equal ruleの例文
- The government is laying down clear and equal rules of economic behavior.
- "It must set equal rules and comply with them, " he wrote.
- We ask for a level playing field and equal rules, " she said.
- For example, the separate but equal ruling reflected the public opinion of the time.
- He appears to have been involved, however, in markedly unequal application of WP's equal rules.
- Equal rules for unequal players ensure unequal outcomes,
- Unequal application of equal rules is problematic.
- In response, in September 2014, the House Judiciary Committee approved the Standard Merger and Acquisition Reviews Through Equal Rules Act ( SMARTER Act ).
- Perhaps inadvertently, he spun a NAFTA-esque scenario for walleye limits : " I would like one day to see equal rules _ one lake, one rule ."
- Khan Krum implemented legal reform, establishing equal rules and punishment for all peoples living within the country's boundaries, intending to reduce poverty and to strengthen the social ties in his vastly enlarged state.
- It was the first major defeat for Cardoso, who sailed through his first year of office in 1995 with victories on votes to allow privatization of state firms and equal rules for foreign investors.
- But if it was necessary to reconsider the separate-but-equal rule, the brief said, the court should reject it as " a constitutional anachronism " subjecting blacks to " humiliation on the pretense that they are being treated as equals ."
- But serious questions remain about whether the tycoons _ who made their fortunes riding roughshod over Russia's weak legal system _ will be willing to give up the heavy-handed ways that propelled them to the top, and abide by equal rules for all.
- Some day there will be equal rules for everyone and governors here will have a reduced role, like governors in the United States, but for now Russia has 89 regions with 89 different economies . . . we have to lobby the interests of our manufacturers.
- Wiercioch said a recent report from Attorney General John Ashcroft saying there is no evidence of racial or geographic bias in the use of the federal death penalty will someday be placed on the shelf next to the Dred Scott decision and Plessy v . Ferguson _ the separate-but-equal ruling on race _ " as a shameful attempt to justify the unjustifiable ."
- The first recorded use of the term was by the Reverend Sydney Smith in 1845, where opposition was expressed to the idea of equal rule for " all units of society "; Smith noted that the young should not have the same authority as the old and challenged isocrats to support voting and political rights for women, which was considered an extremist position at the time.