Few Mexicans are indifferent to the man who's vying to be Mexico's first leftist president.
Another of Dr Nicholson's studies has even found a measurable difference between people who say they like chocolate and those who are indifferent to it.
Most businesses are indifferent to changes in corporate taxes .
But the BBC Mexico correspondent, Will Grant, says many Mexicans are indifferent to her case or angry that she receives what they see as special treatment as a foreigner.
Moreover the kind of cost-benefit assessments agencies do are indifferent to the individuals (like small business and their would-be employees) forced to privately bear the costs of those public benefits.
Its proponents are clearly laying groundwork for uncalled-for regulation of wireless services, and are indifferent to the inevitable ensuing court challenges and wheel-spinning lobbying bonanza that represent what the Mercatus Center's Adam Thierer calls the greatest Christmas gift Washington lawyers and lobbyists could hope for.
The French are famously indifferent to their politicians' private lives, which are protected by strong privacy laws: affairs are tolerated, if not de rigueur, for public figures.
If Algerians seem indifferent to the opposition, they are also largely indifferent to the winner.
This is no surprise given that investors are largely indifferent to pre-IPO compensation practices.
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The problem with capitalists is that they are sometimes indifferent to externalities.
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The report also notes that new employers are sometimes indifferent to processing rollovers because they must confirm that the money comes from another qualified plan.
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These spirits are often indifferent to humanity, neither good nor bad.
It is not that Indians are completely indifferent to sports.
So if their choice of funds carries financial consequences, why are consumers so indifferent to their payment method?
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The mismatch between the skills demanded by employers and those available in the market is a reflection both of bad choices by students, who have not thought hard enough about what will help them find a good job, and of education systems that are too often indifferent to the needs of the labour market and too slow to change even if they try.
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"Most patients are completely unaware or indifferent to what's going on, " he told reporters.
Customers are becoming indifferent, even hostile, to unsolicited e-mail, and legitimate marketers are getting lost in increasingly aggressive filters and run the risk of being reported as spammers and banned from Internet service providers.
In truth, golfers are part of a new international superclass, largely indifferent to barriers of distance and continent, and able to play their game wherever they are asked to.
Her instinct tells her to prepare, her hand making renewed, abrupt contact with the knife, even though two of the youths appear indifferent to her and are religiously chewing qaat and arguing, bansheelike, about yesterday's match between Arsenal and Manchester United, and agreeing that the referee made a balls-up of the game by unfairly red-carding the Gunners' captain.
Moreover in America and elsewhere most young people are extremely tolerant of sexuality, and indifferent to ethnic origin, says Mr Freston.
Most Palestinians, going about their day-to-day business are indifferent at best.
To be sure, there are those in our country, and in the Congress, who seem indifferent to these realities.
Both as Wayne and as super-Wayne he seems indifferent, as the films themselves are, to the activities of little people, and to the claims of the everyday, preferring to semi-purse his lips, as if preparing to whistle for an errant dog, and stare pensively into the distance.
This calculation establishes the total cost that employers are willing to incur to employ that worker, and the employer is indifferent to the composition of the pay package comprised of wages, benefits, and payroll taxes.
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While the loss to Birmingham was hardly the performance of a team in crisis, and the Blues are now through to the last 16 of the Champions League, this indifferent sequence would have been worrying for manager Carlo Ancelotti, underlying as it did the lack of strength in depth in a squad that used to be renowned for it.
Japanese consumers are said (by politicians and bureaucrats, that is) to be either indifferent to how such protection reduces choice and raises prices, or to support protectionism because they fear contaminated and disease-bearing foreign products, and the vulnerability of Japan to blockages of agricultural product imports.
What they mean is that they are shedding off the image they've accrued over the last generation of being indifferent to or even intolerant of minorities.
The Blues are conscious that their recent indifferent form has not been conducive for the region attracting big crowds to the Cardiff City Stadium.
Perhaps he counts on the likelihood that his global audiences are too young to know differently, too old and senile to remember, or just too indifferent to have been paying attention.
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