By laughing at a snidey biog such as this we collude in the destruction of an already terribly injured woman. |
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In many cases, corrupt officials collude with each other in an entangled network to fend off probes into their dirty dealings. |
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Only those tour guides who collude with black market tourist shops should be firmly fought against. |
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But audiences willingly collude in that pretence and rejoice in the characters it brings to life. |
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As history shows, criminals and crooked cops collude where opportunity takes them. |
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Thereafter, they didn't need to collude or otherwise conspire to distort the market. |
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Nor can I understand why Governments would collude with producers who wish to hide where their products are made. |
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More invitingly, there are a good few gnashing epics where guitars and keyboard atmospherics collude to darken an already black mood. |
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And when the parties collude in such a craven course, it becomes conspiracy as well. |
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They collude, have unlimited access to finance, and bring witnesses who are coached to commit perjury. |
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Do not collude or cooperate with any other institution in anti-competitive activities. |
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It is, therefore, not possible for suppliers to tacitly collude on price and output. |
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Would they accept that kind of statehood as the end of the conflict, or would the new state sponsor an irredentist politics and secretly collude in an ongoing terrorist war? |
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There is an incentive to collude with other suppliers to boost prices, just as two prisoners have good reason to keep mum about their crime. |
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Unlike most other businesses, in sport competitors need to collude to provide a sellable product. |
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Further down, policemen, immigration officials and others collude with brokers and factory owners. |
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Local officials are promoted for meeting economic performance targets and some collude for personal gain with the dambuilders. |
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Such controls can be circumvented by a group of employees who collude to defraud the company. |
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In some cases, the airport and dominant airlines have incentives to collude each other at the expenses of other carriers. |
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She then finds that the systems that are supposed to help alleviate the situation collude with the husband and blame her. |
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The fact that those members would collude to prop up that totally corrupt government is a total affront. |
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It would make sense to collude under those circumstances if the fines are going to be so trivial. |
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The second study concludes that there was an explicit attempt to collude at the meeting of 8 December 1993, in which ADM took part. |
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The companies do not have to collude. They do not need to have a few people sitting in a room dishonestly trying to say what the price will be. |
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They all collude, without realizing it, in perpetuating workplace cultures that conform to everybody's expectations. |
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We didn't expect that they would collude and do what they did, because CAC is also an organization. |
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The primary target of the antitrust rules is to make certain that companies compete rather than collude. |
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To do otherwise is to collude in limiting the availability of products many consumers might choose to purchase. |
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It is also illegal for anyone to collude with someone else to circumvent this prohibition. |
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Collusive labor makes it easier for employers to collude to extract maximum rents from customers. |
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I argued that when markets are free, and when government does not collude with business, greed is useful. |
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Did anyone involved in either managing or marketing the trusts collude in a way that impacted on share prices and could be construed as market abuse? |
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Telecommunications companies failed to compete on price, which is what should happen in a proper market, preferring, as numerous experts believe, to collude and fix roaming charges. |
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It had the authority, indeed the majesty, to compel victims and their families to collude in their own abuse and to keep hideous crimes secret for decades. |
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If management fails to challenge employees who appear to collude, a department could end up paying overtime rates for large amounts of work, which could have been performed at regular-pay levels. |
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Contractors may also collude to overcharge. |
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And what if the family and community collude in this inversion? |
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Its people have been set against one another, encouraged to massacre each other and sometimes to commit genocide, so that powerful vested interests outside Africa can collude and gain advantage. |
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Under an IP, both sides agree not to pay, offer, demand or accept bribes, or collude with competitors to obtain the contract, or engage in such abuses while carrying it out. |
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We have lacked the guts to refuse to collude with torture flights and lacked the vision to use Europe's capacity to be a real and united best friend to America, and it is about time that we actually practised those values. |
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And candidates collude in this, sending their partners on the campaign trail, conducting joint interviews and giving them prime time slots at the conventions. |
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Nor, Cortazzo said, did he collude with the geologist to rip off Roy. |
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However, since all students – including those who write for themselves – are subject to the same assignments, deadlines and assessment criteria, it is unfair for universities to collude tacitly with ghostwriting. |
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Mr. Speaker, Quebec's National Assembly has unanimously reiterated its opposition to Conservative plans to collude with the Liberals to reduce the Quebec nation's political weight in the House of Commons. |
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The proposed section 405.2 prohibits any effort to circumvent the contribution limits, to conceal the identity of the source of a donation or to collude with any person or entity for those purposes. |
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The Pact sets out rights and obligations for neither side to offer, demand or accept bribes, or collude with competitors to obtain the contract, or while carrying it out. |
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In fact, it was not unknown for husbands and wives to collude in the wife's adultery, either to collect a large crim. con. settlement or to secure a divorce. |
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One strategy to keep prices high and to maintain profitability was for producers of the same good to collude with each other and form associations, also known as cartels. |
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