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The Feds fear effective encryption because it might hobble their finding ways to tax on-line commerce.
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That event might hobble the government, ruin the country's credit and send markets into an outright panic, analysts predict.
He steered clear of Asian slurs, and although his father couldn't resist hinting that random drug testing might hobble Pacquiao, Mayweather strained to be respectful.
IN THE middle of 2002 Atal Behari Vajpayee, India's prime minister, looked as though he might hobble off the world stage on ailing knees, taking his creaking body into political retirement.
"The U.S. might hobble itself, but the rest of the world won't," says Charles Maxwell, another Weeden oil analyst.
The Hollywood Reporter's John DeFore said Hawke and Gomez "have no chemistry, which you'd think might hobble a film in which they're locked in a car together for around 70 minutes.
But while Obama took the opportunity to discuss youth empowerment and urged the 600 graduates to make this the "century where women shape... the destiny of this nation," he didn't touch on an issue that might hobble their ability to achieve that destiny: mounting student debt.
Pfizer got the cholesterol drug when it bought Warner-Lambert in 2000; former SmithKline Beecham Chief Executive Jan Leschly Jan Leschly comments that if Warner-Lambert had chosen to go it alone, it might have been hobbled by the dropoff in revenue when Lipitor did go off patent.
But it will hobble the hero.
Either way there are risks: it may hobble a still-weak economy.
If the proposed legislation passes, it would hobble BP's growth.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com