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First, they try to please too many constituencies.
President Morsi has been trying to please too many masters: his own Muslim Brotherhood, the other Islamists who find the Brotherhood not Islamist enough, the Americans, and the deep (or "thick" as the revolution calls it) state.
Over the past six years, the Clinton team has often tried to please too many points of view: it has, for example, bashed Japan and also tried to prop it up; it has advanced trade liberalisation and also retarded it by attaching environmental and labour standards to the process.
The executives, who included Ivan Seidenberg, president and co-chief executive of Verizon Communications; Percy Sutton, chief executive of Inner City Broadcasting and the former Manhattan borough president; and Russell Carson of Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, an investment company, also counseled Mr. Levy against trying to please too many political constituencies.
A story written to please too many people is easy to spot: Its voice is scattered or obtuse.
Some revelations about the Obama administration detailed in the new epilogue to the upcoming paperback release of Jonathan Alter's bestseller, "The Promise," probably won't please too many folks at the White House.
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"I don't think he's pleasing too many players, but anyone who voted for him has only got themselves to blame.
Feel free to express yourself in any way you please, but too many different patterns or bold colors could look crazy and leave the wrong impression on people.
Mr. Wilson looked pleased, too.
She was pleased, too.
Goldberg was pleased, too.
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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