The phrase "cool beans" stems from the phrase "some beans," which stems from the phrase "full of beans," which probably stems from horse farts.
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Consider that good art stems from a thriving artistic community, which stems from infrastructure and available capital.
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Some of this abuse stems from tomfoolery, some stems from pure vandalism, and some may stem from fear.
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Some of this stems from the aforementioned lack of receiving talent; some of it stems from the receivers on hand becoming predictable.
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The problem stems from an industry concept called TV Everywhere.
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The lawsuit stems from Illinois' strict laws around biometric privacy.
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The current divergence stems from Asia's continuing dependence on coal.
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It all stems from a licensing deal inked in 2011.
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Partly it stems from the state's grip on strategic industries.
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Partly, however, India's addiction to coal stems from government bias.
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The backlash against Luminary stems from a few different places.
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SpaceX's slide to the 30th spot stems from various factors.
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Some firms' unwillingness to spend big stems from unhappier times.
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Part of it stems from the assault on public services.
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The difference stems from a change in the time frame.
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Friday's recommendation of criminal contempt charges stems from that case.
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The case stems from a peculiar video circulated via WhatsApp.
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Some of this coyness stems from Wall Street's new arithmetic.
|
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Levine's crossover success stems from early on in his career.
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The rule stems from legislation enacted by Congress in 2008.
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But that restriction itself, he added, stems from Christian principles.
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This stems from a 1905 law separating church and state.
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Much of this inequality stems from toxic masculinity and misogyny.
|
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But it also stems from tensions that remain unresolved today.
|
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"The interest really stems from the media hype," he added.
|
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But they need to consider where the advice stems from.
|
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The vulnerability stems from a conscious choice on Zoom's part.
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One of Zuma's recent judicial hitches stems from that decision.
|
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The issue stems from the global phenomenon of device proliferation.
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That all stems from being mentally and physically feeling healthy.
|
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Part of the problem stems from the polling process itself.
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Part of the backlog stems from the cumbersome testing process.
|
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But sadly, it also stems from the same racist strain.
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Its luminous appeal to all humanity stems from the Enlightenment.
|
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Part of that answer stems from uncertainty around government policy.
|
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It stems from an issue that is hardly new: doping.
|
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Johnson conviction stems from the 1994 murder of Marcus Boyd.
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Part of Edwards' appeal stems from his more conservative leanings.
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Her callousness, we learn, stems from an appalling childhood trauma.
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This ban stems from a bad incident in my field.
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Pressure to allow greater foreign investment stems from recapitalisation needs.
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The isolation of homelessness stems from its stigma and shame.
|
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This isn't something that stems from what Drake gave us.
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One stems from Tarantino's treatment of women in his movies.
|
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It all stems from a larger trend of vacation photographers.
|
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Its joy ultimately stems from the medium of cinema itself.
|
|
The ruling stems from identity theft prosecutions in Kansas (Reuters).
|
|
The current controversy stems from two separate but related events.
|
|
"Masculinity stems from gender, which is socially constructed," says Man.
|
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Schlossberg says Facebook's weakness stems from more than regulatory pressure.
|
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The confusion stems from the numbering method most communes choose.
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Beijing's power over Pyongyang stems from North Korea's economic reliance.
|
|
But I think so much of this stems from ignorance.
|
|
The lawsuit stems from a proclamation signed by Trump on Nov.
|
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Some of the building emissions increase stems from a cold winter.
|
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The power of the Orthodox rabbinate largely stems from Israeli realpolitik.
|
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This strange position stems from a combination of two cognitive errors.
|
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Minikus's easy marriage with horses stems from his proximity to them.
|
|
The decline stems from rising employment and not enough new construction.
|
|
The suit stems from an altercation the two had in 2013.
|
|
But her fondness for the project stems from something much deeper.
|
|
But the imbalance also stems from priorities set at the top.
|
|
Another impetus for action stems from a recent pullback by GlobalFoundries.
|
|
Yet not much of that stems from unwinding Obama-era protections.
|
|
Police brutality, activists argue, stems from an abuse of unchecked authority.
|
|
The drama all stems from a whistleblower complaint filed in August.
|
|
Its popularity stems from the fact that it's cheap to use.
|
|
Most of that revenue stems from Facebook's dominance in mobile advertising.
|
|
The award stems from a 2016 dispute over patent licensing contract.
|
|
Its immersiveness stems from a balance of heightened drama and believability.
|
|
My nagging uncertainty stems from two aspects of Mr. Grant's narrative.
|
|
There often is an avoidance behavior that stems from the anxiety.
|
|
His suspension stems from a DUI arrest in California in July.
|
|
He's reportedly said his position on politics stems from his upbringing.
|
|
Remove and discard the stems from the mint, basil, and cilantro.
|
|
That dispute stems from issues over pay, pensions and other benefits.
|
|
It's possible the current sum owed stems from that prior agreement.
|
|
Global hesitation to ban nukes stems from a multitude of factors.
|
|
The divide stems from profound economic, generational, educational and cultural differences.
|
|
" Autonomy means freedom, and freedom stems from the little word "less.
|
|
That worry stems from personal experience, but also from being trans.
|
|
To prepare the slaw, remove the broccoli stems from the heads.
|
|
This stems from a petition filed by the Defenders of Wildlife.
|
|
The divide stems from a question of who has root access.
|
|
The case stems from a Supreme Court order back in June.
|
|
Originality stems from creating something that has never been seen before.
|
|
Everything you do in life stems from either fear or love.
|
|
Some recession anxiety stems from people's assessment of their current finances.
|
|
However, the hype around CBD stems from its purported relaxation effects.
|
|
Instead, the practice stems from an interpretation of the 14th Amendment.
|
|
Spain's current interest in these prosecutions stems from a peculiar history.
|
|
The NYDFS settlement stems from "certain prior business practices," Kay said.
|
|
Levitt's revised outlook stems from the fact that enrollment on HealthCare.
|
|
The lawsuit stems from events Zervos claims took place in 2007.
|
|
You would leave the stems from oregano in there for authenticity.
|
|
It stems from childhood experiences and our relationship with our parents.
|
|
Maybe it stems from something aspirational about the stories we tell.
|
|
Perhaps Billing's interest in communal situations stems from her own upbringing.
|
|
He often says that his drive stems from the AIDS era.
|
|
Much of the drop stems from fewer new consumers selecting policies.
|
|
I think it all stems from, 'What if it were me?
|
|
One of the report's most critical findings stems from a Feb.
|
|
That said, the critics' disappointment stems from a profoundly decent instinct.
|
|
Part of my reason stems from the symbolism his campaign brings.
|
|
This all stems from the failure to hold individuals directly accountable.
|
|
My hunch: Your hostess's request for reimbursement stems from hurt feelings.
|
|
Compassion's openness stems from the events around which it was created.
|
|
Much of his appeal stems from being the "Not Bibi" candidate.
|
|
But the latest massacre in Manaus stems from a different cause.
|
|
Some of the Democrats' animus against Mr. Price stems from experience.
|
|
Ms. Gersh's lawsuit stems from events last spring in Whitefish, Mont.
|
|
It is said that Trump's popularity stems from an angry nation.
|
|
Fiction, she tells her students nowadays, stems from desire, from hunger.
|
|
The charge against the governor apparently stems from a 2015 affair.
|
|
Part of the problem, officials suggested, stems from its conflicted identity.
|
|
The risk aversion stems from trade and a general global slowdown.
|
|
I suspect their consternation stems from the fear they could be next.
|
|
I can appreciate where your uncertainty stems from, and you have reason….
|
|
A major downside risk to inflation projections stems from the exchange rate.
|
|
"It all stems from betting," said 56th-ranked John Millman of Australia.
|
|
The paper's hype probably stems from how the internet disseminates science news.
|
|
Before conflicts begin, suffering stems from three types of human rights violations.
|
|
Trump's "broad-based support" stems from his economic plans, according to Mnuchin.
|
|
The charge stems from an earlier alleged sexual interaction on school property.
|
|
Much of this catastrophe stems from the over-prescription of legal painkillers.
|
|
He thinks his occasional internet searches of former friends stems from sentimentality.
|
|
Ant stems from Alipay, created in 2004 to make online shopping easier.
|
|
Rather, it stems from an ongoing legal dispute between Apple and Qualcomm.
|
|
The 65-year-old says his interest in Lenin stems from childhood.
|
|
McCall's arrest allegedly stems from an incident that took place on Jan.
|
|
Her comment likely stems from other issues the family has with Disick.
|
|
McCall's arrest stems from an incident that allegedly took place on Jan.
|
|
The mistake stems from an inaccurate interpretation of NASA's ongoing Twins Study.
|
|
It stems from being a student of Polke: that was our world.
|
|
Another risk stems from Mr Trump's obsession with the bilateral trade deficit.
|
|
Chandrasekaran's interest in these companies stems from his own experiences in tech.
|
|
It stems from really wonderful work by scholars who study consumption practices.
|
|
The problem stems from an old tannery and waterproof Hush Puppies shoes.
|
|
Part of the problem stems from a US law back in 1920.
|
|
The settlement stems from an investigation by federal prosecutors in New York.
|
|
The thesis of this meme is that all hateration stems from jealousy.
|
|
This delicious possibility stems from the arcane rules of the Democratic caucuses.
|
|
My work stems from being seen, being heard, and not being discounted.
|
|
Mr Griesa's change of heart stems from a change in Argentina's government.
|
|
The review stems from the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act.
|
|
The point: this anti-tech attitude stems from cultural trends favoring privacy.
|
|
This support stems from the rural economic development provided by wind farms.
|
|
The case stems from an overstatement of Tesco's profit forecast in 2014.
|
|
Nevertheless, the biggest threat to emerging market growth stems from corporate debt.
|
|
Our work stems from the belief that beauty can come from horror.
|
|
The ruling stems from a lawsuit filed by a Spanish taxi association.
|
|
Human exhibitions "Völkerschau" translated as "human shows," stems from the 15th century.
|
|
The bottom line: All this stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of trade.
|
|
Some of the controversy stems from apparent confusion about the caucus process.
|
|
It stems from a case of a Border Patrol agent, Lonnie Swartz.
|
|
This stems from a 2010 petition from the Center for Biological Diversity.
|
|
Barclay's fascination with warfare stems from a childhood spent on military bases.
|
|
CNT suggests that the trend stems from a bit of celebrity influence.
|
|
Growth often stems from reducing inputs or introducing novelty, not expanding volumes.
|
|
Facebook's creepiness stems from it sucking in data to power ad targeting.
|
|
The current optimism stems from recent breakthroughs in the field of immunotherapy.
|
|
The surge of fear lately stems from the so-called Brexit vote.
|
|
Some of this fascination no doubt stems from the composer's political context.
|
|
Warrior believes White Eagle's drug problem stems from a lack of opportunity.
|
|
It also stems from the rise of an educated population of women.
|
|
That's where a lot of the violence in their community stems from.
|
|
Only part of the controversy surrounding Northam stems from the revelations themselves.
|
|
Sanders's strength in New Hampshire stems from his support among young voters.
|
|
The unique nature of these measures stems from their origins: the citizenry.
|
|
Part of that steadfast reliability stems from our mutually beneficial trading relationship.
|
|
Much of the frustration stems from a new and complicated voter law.
|
|
Part of that, perhaps inevitably, stems from the absence of human characters.
|
|
The dispute apparently stems from West's 2016 album, The Life of Pablo.
|
|
Keidan's interest in investment stems from his experience in the music industry.
|
|
I wonder what that stems from...I've always found dancing unpleasant actually.
|
|
The name for this zone stems from the Greek; meson, meaning middle.
|
|
Some of that stems from Congress's general dysfunction and inaction, said Harkins.
|
|
Here, however, the potency of slut shaming stems from its enduring nature.
|
|
His interest, he said, stems from growing up near Turners Falls, Mass.
|
|
The case stems from an ICE investigation that is unrelated to Janus.
|
|
Part of their struggle, Ms. Pham-Madden believes, stems from language barriers.
|
|
The report stems from an executive order Mr. Trump signed in April.
|
|
The gauntlet stems from a simple question of arithmetic, according to Christian.
|
|
The Flores Agreement stems from the decades-old settlement Flores v. Reno.
|
|
In predictable fashion, Britt-Marie discovers that Kent's disengagement stems from infidelity.
|
|
"Spanish style house," which stems from Spanish colonialism, was on the list.
|
|
The controversy stems from how members and their staff receive health care.
|
|
Many of us are doing incredible work that stems from surviving trauma.
|
|
The criminal sex act count stems from an encounter with Lucia Evans.
|
|
Australia's brutal fire season stems from a confluence of threats, scientists say.
|
|
But the latest round of accusations stems from activity in recent years.
|
|
The heart of the deficit stems from the state's overspending on Medicaid.
|
|
Much of the current controversy stems from a radio interview Virginia Gov.
|
|
The Fed's reluctance also stems from the enormous uncertainty about economic policy.
|
|
Rainey said the disconnect stems from a misunderstanding of the original deal.
|
|
This stems from a petition for rulemaking by the Defenders of Wildlife.
|
|
The ruling stems from complaints originally filed by the United Auto Workers.
|
|
Part of the mystique surrounding Ms. Ferrante stems from her enigmatic persona.
|
|
The trouble stems from weakening home affordability and a supply-demand imbalance.
|
|
"Hysterical; the word stems from the same word as hysterectomy," Pelosi said.
|
|
I believe my peers' apparent complacency stems from two main issues: 85033.
|
|
The status review stems from a petition by the Defenders of Wildlife.
|
|
The question stems from Trump's comments last week during an immigration roundtable.
|
|
" Hemingway declared that "all modern American literature stems from this one book.
|
|
The trouble stems from the final two letters in the PUBG acronym.
|
|
The difficulty of reading Lax in part stems from a temporal dissonance.
|
|
Jakes's stems from the possibility that his voice will break while singing.
|
|
This opposition stems from lawmakers on different ends of the Republican ideological spectrum.
|
|
The difference stems from the way the system is viewed, according to Delury.
|
|
The idea stems from Kohut's background in investigating the mental representations of pornography.
|
|
But the growing scale and destruction from these fires stems from human activity.
|
|
David Patrikarakos: It all stems from my coverage of the Russo-Ukraine war.
|
|
OPEC's determination to cut output stems from the recent plunge in oil prices.
|
|
Physical inequality stems from passengers being placed into stratified classes within the cabin.
|
|
That stems from a fundamental belief in ahimsa, the principle of non-violence.
|
|
The punishment stems from him making an obscene gesture during a recent game.
|
|
This classic problem stems from the material properties of down and synthetic insulation.
|
|
He suspects crime around here stems from economic need, and that hasn't changed.
|
|
And much of it stems from the problems in the political system itself.
|
|
But its success stems from a holistic approach to community-building through music.
|
|
Much of the criticism stems from Kemp's actions after Guyger's October 2 sentencing.
|
|
He says he is not gay and the accusation stems from a misunderstanding.
|
|
Do you think any of that stems from losing a parent so young?
|
|
Part of these concerns also stems from Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei's political background.
|
|
The case stems from the ride-hailing firm classifying drivers as independent contractors.
|
|
In much of Africa the problem stems from botched regulations and weak states.
|
|
Venezuela's surprising rectitude as a debtor stems from an unlikely confluence of factors.
|
|
The hate you breed that stems from Insecurity don't look pretty on you.
|
|
That stems from the fact that heart failure trials typically use male participants.
|
|
The dancers' anxiety also stems from the clash between Petronio and Cunningham's approaches.
|
|
Forget another myth, too: the problem stems from kids throwing curveballs too young.
|
|
The proposal in New York State stems from many of the same concerns.
|
|
The ruling stems from an antitrust lawsuit brought against Qualcomm by the FTC.
|
|
Sometimes the market-fit issue with developing enterprise companies stems from insufficient focus.
|
|
India's elaborate system of positive discrimination stems from the constitution adopted in 1949.
|
|
Deepindher Singh Some of the problem stems from inherent limitations characterizing IoT devices.
|
|
That his career appears to be Teflon stems from a combination of factors.
|
|
The dispute stems from Argentina's default on $100 billion in bonds in 2002.
|
|
That is a very good characteristic probably no matter where it stems from.
|
|
Jennifer Garner's passion for healthy, organic food all stems from her family's roots.
|
|
A lot of his pessimism stems from the prevalence of high-frequency traders.
|
|
The status review stems from a petition by the Center for Biological Diversity.
|
|
The legal wrangling stems from how much chance is involved in the games.
|
|
Some of this reluctance stems from questions of definition, which I'll discuss below.
|
|
The spat stems from a rejected App Store update to the Spotify app.
|
|
The funding fight stems from Congress' inability to complete work by a Sept.
|
|
This stems from two factors: Firstly, London has a wonderfully irregular street plan.
|
|
This distinction stems from a 1964 court case, New York Times Co. v.
|
|
The temporary holding of immigrant children, for example, stems from a 1997 agreement.
|
|
The summertime ban on E15 stems from classic Washington red tape and bureaucracy.
|
|
This stems from a petition requesting the ban under the Animal Welfare Act.
|
|
A China devaluation threat stems from the idea it would cost American jobs.
|
|
Gullette argues that ageism stems from the perception that old people are irrelevant.
|
|
This stems from the way the show has always prioritized surprise over suspense.
|
|
This popular attitude, say actual scientists, stems from the Kids These Days Effect.
|
|
The change stems from chemical company DowDuPont's breakup into three publicly-listed stocks.
|
|
A chunk of that stems from layoffs and employees clocking in fewer hours.
|
|
Pew noted the dip in support largely stems from changing views among Republicans.
|
|
Gabbard's consideration for from Donald Trump likely stems from her bipartisan, populist appeal.
|
|
There is red ink but it stems from congressional politics, not the mail.
|
|
The review stems from a petition for rulemaking by the Defenders of Wildlife.
|
|
The problem stems from Facebook not requiring any proof of age upon signup.
|
|
But Hamas's real reason stems from a desire to annihilate the Jewish State.
|
|
The sentence stems from eight federal charges Cohen pleaded guilty to in August.
|
|
It stems from a worldview that sees Western Civilization as fragile and besieged.
|
|
The tax lien reportedly stems from a mistake in his 2014 tax filing.
|
|
A large part of this problem stems from white ignorance about African cultures.
|
|
I suspect this discrepancy stems from differences in the methods used across studies.
|
|
I guess it stems from the fact that I consider myself a feminist.
|
|
Whether this stigma stems from biology or society or both is anybody's guess.
|
|
The move stems from a 2010 petition from the Center for Biological Diversity.
|
|
But the devastation from these fires stems from more than just the sparks.
|
|
The indictment stems from his alleged assault of a teenage girl last February.
|
|
Rather, the criticism stems from a deep impatience with both player and team.
|
|
His legitimacy stems from holding power since the day the millennium was born.
|
|
So it's not as if the problem stems from an immutable American characteristic.
|
|
The problem, Carlson said, stems from young men who feel angry and alone.
|
|
The danger stems from the pathogen itself: a virus called SARS-CoV-22.
|
|
My passion for standing up for American families stems from my personal history.
|
|
Jackson told CNN that Brayden's obsession with Target actually stems from her mother.
|
|
"It's a love that stems from dependency, habit, need and attachment," she says.
|
|
This latest change stems from Russia's roundly condemned annexation of Crimea in 2014.
|
|
All of this stems from a classic miscalculation by both Beijing and Pyongyang.
|
|
The importance of Iowa stems from the momentum it can lend a candidate.
|
|
But to Fijians, its significance stems from several legends of romance and heartbreak.
|
|
One way to avoid the frustration that stems from a boring winter wardrobe?
|
|
It just stems from a very anime, video-game influence within my soul.
|
|
Klobuchar noted her question stems from concerns over Trump's comments about the networks.
|
|
This debt stems from a variety of sources, including mortgages and student loans.
|
|
The plea deal stems from an incident that went down in December 2018.
|
|
All of this truly stems from him dancing with Ballet for All Kids.
|
|
But my lack of understanding stems from inexperience with personal trauma and triggers.
|
|
"The influence stems from the type of woman it attracts," she tells me.
|
|
And not all of it stems from China's most controversial telecommunications equipment company.
|
|
The disagreement stems from a fundamental divide between US and Iranian policy makers.
|
|
Their seeming incoherence stems from the big difference between written and spoken language.
|
|
A lot of her specific coming out story stems from my own life.
|
|
The exhibition stems from Fan's experiences transitioning between genders and also between continents.
|
|
To a degree, this likely stems from how intimate most TV comedy is.
|
|
I understand that America's uniqueness, culturally and politically, stems from our experimental nature.
|
|
Some insiders say it stems from a desire to avoid delegating to ministers.
|
|
The most recent conflict apparently stems from an incident around a scheduled custody visit.
|
|
Industry experts say that stems from regulatory uncertainty and more complex geology in California.
|
|
But Fallon and Gray reject the idea that "Bachelor" viewership stems from pure disdain.
|
|
It's actually pretty cool that my self-worth stems from internal things these days.
|
|
Part of the problem stems from stakeholders confusing medical technology with biotechnology (aka pharma).
|
|
Some of that trend stems from greater use of online storage and social media.
|
|
The latter charge stems from an alleged kiss between him and Thomas on Jan.
|
|
Much of the problem stems from consumers' ongoing love affair with trucks and SUVs.
|
|
The dispute stems from tweets Musk made in February that contained Tesla production forecasts.
|
|
The video stems from controversy that erupted yesterday over her KKW Beauty contour kits.
|
|
The latter charge stems from an alleged kiss between Cummins and Thomas on Jan.
|
|
A lot of this stems from the era in which Iron Fist was created.
|
|
A psychologist once told me that most human conflict stems from poorly concealed contempt.
|
|
The source of my personal shame stems from the fact that I accounted for .
|
|
Pay equity is different for black women because it stems from an economic issue.
|
|
The main source of friction stems from Turkey's role in the fight (see article).
|
|
This stems from the Met's former policies concerning its own photography of historical artworks.
|
|
Caron said part of the credibility issue stems from central bankers using extreme policy.
|
|
USA Today reports that the news stems from a Freedom of Information Act request.
|
|
Background: The controversy stems from two sections: The first, widely known as Article 11.
|
|
The problems stems from the drone's auto landing system and an unexpected wind gust.
|
|
Some of this stems from Trump's own unpredictability when it comes to foreign policy.
|
|
Rather, his seeming incoherence stems from the big difference between written and spoken language.
|
|
Their fear often stems from the traffickers' threats to harm their family, she said.
|
|
He says much of his passion stems from him experiencing racism of his own.
|
|
The ridiculousness of camp films often stems from them going to far out places.
|
|
Many of these athletes' activism actually stems from their own hardships endured since childhood.
|
|
Most of the impact outside the US stems from the shock to bond yields.
|
|
Much of TikTok's recent growth stems from its merger with music video app Musical.
|
|
The distinction between the federal and private viewpoints stems from their envisioned end- goals.
|
|
Walker said his opposition stems from the draft bill's use of refundable tax credits.
|
|
Everything kind of stems from that place—it was a lot of fun, though.
|
|
This stems from buyer caution due to prevalent political instability and aggressive taxation drive.
|
|
I think this stems from her not being a natural politician, which pleases me.
|
|
The lawsuit stems from a 2012 shooting at a beauty salon in Brookfield, Wisconsin.
|
|
The film-makers' gripe stems from economists' lack of foresight in the mid-2000s.
|
|
They are not pegged to anything, and their value stems from their dividend policy.
|
|
You are right that much of China's deficit stems from investments in transport infrastructure.
|
|
Or maybe it stems from being disappointed by Kentucky voters so many times before.
|
|
The fine stems from an attempt to find out the identity of a whistleblower.
|
|
The second of Hillary Clinton's problems stems from her tenure in the Obama administration.
|
|
For some, it stems from a traumatic experience; for others, it's a learned trait.
|
|
If the harm from cold stems from direct exposure to chilly weather, then yes.
|
|
Some of the disquiet stems from Britain's decision to hurl itself into the unknown.
|
|
The report concluded that around 92 percent of climate change stems from human activity.
|
|
The case stems from a settlement he made to remove Eagan Avenatti from bankruptcy.
|
|
Jay-Z's origin in the liquor industry stems from a feud with Cristal Champagne.
|
|
The bullishness stems from an expectation that tax reform will generate greater corporate profits.
|
|
Supreme Court stems from the expectation that he will remain there for three, perhaps
|
|
Part of the problem stems from the funding mechanism for Graduate Medical Education (GME).
|
|
And part of that challenge stems from his own unfamiliarity with the convention process.
|
|
Part of that stems from uncertainty over how the money will be spent. Sen.
|
|
The move stems from a phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
|
|
Part of that stereotype stems from a dearth of older women in senior roles.
|
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Perhaps their decision stems from Christan Brothers' guiding principle: Love your neighbor as yourself.
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To the ex-generals, the unrest stems from the lack of a diplomatic horizon.
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This important question stems from a new paradigm that started roughly a decade ago.
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The lack of interest in the insurance probably stems from a number of factors.
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Perhaps the greatest long-term threat to humanity's future, though, stems from artificial superintelligence.
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It also stems from not being included in the conversation about fashion and beauty.
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It stems from the only alibi in his case — his former classmate, Asia McClain.
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It stems from the only alibi in his case — his former classmate Asia McClain.
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It all stems from family, because we all used to go to the games.
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It's entirely possible this stems from the decision to split the season in two.
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The laughter often stems from how hard the show works to make you laugh.
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Greenberg's $9 million payment stems from performance bonuses he received from 20053 to 2004.
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A lot of it stems from the little details that enhance the store experience.
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The crisis stems from people throwing garbage in recycling bins, which contaminates the recyclables.
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Much of the current violence stems from changes in Mexico's ever-shifting criminal landscape.
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Mr. Zuma's corruption stems from the grievances of a man who feels very small.
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Some of the fiercest backlash to Ross's Trump fundraiser stems from inside the company.
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Part of that stems from her willingness to investigate corruption in Puerto Rico's legislature.
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In fact, MikeQ's DJ moniker stems from his old username on those forums: MikeQ20053.
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While her advice stems from clinical experience, it's also informed by her own trauma.
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Part of that stems from the fact that the costs to build vary widely.
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The company's slowdown stems from more than just the scandals it has grappled with.
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His fascination with supernatural beings stems from time spent at the Louvre in Paris.
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Ms. Craft said her interest in cottagecore stems from a desire to self-soothe.
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The heart of the state budget deficit stems from the state's overspending on Medicaid.
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Considerable intrigue naturally stems from what may happen the next time Popovich is ejected.
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Mr. Spiegel explains to viewers that this idea stems from the evolution of cameras.
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Today's pitched mood of political crisis stems from more diffuse sources of cultural change.
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It stems from a developer requirement to fund public art in the downtown core.
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Rather, it stems from something much more fundamental: people's idea of who they are.
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The speculation stems from news about content increases to the AMS-Apple supply chain.
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New Jersey's advantage stems from its location, which attracts an educated and diverse workforce.
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This stems from the recent drought and likely poses the biggest threat to yield.
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Their case stems from Menendez's relationship with Melgen, a Florida ophthalmologist and political donor.
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Part of Disney's success in this category stems from having two distinct animation arms.
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Klobuchar noted her question stems from concerns over Trump's recent comments about network licenses.
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The lawsuit stems from a series of alleged events that took place on Feb.
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His success stems from just how good he is with his feet and head.
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There is little evidence that the foot-dragging stems from a single government policy.
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The success of the Fed as a public institution stems from two key ingredients.
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The hubbub stems from a Medium blog post that came out earlier this month.
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The appellate court's recent ruling stems from a gender discrimination lawsuit filed in 2012.
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And all that stems from a pretty simple idea: Spend some time in contemplation.
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But the name also stems from the high highs and low lows she's experienced.
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People further reports that the criminal investigation stems from a 2004 allegation of sexual assault.
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The debate stems from a unique culture at Bridgewater, which is based in Westport, Conn.
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The latter claim stems from an incident in which Cummins allegedly kissed Thomas on Jan.
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Its popularity also stems from record-low unemployment, a robust economy and increased social spending.
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The idea of universal public access to land stems from Australia's colonial history, he added.
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"We believe the importance of Jabal Moussa reserve stems from the Adonis Valley," says Barakat.
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The sexual assault charge stems from an accusation that Mentzer groped one of the girls.
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Now a source tells PEOPLE that Kardashian's emotional volatility stems from insecurities about his appearance.
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The trial stems from lawsuits brought by a dozen states and big cities, among others.
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It stems from a love of one's country, but not at the expense of others.
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The HR staffer, Jorge Mejia, claims the issue stems from how his shifts were scheduled.
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The former vice president's "favorite son" status stems from his many visits here over decades.
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It's contingent on a willingness to acknowledge — and share — the power that stems from it.
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Most (77%) of America's deficit stems from trade with China, the European Union and Japan.
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JetSmarter says the case stems from a previous job and is unrelated to its business.
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Casey agreed, saying Swift's inevitable impact stems from the singer using her platform for good.
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" The star said the rumor stems from a need "to make Onika the bad guy.
|
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Still, White House officials acknowledged that Vindman's credibility stems from his proximity to the call.
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This crisis stems from a melange of factors, many of them decades in the making.
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"The online demo stems from some of our research over the 7 months," he said.
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The admonition stems from the same actions for which Mr. Menendez was indicted in 2015.
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This stems from the U.K. and EU's potential divergence in data protection laws post-Brexit.
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Fitch views TRMK's growth cautiously given the competitive loan classes that the growth stems from.
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Huawei's controversial status in North America and Europe stems from a lot of different factors.
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Caterpillar said its first quarter tax benefit of $178 million stems from U.S. tax reform.
|
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In Mr Johnson's case opposition to Chequers stems from a desire to be prime minister.
|
|
But now, officials say a substantial proportion of the money stems from corruption or crime.
|
|
The background of this alleged "feud" stems from talk of Sex and the City 3.
|
|
One explanation for Sarah's behavior stems from a legendary encounter she had with a psychic.
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The rule change stems from a 25-hour sit-in last June over gun control.
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The picture stems from the National Archives and was labeled "Jaluit Atoll," a Japanese territory.
|
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The excellence of Dutch speed-skating stems from the sport's special place in national culture.
|
|
I ask her if she feels that the majority of her stress stems from clients.
|
|
Bryan's happy-go-lucky attitude, translated onto many of his songs, actually stems from tragedy.
|
|
Like Cora and Julian, all of Harry's trauma stems from a troubling childhood home life.
|
|
The beef, Rockhold says, stems from the pair's time as members of the Strikeforce roster.
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|
For me it stems from '90s nostalgia — watching cartoons, The Simpsons, Nickelodeon, One Saturday Morning.
|
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Almost 60% of the games' budget stems from the private sector, thus saving taxpayers' money.
|
|
However there are differences between bitcoin and Libra and it stems from their use case.
|
|
But, for Lena, this frustration stems from a history of co-opting culture through fashion.
|
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She had ordered 100 stems from Rose Story Farm but knew Monday they wouldn't arrive.
|
|
This commitment to building friendships stems from the worth of the people living in Haiti.
|
|
Part of the speculation stems from evidence of AirPower support in the iOS 12.2 beta.
|
|
This stems from its association with a crucial player in our solar system -- the sun.
|
|
The contempt charge stems from vote-buying accusations against three lawmakers from southern Amazonas state.
|
|
" A key point: "[P]ersistent underrepresentation often stems from equity issues that begin [before college].
|
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The dispute stems from Qualcomm's charging of patent royalties, which Apple has decried as extortionist.
|
|
The diesel's efficiency stems from not having to throttle the engine to control its speed.
|
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One of his agents, Brian Fettner, confirmed the ban stems from multiple missed drug tests.
|
|
But regardless of which specific vendor the breach stems from, the upshot is the same.
|
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The rule stems from the nation's Fair Housing Act, which aimed to ban racial segregation.
|
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Much of the stigma surrounding HIV stems from a lack of awareness of these facts.
|
|
Instead, it stems from a variety of sources, including poor service, discomfort and flight delays.
|
|
However, much of this advantage stems from incumbency — relatively old presidents running for re-election.
|
|
The lawsuit against the Department of Veteran Affairs stems from a dispute over disability benefits.
|
|
Perhaps all this confusion stems from the fact that the vegan lobby doesn't really exist.
|
|
Buffalo's problem stems from a simple equation: Old houses plus high poverty equal lead poisoning.
|
|
Mr. Smead estimates a majority of the deal's value stems from the credit card operations.
|
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The pizza sauce controversy stems from new school lunch standards the USDA proposed in 2011.
|
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That increase largely stems from the 2015 budget deal struck by congressional leaders in November.
|
|
Part of it stems from the way The Sopranos was received and defined by critics.
|
|
The indictment stems from Manafort's work consulting for a pro-Russia political party in Ukraine.
|
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The controversy around triple talaq stems from how it is practiced in modern day societies.
|
|
RBC's caution on Chevron stems from the company's rapid ramp-up in the Permian Basin.
|
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Palestinians say the violence stems from frustration at nearly five decades of Israeli military occupation.
|
|
That stems from the lack of equality in boardrooms and the hiring process by clubs.
|
|
Annie's devotion to her unsatisfying relationship with Ryan stems from a deep place of insecurity.
|
|
Sometimes that's true, but more often it stems from an underlying anxiety disorder, like agoraphobia.
|
|
But Trump's popularity among Indians also stems from the way he symbolizes wealth and power.
|
|
Another major incidence bias stems from who feels they can get away with this behavior.
|
|
" Part of the problem stems from the fact that we are calling it "artificial intelligence.
|
|
The dire situation there stems from a variety of factors, including conflict, flooding, and drought.
|
|
That stems from the divide over the role of populist nationalism in the conservative movement.
|
|
Smart take: The drive to create scalable video stems from business needs, not reader demand.
|
|
But Biden's staunch defense of NATO stems from his traditional view of US foreign policy.
|
|
Said album showcases the project's hazy, hypnotic black metal, which stems from founder Dempsey Mills.
|
|
This action appealed to me as a Jew, because my activism stems from my Judaism.
|
|
The Chicago update really stems from just the growth and the momentum at Uber Freight.
|
|
Most of his wealth stems from a medieval estate known as the Duchy of Cornwall.
|
|
How much of that feeling stems from his assasination and the tumult of the 1960s?
|
|
It stems from an economic system that has resulted in stagnant wages and insecure jobs.
|
|
Insufficient FundsThe predicament stems from Louisiana's unique "user pay" system for funding indigent legal services.
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The studio's confidence in Deadpool stems from the character's unique place in the Marvel Universe.
|
|
The bad blood between Mr. Sweeney and the teachers' union stems from disagreements over pensions.
|
|
The case stems from former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation that documented Russian election interference.
|
|
I sometimes wonder if her rejection of me stems from a longing for a dad.
|
|
A large share of that debt stems from Deutsche Bank loans to Trump National Doral.
|
|
" Another officer wrote, "The dispute stems from his family not wanting her to marry him.
|
|
Like most celebrities, the decision stems from an attempt to keep her personal life private.
|
|
Trump's long-simmering anger stems from Sessions' decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation.
|
|
The Council's authority stems from the UN Charter and the support of the international community.
|
|
The case stems from a DUI stop in which Smollett gave police the wrong name.
|
|
The charge stems from the death of Gemmel Moore at Buck's residence in July 2017.
|
|
Sometimes insecurity stems from feeling you ought to be knowledgeable when you really don't care.
|
|
Everything Guardiola has done stems from his meticulousness, from his almost pathological attention to detail.
|
|
It seems clear that some portion of the problem stems from a poorly architected app.
|
|
Part of this stems from food's special power as the most accessible of cultural touchstones.
|
|
The investigation stems from a case brought to the body by Palestinian officials in 2015.
|
|
The deficit stems from increased state spending, lower average oil prices and lower oil production.
|
|
Turkey's hostility to Rojava stems from its long-running conflict with its own Kurdish population.
|
|
Lindsay's beef with Miley's new man apparently stems from his time dating her sister, Aliana.
|
|
The love for this Italian liquor most likely stems from the country's strong Italian roots.
|
|
The violence smacks of sectarian prejudice because Mr. Sisi's support stems from Egypt's Muslim majority.
|
|
McDonald believes part of the problem stems from the design of the county's absentee ballot.
|
|
The charge stems from Villavicencio taking his wife's phone to stop her from calling police.
|
|
Petty's sex offender status stems from a 1995 NY conviction for first-degree attempted rape.
|
|
Our defensive posture stems from sober geostrategic calculations, as well as moral and religious convictions.
|
|
The feud stems from a Florida-based pharmaceutical startup, Altor BioScience, which Cher invested in.
|
|
Levi explained that such hesitation is common, and stems from a misinterpretation of disability law.
|
|
"That killing of those Jewish people stems from our leaders," said Coakley, a manufacturing technician.
|
|
Much of it stems from a lack of knowledge on how to address trans people.
|
|
That stems from the fund's current policy of directing investment to Norway's most important trading partners.
|
|
The exclusion of data from after 1980 stems from an interesting historic quirk of our archive.
|
|
I think it just stems from the myth of 'there can only be one female rapper.
|
|
Barring him from campus is also problematic, because the justification stems from the original Facebook post.
|
|
The deal stems from the nationalization of Conoco assets dating back over a decade in Venezuela.
|
|
Irving told NBC Sports Boston that his opposition to Thanksgiving stems from his Native American heritage.
|
|
All of this "seeing" stems from a remarkably effective breed of artificial intelligence called deep learning.
|
|
The modern obsession with benchmarks and index funds stems from the aftermath of the financial crisis.
|
|
The #calexit name stems from the successful "brexit" campaign in Britain to leave the European Union.
|
|
Much of the conflict in their relationship stems from the religious makeup of the two nations.
|
|
The bigger threat stems from plans to set a minimum global tax level for big companies.
|
|
The breach stems from the massive conflicts of interest between his presidency and his business empire.
|
|
Part of the pandemonium over addressing these vulnerabilities stems from the necessary involvement of multiple players.
|
|
United States, and it stems from a 2011 investigation into a series of robberies in Detroit.
|
|
"The monetary effect of reinvestments stems from the maintaining of the stock of securities," Wuermelling said.
|
|
The most recent animosity stems from Japan's harsh colonial rule of Korea from 2000 to 22017.
|
|
Aksram's sadness stems from the knowledge that one day soon, her people could be erased altogether.
|
|
It all stems from a policy decision made by the Trump administration, as Engadget points out.
|
|
It was signed more than a year ago, and stems from fighting that began in 2012.
|
|
Much of this stems from their clash of cultures — they don't even speak the same language.
|
|
This stems from a promotion gap that occurs early on in women's careers, the report showed.
|
|
Davachi says that her prolificness likely stems from her ability to access so many different instruments.
|
|
In the Atlanta case, the complaint stems from a 2250 tour by the band Matchbox Twenty.
|
|
The charge stems from an incident late last month at a checkpoint near the White House.
|
|
Part of Zambia's debt problem stems from $2.8 billion in Eurobonds, issued from 2012 to 2015.
|
|
I discovered that Michael's impact stems from how passionate he is about the art of design.
|
|
PA) managers stems from a complaint filed by the main shareholder of Italian broadcaster Mediaset (MS.
|
|
The project stems from Bianchi's broader quest to document the contradictions of religion in modern society.
|
|
The bearish call from Capital Wealth Planning's Jeffrey Saut stems from one of his proprietary gauges.
|
|
The disparity stems from a variety of factors, including a lack of representation and occupational segregation.
|
|
This time the effort to root out Obamacare stems from a lawsuit rather than from legislation.
|
|
"We know this incident stems from some kind of encounter with an Uber driver," he said.
|
|
The stronger growth stems from higher coal prices paid by Mongolia's number-one trade partner, China.
|
|
The trouble stems from the part of the code that contains the barebones basic fighting moves.
|
|
But their shared optimism stems from sharply different assessments of the country's current state of affairs.
|
|
This new business line stems from its previous relationships with companies like Van Hool and Daimler .
|
|
It stems from an August 2017 complaint by the NLRB that Tesla was illegally union-busting.
|
|
This stems from the unique position of the FBI, which straddles both intelligence and law enforcement.
|
|
Nissan told NHTSA that the issue of possibly defective seals stems from a third-tier supplier.
|
|
A good deal of my enthusiasm for the R70x stems from how unbelievably light they are.
|
|
Much of the confusion stems from how Facebook first presented the war room to the media.
|
|
The latter claim stems from the alleged interaction that authorities referred to when releasing Tuesday's photo.
|
|
"Part of it stems from the fact that nursing is predominantly a female profession," Gillespie says.
|
|
We're told BC's anger stems from SB's response to TMZ breaking the news of their split.
|
|
Cramer said the negativity in the market stems from four directions: First, China is falling apart.
|
|
The case stems from a June 13, 2009, call from a woman to Las Vegas police.
|
|
Even more uncertainty over soybeans stems from disappointing rainfall in Mato Grosso, Brazil's lead producing region.
|
|
The particular ire that Abdulbari has drawn stems from his public and unwavering support for CEDAW.
|
|
In part, the poor performance of bank shares stems from the broader gloom in global markets.
|
|
Part of this stems from Clinton herself, whose brand of politics is more pragmatic than inspirational.
|
|
Here's what we know ... the allegation stems from an incident on May 23 in Cleveland, Ohio.
|
|
The rest stems from efforts to keep spending down, including cost-containment measures introduced in Obamacare.
|
|
Voice calling stems from Slack's acquisition of screen-sharing app Screenhero just over a year ago.
|
|
The probe stems from a complaint from renewable energy company Inversiones Empresariales Vapat, the regulator said.
|
|
The problem stems from a general flatness of the characters and, despite the harrowing situations, storytelling.
|
|
Much of the strength stems from a second straight month of booming demand for commercial aircraft.
|
|
The issue stems from some kind of issue with the brakes on those pedal-assist bikes.
|
|
His recusal in that review stems from Barr's prior work with the law firm Kirkland & Ellis.
|
|
The charge stems from an earlier alleged sexual interaction, on school property, between him and Thomas.
|
|
We learn that the VHS tape's power stems from a mysterious incident involving a young girl.
|
|
Part of this distrust stems from beliefs in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, athletic officials said.
|
|
The probe of Cohen stems from a referral to prosecutors in the Southern District by Mueller.
|
|
My unhappiness with the Sense system stems from how close it comes to being a sham.
|
|
Schawbel said that fear stems from the fact that the industry is already seeing it happen.
|
|
Much of the scrutiny around the rooftop solar industry stems from sales representatives misleading potential customers.
|
|
This recent ruckus stems from Hannity's clumsy on-air defense of Alabama senate candidate Roy Moore.
|
|
The approach used by GIRDS stems from Germany's longstanding experience de-radicalizing neo-Nazis, he said.
|
|
The closure reportedly stems from a contract dispute with Columbia Books, which runs the website Lobbyists.
|
|
It seems part of The Capitalization Appeal stems from the sheer competitive nature of social media.
|
|
The charge stems from an incident in July 2016 involving a then-18-year-old busboy.
|
|
The reason stems from male leaders' tendency to, over time, stop asking for ways to improve.
|
|
Techcombank's appeal stems from a boom in financial services while the economy expands at record rates.
|
|
The indignation stems from Bannon having previously presided over "white ethno-nationalist propaganda mill", Breitbart News.
|
|
Nokia's patent portfolio stems from when it was the world's largest handset maker in previous decades.
|
|
The foul odor stems from hydrogen sulfide, which the seaweed releases when it rots on land.
|
|
The cache stems from a lawsuit brought against Facebook by a small app company called Six4Three.
|
|
Much confusion stems from the fact that many states tend to lump types of distributors together.
|
|
Greene's Energy Group, stems from a dispute over a method using in hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.
|
|
Amazon, which stems from Erie Insurance's coverage for a house fire blamed on a faulty headlamp.
|
|
The issue stems from used aircraft that Southwest has purchased over several years from foreign airlines.
|
|
After all, research has shown that 93% of all internet traffic stems from a search engine.
|
|
The ambiguity stems from how the taxi horn parts are notated in Gershwin's original handwritten score.
|
|
This below-cost "normalcy" stems from the farm bill's blind faith devotion to expanding export markets.
|
|
This all stems from a post by Paul Joseph Watson, the Robin to Alex Jones's Batman.
|
|
Newly unsealed documents suggest that the confusion stems from the US Department of Justice's own arguments.
|
|
It's even suggested the word "pizza" stems from the Greek word "pitta," meaning cake or pie.
|
|
As for nanotechnology, the most well-known risk stems from what's called the grey goo scenario.
|
|
The rumor stems from a report by Nikkei (Japan's predominant financial newspaper), later translated by NintendoEverything.
|
|
Geminis can be insecure, which stems from their inability to shut up and explore their emotions.
|
|
The Christmas bauble-like sphere stems from the group's reEarth project and went through several iterations.
|
|
It all stems from a relatively simple announcement Facebook recently made about how its advertising works.
|
|
The most recent contention stems from Braun's acquisition of Big Machine Records, Swift's old record label.
|
|
Dr. Ford's allegation stems from a party that she alleges occurred during the summer of 1982.
|
|
All of this stems from Snapchat's product, which works differently from everything that came before it.
|
|
The exploding mosquito problem staring down Puerto Rico stems from the island's negligible mosquito control infrastructure.
|
|
It stems from his unexpected vote in 2012 to uphold the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate.
|
|
The first stems from a New York Times article in 2015 that said that while Mrs.
|
|
The arbitration rule stems from concerns about the growing prevalence of financial contracts stipulating their use.
|
|
The organization's latest statement stems from a body of research that was unavailable two decades ago.
|
|
Many of our leaders argue that this violence stems from society's rising rates of mental illness.
|
|
Billings argues that the lax approach stems from a desire not to over burden the industry.
|
|
Though its subject matter often stems from life's struggles, Memphis soul sounds a lot like strutting.
|
|
The trouble stems from a force that's mostly positive: enormous Democratic enthusiasm for this year's elections.
|
|
The biggest problem, I think, stems from the fact that Sandler has simply outgrown his innocence.
|
|
For Onewheel riders like Chris Romine, his devotion stems from the unique experience the rideable offers.
|
|
HPE's expanding relationship with Pensando Systems stems from our shared understanding of enterprises and the cloud.
|
|
The biggest risk for the dollar stems from the possible exodus of capital flows, analysts said.
|
|
Much of the anxiety in Tokyo and Beijing stems from the unpredictability of the main players.
|
|
The run-up in Iranian equities perversely stems from the country's status as an international pariah.
|
|
The case stems from the class-action lawsuit the EEOC brought against CRST Van Expedited Inc.
|
|
The dispute between Pompeo and Kelly stems from a disagreement about the terms of the interview.
|
|
Yet tension on the series typically stems from the more mundane emotional landscape of Lucy's phone.
|
|
Much of the expressiveness of this style stems from its wounded inarticulateness, its struggle to express.
|
|
The suit stems from a sexual assault case against Uber in late 2014 in New Delhi.
|
|
He said doctors may also not realize a patient's problem stems from issues with the medicine.
|
|
The increased sensitivity to revenue declines stems from higher fixed costs after factoring in the leases.
|
|
That belief stems from the country's massive consumer market, which has been its one big advantage.
|
|
The Carson controversy stems from alleged requests for agency spending by the secretary's wife, Candy Carson.
|
|
Caroline thinks this hatred stems from the feeling you get when you scroll through your feed.
|
|
I think it stems from wanting to save money/not thinking expensive food is worth it.
|
|
Though some may refute this charge, a great deal of this grief stems from President Trump.
|
|
The legal fight stems from Goldilocks' dispute with Noble over its $3.4 billion debt restructuring plan.
|
|
The legal fight stems from Chevron's 2001 purchase of a subsidiary, Texaco, which operated in Ecuador.
|
|
" His interest in Universal Basic Income also stems from the "looming threat of automation and displacement.
|
|
The trial stems from a series of corruption scandals involving members of his conservative People's Party.
|
|
The uproar all stems from one key creative decision: namely, portraying Julius Caesar as Donald Trump.
|
|
But some critics say that the main threat to Russian YouTube stems from its own success.
|
|
The first is an environmental crisis, which he says stems from our perceived distance from nature.
|
|
While these guys get laughs, and money, I've always believed more interesting comedy stems from discomfort.
|
|
Dr. Ford's allegations stems from a party that she alleges occurred during the summer of 1982.
|
|
That norm stems from a desire to have journalists remain objective, even during heated political disputes.
|
|
" The mood stems from Rihanna's attitude as she hurls, "ella, ella, ella," and "eh, eh, eh.
|
|
But the shift also stems from audiences and critics searching for deeper meaning in superhero films.
|
|
It all stems from the violent altercation with her ex-wife, Brittney Griner, back in 2015.
|
|
Trump's "charitable" donation of his paycheck to the Department of Education stems from the same impulse.
|
|
Much of this problem, I think, stems from the origin of this device in the first place.
|
|
Inspector Sands' surname stems from the use of sand buckets, which are sometimes used to extinguish fires.
|
|
The confrontation stems from the Kurdish vote for independence last month, which Iraq and its neighbors rejected.
|
|
This partly stems from interest in dreams: those most interested in their dreams also recall them better.
|
|
Yaffe said this optimism stems from preliminary studies using retinal cells derived from stem cells in animals.
|
|
"It really stems from (jewellers) becoming better at meeting the needs of the Chinese millennials," he said.
|
|
Some of her emotional damage stems from brain damage sustained in the accident that nearly killed her.
|
|
The extreme competition only secondarily stems from the entrepreneurs; the main driver is the consumer adoption rates.
|
|
Economists have said the decline in new home sales stems from weakened affordability across U.S. local markets.
|
|
That incident stems from an online quiz linked to Facebook accounts that users voluntarily filled out online.
|
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Part of it stems from the fact that Cruz and McCain have disliked each other for years.
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However, credit quality risks stems from the improved but still highly concentrated nature of BCAB's loan portfolio.
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The rest surely stems from the time-honored tradition of new bosses throwing in the kitchen sink.
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Finally, Cramer found that the notion that any Lululemon weakness stems from the board as being absurd.
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Some of this attitude stems from an optimistic view of the president as a reformer-in-waiting.
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"All this stems from an ex-boyfriend," Castilleja's aunt, Marie Fernandez, told the San Antonio Express-News.
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The case stems from an April 2016 sale of 75 CSeries jets to Delta Air Lines Inc.
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Mr Piketty says that all work on trends in income and wealth inequality stems from Sir Anthony's.
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A partial justification for the latest actions of these companies stems from the maturity of Android itself.
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Some of that sureness stems from Lindelof choosing collaborators who can illuminate experiences he couldn't possibly understand.
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"All of the music stems from the beginning point that she's a Dutch woman," Mr. O'Regan said.
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It's a modern form of violence that stems from slavery and is entrenched in the American economy.
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The genetic disorder stems from either a mutation or deletion of a gene on the 15th chromosome.
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But with only 5m of them, its influence stems from speaking for a wider group of sympathisers.
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Confusion around the term "efficiency" stems from the failure to distinguish between "using" water and "consuming" water.
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He can relate to shy children Escueta's desire to empower children stems from his own childhood pain.
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A big part of the debt problem stems from a dysfunctional relationship between central and local governments.
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The latter stems from reports that the pair were caught kissing in Cummins' classroom on Jan. 23.
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The phenomenal success of Lyft and Uber stems from the fact that they are two-sided marketplaces.
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The most interesting part of Mindy's "bad wife" verdict stems from who actually gives it to her.
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It also stems from a perception that the ad agencies have exploited their complexity to boost billings.
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Part of this frustration likely stems from the fact that Altman and Thiel are extremely close friends.
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"For many people, anxiety about flying on a plane stems from a lack of control," she says.
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Indeed, his talent stems from a uniquely Egyptian milieu: the multinational cosmopolitanism of 1940s Alexandria and Cairo.
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A final benefit of putting patients in charge stems from the generation and aggregation of their data.
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The settlement stems from the company's alleged violations of a 2012 FTC settlement order over privacy issues.
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Critics say Google's insistence on tracking its users' locations stems from its drive to boost advertising revenue.
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Soulja's probation stems from his 2014 arrest for carrying a loaded gun in public, USA Today reports.
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But private forecasters cautioned that the April-June pace is unsustainable because it stems from temporary factors.
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And my optimism stems from that history – I do think that is the arc across the world.
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One argues that the style stems from Mudra, a ritualistic gesture in the Buddhist and Hindu tradition.
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The global movement stems from the stark reality that the window to addressing this emergency is closing.
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Much of the worry stems from a looming fight with American publishers over sales in Continental Europe.
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The controversy stems from whether or not data is to be considered a countable or uncountable noun.
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Mango told me his dedication to Lenny mostly stems from seeing people get scammed far too often.
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Leahy's question stems from the 2005 Access Hollywood tape that featured Trump making lewd comments about women.
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The Baster Scene stems from the Blind Man's desire to replace his dead daughter with another child.
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Narcissism is a giving impulse; it stems from a passionate conviction about your ideas and your work.
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This stems from the fact that gendered clothing relies on the rigid constructs of masculinity and femininity.
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The dispute stems from Venezuela's nationalization of Conoco's assets a decade ago under late leader Hugo Chavez.
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This stems from the Last Supper—you know, the painting of Jesus eating with the 12 Apostles.
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No legal recourse The controversy around talaq stems from how it is practiced in modern day societies.
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Much of the surprise stems from Hatchimals' diverse fan base and their unexpected similarities to modern technology.
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The confusion stems from the international agreements that govern how law enforcement requests evidence from foreign countries.
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The restructuring stems from Triunfo's default on an 800 million-real ($256 million) loan late last year.
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Karan walked us through her connection to Kawakubo, which stems from Karan's early days in the business.
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And I also understand that most of this anxiety stems from an unabashed anti-vaccination misinformation campaign.
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The change stems from a Europe-wide shift in the way investment is treated in GDP statistics.
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The biggest risk for the dollar stems from the possible exodus of capital flows, analysts have said.
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Much of the early enthusiasm for new products stems from disillusionment with the existing ingredients we overeat.
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The unlikely diversity of this alliance stems from the opaque tangle of entities involved in Northern Pass.
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Perhaps American apathy stems from the fact that Silicon Valley is still the world's foremost tech hub.
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Trump's war on women and people of color stems from an irrefutable record of racism and misogyny.
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I've always felt long-term capital gains in part stems from inflation, so tax inflation is wrong.
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"This all stems from the President's permissive attitude toward ethics; the tone is set at the top."
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The heart of the corruption stems from Trump's failure to divest from his sprawling international business empire.
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"It stems from being a character — transporting ourselves and transporting the audience," Ms. Laessig told Rolling Stone.
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Pictures' current struggle "partly stems from Sony's focus on short-term profit over many years," Yoshida said.
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Even if it stems from good intentions, any effort to ban speech will be infected with bias.
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Shot at Short stems from Trump's relationship with Heitkamp, whom Cramer is looking to unseat in November.
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Bellworthy's supervisor, Professor Maoz Fine, has suggested that their remarkable resistance stems from the last Ice Age.
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This more recent White House perspective stems from worries of the cost of a nuclear arms race.
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" To Bennett, Cohen's U-turn and fondness for blasting Trump stems from him "feeling jilted or whatever.
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The decision stems from 2010 lawsuit brought by the Justice Department and attorneys general in 17 states.
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The case stems from a long-standing feud between neighbors in rural Jackson County in southern Oregon.
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Part of the issue stems from The Walking Dead being a TV show in its seventh season.
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This all stems from a change in policy implemented by various payment networks on October 1, 2015.
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But I do know that my hatred for being tickled probably stems from my family's relentless teasing.
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Some of this fascination with childlike wonder almost certainly stems from a unique circumstance of Smith's childhood.
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Technical suggestions aside, it's possible that your form of anorgasmia stems from emotional rather than physical causes.
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It doesn't make perfect, rational sense, and that's because it stems from the way we're built biologically.
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"It all kind of stems from the fact that real life is boring as shit," he says.
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According to her, the problem stems from a combination of a lack of information and inconsistent information.
|
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The talk show host says the recent speculation likely stems from President Trump's unexpected victory in 2016.
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The 79-year-old's fortune stems from diverse sources including oil, railroads, telecom, real estate, and entertainment.
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The drop in purchasing power likely stems from tightened regulations in China with regards to capital outflow.
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The current case stems from a request for a review filed last year by Ms. Bernal, 43.
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Some of that probably stems from a pickup in global growth that is outside Mr. Trump's control.
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The run on hydroxychloroquine stems from fear: Americans are facing a frightening pandemic and looking for hope.
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Yes, they're smart, but our fascination with orcas and other cetaceans also stems from something more esoteric.
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It stems from the new caps on the home mortgage interest and state and local tax deductions.
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The name of the libation was also suggested to Don Pacecho and stems from his last name.
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The whole reason we have a fall TV season in the first place largely stems from advertising.
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It stems from me wanting to know what something is going to look like when I'm done.
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Some of this isolation, no doubt, stems from genuine conviction in the face of countervailing political winds.
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It all stems from his America First Committee, which was founded in 1940 and disbanded by 1941.
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But I am familiar with loneliness, and specifically the variety that stems from being far from home.
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"The power of American higher education stems from a devotion to learning from our differences," he said.
|
|
But the problem really stems from the drivers' struggling to maximize earnings from simply driving people around.
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Some of the fire alarm problem stems from the way in which the chaos has been covered.
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|
HO CHI MINH THOUGHT Much of the problem stems from a lack of educational reform, analysts say.
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Depending on the rule in question, that can be legally dicey if it stems from congressional legislation.
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Out of the $136 billion in extra health spending, most stems from "significantly higher" enrollment in Medicaid.
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If you feel guilt, shame, pride, anger or judged, then ask yourself where that emotion stems from.
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Some of the growth stems from heavy investment by health insurance companies in geographic expansion and marketing.
|
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While each have their own personal projects, much of the family's fame stems from their hit E!
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Legionnaires' disease is a type of pneumonia that stems from the Legionella bacterium and infects the lungs.
|
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The lack of American casualties — despite the accuracy of the Iranian missiles — likely stems from two factors.
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The chaos we see stems from two sources — aggression mandated by Iran's mullahs and the fallout therefrom.
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The payroll crisis all stems from a complicated law, the Holidays Act, which was enacted in 2003.
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The hit stems from fear that Trump's "America First" policies might put Japanese firms in difficult positions.
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|
However, a great deal of the difficulties of transgender individuals stems from a lack of social acceptance.
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The real trouble stems from Federal Reserve policy and easy money, according to the former presidential candidate.
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From those experiences I concluded that one of civilization's great challenges stems from millionaire rhyming with billionaire.
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How we got here The legal debate stems from arrests at the "Straight Pride Parade" last week.
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The appeals court ruling stems from a lawsuit involving Evelyn Sineneng-Smith, a former California immigration consultant.
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This imbalance stems from the fact that "centrist" ideas are the province of the educated, wealthy elite.
|
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The variety of offerings in this niche stems from the many definitions of the international E.S.G. mandate.
|
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Legionnaires' disease is a type of pneumonia that stems from the Legionella bacterium and infects the lungs.
|
|
I suspect this attitude stems from the prison system, where loneliness skews everyone's sense of social normality.
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Both proposals revive an aspect of constitutional law that stems from the Constitution's ban of direct taxes.
|
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Arguments abound over whether violence stems from guns or a violent culture with firearms as the tool.
|
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In poisoning cases, Dr. Barr said, the problem often stems from the pesticide not being properly contained.
|
|
The voters were, of course, correct about Donald Trump, and the government shutdown stems from those facts.
|
|
It stems from a sense of adventure and a thirst to fulfill the potential of their lives.
|
|
And in large part, that interest stems from watching Offred figure out how to manipulate Fiennes's Commander.
|
|
Some of the angst over the economy stems from a recognition that the state's boom times are over.
|
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Allergan's newfound cash bounty stems from the sale of its generic drugs business to Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (TEVA.TA).
|
|
That payment stems from claims of misrepresentation, according to Dow Jones, which reported news of the settlement earlier.
|
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Bowen's punishment stems from FBI allegations that his father took money from Adidas while Bowen was at Louisville.
|
|
All of this stems from a diesel emissions scandal that ultimately found VW paying $4.3 billion in penalties.
|
|
The controversy over the new copyright directive stems from two vague but incredibly consequential pieces of the legislation.
|
|
"Me wanting to have a boy stems from my relationship with my dad," Rob added during his interview.
|
|
The sanction stems from an incident in March 2016, in which a female Uber driver in Scottsdale, Ariz.
|
|
The reason once again stems from the villain, Erik Killmonger, played with mesmerizing bravado by Michael B. Jordan.
|
|
Especially in El Salvador, today's gang violence directly stems from the Clinton-era policy of aggressively deporting felons.
|
|
The astonishing break from diplomatic practice stems from reasons that range from the personal to the broadly geopolitical.
|
|
It stems from work I did a long time ago; actually the first data was collected in 1961.
|
|
But it also stems from our desire to protect our egos as well as to simplify decision making.
|
|
So, I think it all stems from an administration that has been spewing hate and venom and indifference.
|
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Kelly tells PEOPLE that the blowup stems from months of escalating tensions between the colleagues and former fiancés.
|
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Much of the confusion over the appointment stems from a lack of legal clarity surrounding the succession process.
|
|
A large portion of the apathy stems from the aforementioned sentiment that anti-Indigenousness is a bipartisan effort.
|
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The suit stems from recent investigations into how AT&T and other wireless carriers share the sensitive data.
|
|
For those who knew John, the honor stems from the quality he himself referenced while in high school.
|
|
The trade imbalance between China and the U.S. stems from the greenback's global reserve currency status, they said.
|
|
But European banks' plight stems from more than just being slow to recapitalise and sort out bad loans.
|
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The slowdown in growth in 2019 largely stems from weaker growth in business investment, according to the report.
|
|
I think that's a big part of where my need for financial education and financial security stems from.
|
|
So much of what is wrong with Britain today stems from the fact that it is unusually centralised.
|
|
Partly, this stems from the fact that when those professors were undergraduates the sex ratio was even worse.
|
|
The ban, once again, stems from WhatsApp's "failing to turn over data in a criminal investigation," Bloomberg reports.
|
|
The investigation stems from a March 14th summons sent by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to Twitter.
|
|
It is adding new users at a slowing rate, though some of that stems from a maturing market.
|
|
It stems from the transformation of smartphone-sized devices that has been going on for several years now.
|
|
The concern stems from how BPA can hack and disrupt the normal responses of hormones in the body.
|
|
The schism between Shiite and Sunni Islam stems from a dispute after the death of the Prophet Muhammad.
|
|
The latter claim stems from an alleged sexual interaction between him and Thomas in January on school property.
|
|
Part of the split between driver groups stems from tension leading up to the vote on AB 5.
|
|
Part of Bird Box's immense success stems from the instantaneous memes it spawned within days of being released.
|
|
OYO Jiudian's success also stems from how it's positioned itself in the world's second-largest economy, Agarwal said.
|
|
Update: 10:00pm: According to Fiat Chrysler Automotive, the issue stems from the design of the electronic shifter.
|
|
Driving the news: Disney's mega-success at the box office this weekend stems from its focus on franchises.
|
|
His popularity stems from this very fact; he's loved here because he is always, undeniably, and unapologetically himself.
|
|
It stems from allegations of sexual assault against the officer that came to light after the fatal shooting.
|
|
Most of the fear stems from the coincidental timing of a Bitcoin transaction worth about $3.8 million dollars.
|
|
Much of the inaccuracy stems from products like cans where an outer paper layer covers tin or aluminum.
|
|
All of this stems from your curl pattern, not a natural inclination that you have for drier hair.
|
|
Jenner's motivation for changing her mindset stems from creating a positive environment for Stormi to grow up in.
|
|
Much of the opposition stems from the fact that most airlines were given their slots for no charge.
|
|
The problem stems from the fact that NASA's current mobile launch platform wasn't actually built for the SLS.
|
|
It stems from the publication this autumn of a third-grade grammar textbook featuring a rare punctuation mark.
|
|
But first and foremost, our adoration stems from the fact that she has the chillest hair in Hollywood.
|
|
The difficulty in exploring the far side stems from its position: the Moon's bulk blocks all radio signals.
|
|
Friday's FAA airworthiness directive stems from a January 29 incident aboard a 787 flying at about 20,5003 feet.
|
|
Why it matters: Big Tech's efforts to take over Hollywood stems from its poaching of talent and franchises.
|
|
The scandal stems from the Lava Jato ("Car Wash") investigation in Brazil, which has spread to other countries.
|
|
The charge stems from an earlier alleged sexual interaction on school property between him and Thomas, say authorities.
|
|
But more often the disinvitation attempt stems from disagreements over immigration, gender, race, religion, sexual orientation or abortion.
|
|
Some of this stems from how difficult it is to blend modern technology, especially smartphones, with good storytelling.
|
|
But a lot of it stems from just how much better NBC has gotten at modulating its programming.
|
|
But, Cramer thinks its success this year stems from the stock already reflecting the negatives coming into 8003.
|
|
Democrats have demanded action on the crisis, which stems from dangerous levels of lead in Flint's drinking water.
|
|
Some of Trump's love of loyalty, another former employee said, stems from Trump's lawyer-turned-mentor, Roy Cohn.
|
|
The interest in Arya killing someone with green eyes stems from a new interpretation of Melisandre's previous revelation.
|
|
Hong Kong's general stance toward homosexuality stems from the outsized influence of Christianity and Catholicism in the city.
|
|
As 9To5Mac reports, the problem stems from the way in which subscription prompts would pop-up on-screen.
|
|
It stems from the shared agony of being alive, and stumbling through the illogical reality of human existence.
|
|
People here in Canada haven't seen the transition from funky house to garage, and grime stems from garage.
|
|
Steinem also discussed the anthropological sources of patriarchy, which she believes stems from a desire to control reproduction.
|
|
The Veep's reputation in the LGBTQ community stems from a stance he took in 2000 during a campaign.
|
|
On the whole the main risk to the outlook for the region stems from external headwinds, analysts say.
|
|
The warrant stems from a traffic stop when cops cited Devoin for possession of weed and drug paraphernalia.
|
|
"I think a lot of it just stems from feeling like a minority in America," Chong told Mashable.
|
|
The idea for the Maka'u mural stems from Hula's desire to push himself outside of his comfort zone.
|
|
Some of this undoubtedly stems from the poor employment outcomes experienced by college graduates during the Great Recession.
|
|
The bombshell accusation stems from an ongoing investigation into the search giant's payroll practices, The Guardian first reported.
|
|
The Sleep series stems from a fascination with dreams and the contrast between our conscious and unconscious perceptions.
|
|
This bias stems from the same stereotype that evangelical Christians' beliefs must be anti-science and anti-intellectual.
|
|
The most novel legal argument stems from a peculiar action Congress took more than a quarter century ago.
|
|
The trail stems from a lawsuit brought by 17 blue-leaning states and several cities against the administration.
|
|
Frost, stems from a lawsuit filed by John Sturgeon against Alaska's Regional Director of the National Park Service.
|
|
Trump on Wednesday said that Carson's involvement stems from his reluctance in becoming the vice presidential nominee himself.
|
|
The concern about embryonic genome editing largely stems from uncertainties about how this process will affect later generations.
|
|
The 79-year-old's fortune stems from such diverse sources as oil, railroads, telecom, real estate, and entertainment.
|
|
Part of Bloomberg's motivation to enter the race stems from a frustration with Clinton's campaign, the source said.
|
|
The HBO case stems from a June segment on "Last Week Tonight," Oliver's Sunday night comedy news show.
|
|
The concern with the extradition law stems from fear of the political nature of justice on the mainland.
|
|
They certainly aren't ideal role models, but that's largely where their appeal to their young followers stems from.
|
|
Her appeal stems from an ability to "be very stern" but still "slay the comedy," Mr. Piven said.
|
|
While we all look in the rearview mirror, the next downturn often stems from something few see coming.
|
|
Mayfield's request stems from the Browns thrwarted drive at the end of the first half against the Bills.
|
|
This level of wariness with the Jewish state stems from its comparative advantage with technological and scientific advances.
|
|
The Supreme Court case stems from a lawsuit filed by Whole Woman's Health, an abortion provider in Texas.
|
|
The attempted murder charge stems from what authorities described as an exchange of gunfire with an armed civilian.
|
|
It partly stems from how, while writing this record, Ben began to discover his strengths as a musician.
|
|
Instead, they said it stems from strong U.S. demand and the corporate tax overhaul recently signed into law.
|
|
This dark association stems from Santa Muerte's status as a back-channel intercessor for less-than-holy petitions.
|
|
However, the decision to prosecute parents who are caught crossing the border illegally stems from the Trump administration.
|
|
Remove the stems from the second bunch of beet greens and put the greens in a large bowl.
|
|
My discomfort stems from feeling like I don't measure up to what I "should" do for my partner.
|
|
A lot more of it stems from a longstanding sense of deference to the president on national security.
|
|
Critics have argued that the lack of immediate attention stems from racism, incompetence or some combination of both.
|
|
The demand shock stems from individuals cutting back on spending as their income declines and their fears rise.
|
|
Australians' and Americans' different relationship with firearms stems from the role that armed struggle played in their histories.
|
|
Our misery stems from the lack of self-confidence and grows into a flourishing constant state of mind.
|
|
The reason New Girl is able to survive its own worst impulses largely stems from its ensemble cast.
|
|
The order stems from a ruling that Apple infringed on the chip-maker's patents involving power-saving technology.
|
|
It will be interesting to see what develops around virtual business conferences that stems from virtual world technology.
|
|
The suspension stems from a positive test for cocaine at the 2019 IIHF World Championships on May 26.
|
|
The debt stems from the foundation's purchase in 2007 of the 1,400-piece collection that included the hat.
|
|
Typically, when a person is codependent, it stems from a place of anxiety and wanting reassurance, Kolawole said.
|
|
The battle stems from landmark medical information-sharing rules that the federal government is now working to complete.
|
|
Richard is not having an affair, and Catherine's anxiety likely stems from her insecurity over her icy marriage.
|
|
The puzzle's theme stems from his great enthusiasm, way back in elementary school days, for Swiss Army knives.
|
|
Research shows that this gender imbalance in tech stems from the different ways in which children are raised.
|
|
Trump has publicly lambasted Sessions several times recently, and his anger stems from the attorney general's March recusal.
|
|
But a more serious problem, according to Enrico Letta, the former Italian prime minister, stems from putting Mrs.
|
|
It stems from people correlating accurate spelling with a good education and outsize intelligence, which is actually incorrect.
|
|
It's rare, only affects about one in 100,000 people, and stems from my parents having an abnormal chromosome.
|
|
In part, the disconnect stems from a revved-up labor market that encourages job hopping and inflated credentials.
|
|
This may sound surprising, but again, Lane speculates that the negativity stems from the competitive nature of trading.
|
|
For Foss, success stems from authenticity and being yourself across all of your marketing and interactions with clients.
|
|
Democrats say much of that instability stems from Republican efforts to repeal and undermine the Affordable Care Act.
|
|
Ms. Walter's ease with the thorny language stems from decades of practice, but some see something more visceral.
|
|
The notion that white farmers are persecuted in South Africa largely stems from a fringe group called AfriForum.
|
|
The impressive drive that has defined his decade-long career, he explains, stems from growing up without much.
|
|
The book's success stems from the wobbliness with which Marnell renders those worlds: Are they gross or sexy?
|
|
If your dislike stems from micro-management or an overly-talkative colleague, create some space without being offensive.
|
|
Arrests at Straight Pride Parade The legal debate stems from arrests at the "Straight Pride Parade" on Saturday.
|
|
The order stems from an agreement that allowed Avenatti's law firm, Eagan Avenatti, out of bankruptcy in 2017.
|
|
The probe stems from a whistleblower complaint filed by a member of the intelligence community citing that call.
|
|
That the Lords could intervene in the process stems from another ancient quirk of the British political system.
|
|
Manafort, 69, faces another federal trial in September in Washington, D.C., which also stems from the Russia probe.
|
|
Much of the fighting today stems from political conflicts that stretch back long before the shooters were born.
|
|
Much of the fighting today stems from political conflicts that stretch back long before the shooters were born.
|
|
MacNaughton said part of Canada's frustration also stems from a lack of information on U.S. intentions toward Meng.
|
|
It all stems from Puerto Rico's reliance on Medicaid, the federal government health insurance program for the poor.
|
|
Our collective incredulity stems from the fact that many Americans seem to lack direct personal experience with sociopaths.
|
|
Much of that activity stems from the city's longstanding strategy to build up its academic, medical and technological base.
|
|
Part of the frustration of the Aboriginals stems from how small a say they have in their own affairs.
|
|
And this time, the celestial signal stems from a never-before-seen event: the merger of two neutron stars.
|
|
Utah assault case solved with milk container This fierce debate stems from an attack last November in Centerville, Utah.
|
|
Trump administration officials met Tuesday to discuss the draft that stems from a Commerce Department investigation into the matter.
|
|
The decision likely stems from Google's effort to streamline its more ambitious projects, an ongoing slog at the company.
|
|
That second charge stems from an incident police claim occurred during the spring of 2014, according to court records.
|
|
The split on wholesale roaming caps stems from wide differences in domestic prices and travel patterns across the bloc.
|
|
The case stems from Special Counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russia's efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election.
|
|
His trail stems from Special Counsel Robert Mueller&aposs investigation into potential coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign.
|
|
The case at issue stems from New Jersey's attempt to legalize and regulate sports betting at casinos and racetracks.
|
|
Likely, Up Lit's popularity stems from the same forces that led to the rise of the literary rom-com.
|
|
The strength stems from a sizable 4.5 percent rise in residential construction, the biggest percentage gain since November 1993.
|
|
But sources in both countries say a rift between them is deepening, and stems from disagreement about regional politics.
|
|
"I have a specific type of body dysmorphia that stems from acne," Reinhart told Glamour in their October issue.
|
|
They say the crisis stems from Qatar&aposs support for extremist groups in the region, charges denied by Doha.
|
|
In addition, the growth stems from a new generation of Windows devices, including Hololens and the Internet of Things.
|
|
And, in traditional rom-com fashion, all of this theorizing stems from the possibility of a Mindy-Danny reconciliation.
|
|
Dr. Ford's allegation stems from a party that she alleges occurred during the summer of 1982, 36 years ago.
|
|
Aside from broadly hating women, the Sons of Jacob's impetus for creating Gilead stems from a vast infertility issue.
|
|
"The genesis of this project stems from a fascination and fetishism with medical equipment and quackery," Atkinson told me.
|
|
Part of her popularity stems from her ability to distinguish between the theory and reality behind American immigration policy.
|
|
In part, the jumpiness in Washington, DC, stems from the entry to the market of new competitors, especially China.
|
|
The settlement the committee approved Thursday stems from a lawsuit Mr. Tankleff filed nearly a decade ago, in 2009.
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However, one potential negative consequence of THAAD's deployment stems from the sense of complacency that such systems can foster.
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The sharp downturn in capacity partially stems from the fact that the industry wasn't prepared for the AOBRD switch.
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There is a part of this from the adult end that — I imagine — stems from a kind of envy.
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"All of this stems from the success of E.D.M.," Mr. Hess said in talking about dance music going mainstream.
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The GOP's ability to get away with this stems from years of Democrats' underestimating the importance of state politics.
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The loss of confidence stems from an enduring scandal over the molestation, and sometimes rape, of children by priests.
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Often, our belief in their power stems from our lack of understanding of how machines are constructed and operate.
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The recall stems from concerns about possible listeria contamination, though no illnesses have been directly linked to the products.
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Part of the reason for the lack of conviction for more rate rises stems from still-tame inflation pressure.
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The charge stems from a July 19 incident at a Clearwater convenience store that was captured on security footage.
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The fall of the value of the Canadian dollar, which stems from that, makes things particularly difficult for retailers.
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His interest in such stories expresses not just a need to escape: it stems from a need for guidance.
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The diversification of the funeral industry stems from the environmental impact of traditional burial and the rise of cremation.
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The insult stems from Clinton's publicized email scandal, and is meant to highlight the former Secretary of State's trustworthiness.
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He suggested Washington's resistance stems from a hope to retain the combat potential of forces fighting the Syrian government.
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As for the secret to his success, Wilson said it stems from the passion he brings to the category.
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Most of Bezeq's profit decline this year stems from mobile phone unit Pelephone, which has been hurt by competition.
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For example, maybe gay men's preference for masculinity stems from a general societal devaluing of femininity or internalized homophobia.
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The latter charge stems from an earlier alleged sexual interaction between him and Thomas in January on school property.
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Part of the reason for all of this technology inclusion stems from a point I made at the beginning.
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The latest push for talks between the US and the Taliban also stems from the reality on the ground.
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The witness-tampering charge stems from his alleged attempts to prevent one of those intermediaries from contradicting his testimony.
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The criminal contempt charge stems from a 2007 lawsuit brought by Hispanics, who claim Arpaio had discriminated against them.
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Much of contemporary AI's prowess stems from its ability to sieve patterns out of huge stacks of digital information.
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Some on Twitter have suggested that the exclusion stems from the fact that both of them are Black men.
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The improvement primarily stems from a reduction in legacy non-performing loans at some of the EU's largest banks.
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Remove stems from strawberries, chop in half, and combine in a blender with the sugar and 2 oz. water.
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While no one is arguing that they're against the idea of solar energy, the debate stems from—what else?
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In an interview before the latest shooting, March said Toronto's gun violence stems from the disenfranchisement of certain communities.
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Much of the tension stems from concerns over the influx of Han Chinese -- China's dominant ethnic group -- into Tibet.
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The current conflict stems from the sentences handed down following convictions for incidents that occurred in 2001 and 2006.
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Some of that disparity probably stems from the ridiculous number of guns floating around America compared to other countries.
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The recent bipartisan concern over Mueller stems from weeks of angry criticism from the Trump administration over the investigation.
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