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" ... Army survivability. The article in the Air Force Association’s magazine asserts that Army forces in the Pacific “will be shooting from a fixed, ground-based location…while bombers are always moving.” This is sophistry. Air Force bombers spend most of their time on the ground at large, vulnerable bases. The Army’s plans for future fires of all ranges assumes road-mobile systems that can be rapidly repositioned to minimize vulnerability. While most such systems would be impossible for current Chinese reconnaissance assets to find and target, the entire Army approach to war in the Pacific or anywhere else presumes continuous maneuver to confuse adversaries and maximize the survivability of friendly forces. ... "
" ... Judge Sutton's sophistry may or may not be persuasive to the Justices of the Supreme Court should they, as is expected, ultimately have to rule on the legality of the Affordable Care Act. If they deem it Constitutional, Buffett will have helped inspire a contrived new Constitutional doctrine in addition to an eponymous tax. One wonders what branch of government will next turn to Buffett for legal or moral authority? And whether the freedoms that made Buffett's success possible will last under such a government. ... "
" ... Russell's argument was rooted in a technical sophistry that only lawyers could admire, but the Judges on the Eleventh Circuit saw right through it. The Court noted that punitive damages were not strictly based on the damages awarded but rather the actual harm inflicted by the defendant. Since the value of the property transferred by Russell to Highway 59 was worth $795,000 and Russell's half-interest in that property was therefore worth $397,500 ⸺ being the amount that SEPH as Vision Bank's successor would have collected from Russell ⸺ the $300,000 punitive damages award was quite reasonable, especially considering that the Eleventh Circuit had upheld in other cases much higher ratios, including one of nearly six times in punitive damages the injury caused by the defendant. ... "
" ... The conditions of foreign workers and environments are invisible to Americans because they are out of sight. However, whether the product is the clothing on our backs or food in our bellies, low prices are enabled by the suffering of others. And no amount of sophistry about opportunities for workers changes that quid pro quo. ... "
" ... Without more clarity, however, the debate runs the risk of unraveling into exercises in sophistry. ... "