The funds here tend to have the virtue of consistency coupled with a knack for logging impressive long-term results.
That ending would have the virtue of symmetry, and pleasure, and closure, and relief, for the suffering audience.
Despite the visceral sting on April 15th, taxes have the virtue of being honest, direct, and most importantly, visible.
FORBES: Spending Is Choking Us And Tax Cuts Are No Heimlich Maneuver
Conveniently, the banks provided two external villains for their troubles which have the virtue of being plausible and temporary.
These have the virtue of being traded right here at home, in full public view, on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
The Gus Rankings have the virtue of relying on fairly objective results (on-the-field wins and losses) while correcting a little bit for randomness.
But this plan of attack does at least have the virtue of appealing to widespread worries about an Obama victory rather than pandering to the foam-flecked fringe.
While a class action can have the virtue of assuring equal justice to all class members, it can also have the vice of binding them to something less than justice.
FORBES: Judge's Dissent In Rio Tinto Case Slams Alien-Tort Claims
These have the virtue of being more clear-cut than friendships (did you sleep together or didn't you?) and thus what is or is not a link between nodes is unambiguous.
It is worth noting that, in the meantime, associate IMF membership might also have the virtue of vitiating the prohibitions imposed by the 1934 Johnson Debt Default Act -- enabling the USSR for the first time to issue bonds and other securities instruments in the United States.
This hands-off policy was supposed to have the extra virtue of allowing America to mend fences with its Arab allies and help rebuild support for the United Nations embargo on Iraq.
It reckons that its big stitching centres have the double virtue of impressing ethically anxious customers and ensuring quality.
ECONOMIST: Ending child labour can have unexpected consequences
My "tail" did not even have the redeeming virtue of elegance.
I'm saying that our preference here is to go ahead and seat the delegates who have been selected by virtue of the vote - a record turnout vote I should add, January 29th - and have those votes not be disenfranchised but rather be counted as they should be in a democracy.
Considerations of these sorts have long been part of the virtue of judicial modesty, too often undervalued by partisans on both sides.
WSJ: Michael McConnell: The Constitution and Same-Sex Marriage
Yes the leaders of powerful countries such as the United States, or many of the European countries do have an influence on many of us Africans by virtue of their big purses and the aid they grant us.
Over the last several weeks, in a multipart series on Obamacare ( part 1, part 2, part 3), a recurring theme I have discussed is the seemingly prosaic virtue of shopping.
With the recession hitting Medicaid outcomes have been getting better by virtue of healthier people in the system (due to rising unemployment from 2007 to 2011) and by more practices and insurers realizing that service delivery and outcomes needed to get better.
FORBES: How Medicaid Harms the Poor: A Counter-Rebuttal, Part III
If not Obama, it seems the Republicans would have similarly erred mightily by virtue of trying to fix what was broken rather than let the markets correct the myriad errors that originated from the federal government to begin with.
FORBES: Book Review: Ayn Rand's "Free Market Revolution" by Yaron Brook and Don Watkins
For decades, now, professors of political theory have squabbled over whether liberty or virtue should be the foundation of American politics.
FORBES: Un-Thinking The Culture War: It's Not Liberty vs. Virtue
"The lesson we in the media have learned from the web and blogs is that the highest virtue of the media is transparency, " he says.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Magazine | Down with blogs... so here's another
In a country of Confucian tradition, Koreans have long regarded filial piety as the source of all virtue.
It looks like Chinese reformers will have to continue to practice the Confucian virtue of patience.
Because there is no other nation on earth with the capacity that we have by virtue of our principles, our history, our beliefs, our values, our resources, and our freedom, that can lead.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Liz Cheney at the Freedom Flame: Educating Obama
Though the Front is still unlikely to gain more than a handful of seats at most, no fewer than 134 of its candidates have got through to second rounds by virtue of winning the first-round votes of at least 12.5% of registered voters in their constituencies.
One of the many mistakes the McCain people have admitted is that they assumed that a sitting governor, by virtue of her position, would be up to the task of answering substantive questions of vital interest to the nation.
Within Europe, the mini-states of Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican have even been granted the right to mint their own euro coins, by virtue of their historical links and monetary agreements with France and Italy.
Then you can walk down the steps and have a pleasant lunch and justify the second glass of cold Bergerac wine by virtue of having to pedal all the way back to Treyne in time for Champagne cocktails on the patio and one last death-defying inhalation of foie gras.
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