Little evidence definition

Little evidence actually means none at all. As usual, the New York Times keeps accusing “unspecified revisionists” of “denial” although it is never stated who exactly denies what. The New York Times is, of course expert in “denial” particularly at the time when it matters the most - it denied the Holocaust while it was going on [LL], it denied the Holodomor while it was going on [HOL], it is engaged in a continual denial of genocidal intentions on the part of Hamas, the PA, Hizbollah, and Iran against Israel and the Jews [CA], and so on, but it is always on the lookout for “deniers” when it looses an argument about evidence. Neither Hata nor any other respected Japanese historian “deny” that some of the comfort women were recruited by deception, some were sold by their parents, some may well have been even kidnapped by traffickers - the kind of things that were common in the civilian brothels in Korea and Japan. What they do deny is two crucial things: that the Japanese army was involved in a deliberate and systematic breaking of Japan’s own laws both in Japan and in Korea and that recruitment of comfort women was in any sense a “crime” committed by a colonial power (Japan) against its colony (Korea).

Examples of Little evidence in a sentence

  • Little evidence exists for historical costs of extreme weather events in Antwerp.

  • Little evidence supports the claim that IMRT could improve oncological outcomes of breast cancer patients.

  • Little evidence supports that self-efficacy conditions the relationship between strain and crime (▇▇▇▇▇ and ▇▇▇▇▇ 1992; Baron 2004), with the majority of the studies failing to support this part of the theory (▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ et al.

  • Little evidence exists of relationships between women’s social solidarity and schooling or any health and nutrition outcomes globally.

  • Little evidence exists linking AST to reduced BMI among school-aged youth [41].

  • Little evidence and data exists regarding the direct and indirect use of land by transport infrastructures in the EU, and even less so on the materials required to maintain and increase the transport stock.