movie runs the risk of exploiting something that lots of people struggle with — both the effects of abuse and disorders like DID — and saying that they're more special than other people, which could be taken as just another way of saying that they're weird.
What gets lost in the hype The focus on sex trafficking during the Super Bowl runs the risk of concentrating resources on just one weekend, says Bouchard with Polaris, and only for sex trafficking, "when the focus needs to be year-round and across all types of human trafficking present in the United States," he said.
These events, along with the ongoing increase in energy production and consumption, make it clear that we should not view oil as just another commodity, but rather as a fossil fuel that runs the risk of entangling America in foreign wars if and when today's glut turns into tomorrow's shortage, and in the meantime doing irreparable harm to the world we live in.
"The National Mining Association or any other lobbying group has likely concluded that spending money at the Trump International Hotel in D.C. is a solid way of currying favor with the administration — and that spending money anywhere else runs the risk of offending our very sensitive president," Brendan Fischer, an election law expert with the Campaign Legal Center, told the Intercept.
" He added, "But in my view, I was not interested in putting out summaries or trying to summarize because I think any summary, regardless of who prepares it, not only runs the risk of, you know, being underinclusive or overinclusive, but also, you know, would trigger a lot of discussion and analysis that really should await everything coming out all at once.
But focusing too heavily on Stonewall turns it into a historical queer awakening that began in New York City, as opposed to a major event that led to further calls for LGBTQ liberation across the US. In other words, hyperfixating on Stonewall as a coming-out celebration runs the risk of depoliticizing the whole point of the riots in the first place.
The mutual fund and ETF giant, which manages more than $259 trillion in investor assets, is making all ETF trading free on its brokerage platform this month, a move that runs the risk of leading investors to the kind of bad, market-timing behavior it has always shunned, especially from the bully pulpit of its influential and outspoken founder, Jack Bogle.
Though the company runs the risk of becoming entangled with foreign partners on projects in the United States, and might have to deal with the suspicion that it got tax breaks and other incentives from local governments because of its ties to the White House, company officials say they decided not to stop domestic expansion because it is creating jobs for Americans.
It is Stone who, much like his friend, President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE, can't seem to stop talking — and in doing so, runs the risk of prejudicing himself in the court of public opinion.
Orange is no stranger to trying to work closer with tech companies to bring some of their ethos, culture, and rapid customer growth to their business — which, like many large carriers, continues to bring in huge amounts of cash and strong margins, but is often based on legacy services and therefore runs the risk of shrinking, being curtailed by regulators, or simply becoming less appealing to consumers.
A writer who extols the virtues of a group of people based on any demographic denominator runs the risk of flattening or essentializing his characters, but in the face of popular novels centered on middle- and upper-class black experiences, such as those by his contemporary Jessie Redmon Fauset, Hughes's call for nuanced consideration of working-class (and even out-of-work) black people was noteworthy.
A portion of the VR scene runs the risk of heading the same way—there are, for my money, too many games on the boil that rely on the novelty value of "true" 3D depth to paper over the tedium of yet another shooter or action experience, and the fact that so many VR games can also be played on a screen suggests that developers are preparing for the worst.
However, the Xbox design team doesn't think of the device's software as if it should or needs to be as complex and capable as a full-blown desktop OS. That runs the risk of confusing users, obfuscating obvious tasks and features, and creating a bogged-down mess of software that makes it more difficult and time-consuming to get to where you need to go and do what you want to do.
But thinking past Tuesday's election, to a year from now, when (possibly incumbent) McCready is back on the campaign trail trying to convince voters on the left that they should trust a Democrat who loves to espouse "country over party" and is willing to shake hands with the other side of the aisle, that's where the concern starts to set in—by trying to appeal to those in the middle, McCready runs the risk of appealing to none.
The significance of the incident extends beyond Avast and Jumpshot's practices: it highlights the sometimes-obscure but very real connection between how some security technology runs the risk of stepping over the boundary into violations of privacy; and ultimately how big data is a hot commodity, a fact that potentially clouds that demarcation even more, as it did here: "We started Jumpshot in 2015 with the idea of extending our data analytics capabilities beyond core security," writes the CEO Ondrej Vlcek in a blog post in response to Jumpshot news.

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