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Just like a powerful car that enables you to engage another gear and suddenly accelerate to avoid an obstacle, your brain can change the way it operates and thus make added recourses available to cope with challenges.
Any lawsuit would have to be brought by fans or cable companies, but Mr. Specter added "our recourse would be to consider legislation, which could change their overall antitrust exemption on the over-the-air games".
He suggested he may force more uniformity in sales tax rates and add legal recourse for Internet retailers facing multiple audits.
"Whenever there is concern from a business that thinks we're trying to take its customers, we sit down with them and talk it through," he said, adding that recourse is also available from state boards, governors' offices and legislators.
Users have no way of protecting their data against theft, Tester added, and no recourse if a breach happens.
If journalists refuse to be bought off, Dietz added, "then another recourse is to shoot them".
There is no further legal recourse, he added.
Adderley's only real recourse, Kramer added, has been to refuse to wear his Super Bowl or Hall of Fame rings, pretend he never played.
And that's the danger — that it's easier to accuse Africans of these crimes, because, what is their recourse?" she added.
He might as well add that such recourse would produce no legal contingency fees.
The EA and Defra added: "There is no statutory recourse to compensation for property lost or damaged due to coastal change".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com