Businesses
in sentence
2499 examples of Businesses in a sentence
These criminal organizations operate like highly regimented, legitimate
businesses.
The detractors, or the people telling you that
businesses
will prevail, are right.
BF: So are you saying that individuals will force
businesses
or business will be forced to be responsive, or is there a fear that they won't be?
Because governments and
businesses
will fight over this power game, but where are we?
Those unemployment numbers I keep on referencing come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and to make their estimates, they speak to over 140,000
businesses
in this country.
Businesses
shut down, airlines started canceling routes.
Now, this is a widespread practice, but I think what's really interesting is when you find exceptions to this rule, when you find cases of
businesses
or people in
businesses
who don't use their own products.
We want more Rco's, we want more black-owned businesses, female-led, triple bottom line, Ban the Box, green manufacturing companies," right?
Where's the capital in our communities to build the types of
businesses
that we want?
LUCI stands for the Los Angeles Union Cooperative Initiative, and our objective is to create more worker-owned
businesses
here in Los Angeles.
These are the types of folks that want more union
businesses
to exist, so let's build them with them.
There's 260-plus
businesses
here, manufacturing everything from bicycles to washing machines to transformers.
And this group of
businesses
now employs 80,000 people and earns more than 12 billion euros in revenue every year.
If you're a politician, or you work for one, or you just like talking to them, please get the city, state, federal and county legislation passed that we need in order to fund and support worker-owned
businesses.
But doing this work, we also realized that the world, not just world leaders, but
businesses
and citizens like every single person in this room, lacked an actionable guide on how we can avoid a coming global food security crisis.
We see not just environmental groups concerned about climate change but also civic and religious groups, the military and
businesses.
You know, the Small Business Administration tells us that 64 percent of new jobs created in the private sector in the USA are thanks to small
businesses
like mine.
She had no shortage of material: in the decades following the Civil War, Southern whites attempted to reassert their power by committing crimes against Black people including suppressing their votes, vandalizing their businesses, and even murdering them.
But if you flip to satellite view, there are thousands of people, homes and
businesses
in this vast, unmapped and unaddressed spaces.
Already back then, they saw how markets, when left to themselves, can sort of slip into being just the private property of big
businesses
and cartels, meeting the needs of some
businesses
and not the needs of customers.
Why not just let
businesses
compete?
But the problem is that sometimes, for businesses, competition can be inconvenient, because competition means that the race is never over, the game is never won.
And we don't want
businesses
to agree on prices in the back office.
Of course, some people and some
businesses
are more successful than others, but we do not trust in a society if the prizes are handed out even before the contest begins.
And this is where competition rules come in, because when we make sure that markets work fairly, then
businesses
compete on the merits, and that helps to build the trust that we need as citizens to feel comfortable and in control, and the trust that allows our society to work.
Today, for example, less than a quarter of Europeans trust online
businesses
to protect their personal information.
I think we can run our
businesses
by just talking to each other like regular human beings.
But it's also beginning to affect a series of other
businesses
in unexpected ways.
We see big businesses, Monsanto and DuPont, who brought out Agent Orange and stain-resistant carpet.
I was very lucky that, when I worked for Oxfam and other big charities, I could read lots of big reports on what influenced politicians and
businesses
and the general public, what campaigns worked really well, which ones didn't.
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