And they complain that the shrimpers catch the red snapper that they hope to catch themselves.
They complain that no international courts or criminal tribunals in Iraq were allowed to conduct investigations of U.S. officials.
They complain that the smart new hotels import their smiling staff from Bali, rather than recruit on the spot.
They complain that the bankruptcy proceedings left WorldCom in an unfairly strong position.
They complain that even the small hydroelectric plant being built nearby will light only one light bulb per household here.
They complain that very broad and vague patents are a plague on the industry, on innovation and ultimately on consumers.
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They complain that it does little to alleviate the crisis even though that was not the intention or to tighten the rules.
They complain that some of the signatories to CAFTA fail to enforce labour standards laid down by the International Labour Organisation.
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They complain that India's tax regime is causing confusion and may deter foreign firms from trying to develop the domestic market.
They complain that jobs are hard to come by, especially since employers fear that many Indians may be involved in crime.
Though hardly filled with hope, they complain that at present they feel thwarted in their attempts to prise information from public bodies.
They complain that big firms in rich countries are exploiting their vulnerability.
They complain that it abandons the principles he laid out in May, by resorting to committees and spending caps rather than detailed reforms.
Moreover, they complain that the Metsa-Botnia installation will not use the cleanest available production technology, meaning that it may emit potentially carcinogenic dioxins.
They complain that barriers to China's domestic market mean that India is mostly shipping unrefined minerals and primary goods, getting finished products in return.
Then when the developers deliver what the lazy masses have asked for, they complain that none of the new games have any replay value.
Critics are on stronger ground when they complain that private-equity firms burdened companies with debt, took the cash out as dividends and sometimes drove them to the wall.
They complain that their parades are facing more and more restrictions in terms of where and when they can march, and what emblems they display and what tunes they can play.
Thirdly, they complain that the beneficiaries of the scheme are to be picked by reference to official poverty data, out-of-date and unreliable (the 150 districts, for example, are not necessarily the poorest).
They complain that bungling local officials, who may well feel threatened by volunteers doing their jobs better (as was shown in Kobe), could use the new regulations to shut voluntary organisations down.
IRA. They complain that if he did not keep repeating this slippery half-fiction, Mr Adams would have found it much more difficult to prosecute his having-it-both-ways strategy of ballot box and Armalite rifle.
In particular, they complain that the Kremlin is not helping track down those responsible for a Soviet-backed attempted putsch in Lithuania in early 1991 that killed 14 people and for the execution of eight border guards shortly afterwards.
They complain that indelible ink - meant to prevent multiple voting - could be easily washed off and that accounts abound of a government scheme to fly tens of thousands of "dubious" - and possibly foreign - voters to flood key constituencies.
They complain that it alternately builds up and disowns vile dictators, such as Saddam Hussein, props up corrupt and unpopular regimes, as in Saudi Arabia, and turns a blind eye to the unsavoury activities of its allies, in places such as Bahrain and Tunisia.
They also complain that the Palestinians promised to arrest ten militants thought to be planning fresh terror attacks.
They also complain that the law lacks proper funding.
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They applaud when the government forces insurance companies to keep them on their parents health plans until they turn 27, but complain that they have no job and have to live at home.
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They complain about policies that have brought unemployment and poverty, but seem unable to grasp that, if they chose to organise, they could influence government through their numbers.
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