In short, the president made imprudent remarks without taking into consideration the current situation the nation is now faced with. |
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I reminded the committee that it was imprudent to embark on any major capital programme without having funding in place. |
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Countries followed imprudent policies that favored monopolistic crony capitalists, inflation that magnified poverty and currency overvaluation. |
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It is, however, often imprudent and officious to try and fix the problems and arbitrate the quarrels of strangers. |
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Nevertheless some thoughtless and imprudent actions of hers made me from time to time regret that I was in her confidence. |
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His logic was that opponents would be deceived by the ship's appearance, and make rash and imprudent mistakes during confrontation. |
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So many people vowed to boycott sponsors of the biased docudrama that airing it on primetime TV became financially imprudent. |
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But if they are needy as a consequence of their criminal, irrational, or imprudent behavior, then it is not a fine thing. |
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The Act will not redistribute wealth from the poor to the rich, but from the imprudent borrower to the prudent borrower. |
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It would be imprudent of the Pentagon not to be developing contingency plans. |
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Yet while he opposes new program spending, the professor agrees that immediate federal tax cuts would be imprudent. |
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By their imprudent actions, they make the people of this country ludicrous and laughing-stocks to others. |
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It is imprudent of presidents and trustees to approve budgets that were not crafted by those with the relevant academic and fiscal know-how. |
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To further minimize the imprudent use of antibiotics for treatment of influenza, diagnostic techniques should be considered. |
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I think it's probably imprudent for an independent counsel to make any predictions about the outcome of the case. |
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Carrying out the original aim of a quick war with minimal civilian casualties would require taking chances that officers here now deem imprudent. |
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That position is both morally insupportable and legally imprudent. |
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Even when a picture or opinion is imprudent or tasteless, unless it directly incites violence it should not be banned. |
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He had no strong opinion as to whether or not the Committee had the power to add such a rule, but simply believed it would be imprudent. |
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But it would be imprudent to expect that every investment would be a resounding success. |
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While the member's intervention was perhaps unnecessary and imprudent, taken in context it did not compromise his impartiality. |
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Retaining the complainant as a beneficiary of the NECC project would have therefore been imprudent and contrary to the rules of sound management. |
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It emphasized that it would be imprudent for it to start reassessing the testimony of witnesses whom it had not directly heard. |
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Reliance on drug company studies is also imprudent given conflicts of interest, even when the above safe-guards are incorporated. |
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On the other hand you are singularly imprudent and you have a defective sense of honour. |
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Can there be any doubt that it is imprudent to kill alleged traitors without even bothering to convict them? |
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It would be imprudent to write them off as doomed archaic survivals. |
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I have merely decided that such a move would be imprudent at this time. |
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It is probably not surprising that this extravagantly rich and imprudent character made enemies, and they jumped at the chance to bring him down when it arose. |
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It would be imprudent to assume that we are immune from attacks. |
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Although we are preoccupied by what is about to happen in Iraq, we are reassured that our Prime Minister and our Government has the courage and judgment to oppose an unjustified, illegal and imprudent war. |
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On the other hand, nothing stops one from being aware of this state of things and still continuing to take risks, being imprudent in various ways and often suffering bruises. |
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Any imprudent and hasty action that disregards the objective conditions, despite its good intentions, cannot gain the approval and support of the international community. |
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It would be imprudent to suspend the capital master plan for want of a decision on associated costs: the resulting delays would lead to additional costs amounting to millions of dollars. |
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The current crisis in financial markets has been a reminder of how vulnerable financial markets are to imprudent behaviour and uninformed choices of financial products by customers. |
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It is fair to say that more than three years since the crisis began in the summer of 2007, there is a broad agreement on the role of imprudent practices in the financial sector. |
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Appropriate rules on capital buffers would reduce the dependence on socially imprudent private investors, who have encouraged growth without regard for the impact on clients. |
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Shifting the burden of calamities or other problems besetting its people onto others was not only immoral, unfair and irresponsible, but also imprudent, because it could establish a culture of dependency. |
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And because of this imprudent greediness, summon a terrible rain! |
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Prudent man rules also require that greater financial and legal responsibility be attached to any imprudent action by corporate officers. |
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Here Her Majesty took a great dislike at the imprudent behavior of many of the Ministers and Readers. |
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Under the Code, legal capacity is wanting in the case of any person who is feeble-minded, demented, imprudent or under the age of 17, while any person who is insane has no legal capacity. |
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It's politically imprudent to stir up such controversy during an election year. |
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