They didn't do enough to temper the company's culture of compliance and complacence.
From the stltoday.com
Rumsfeld's complacence should have come as no surprise.
From the theatlantic.com
If we're doing well, our over-confidence can devolve into complacence, thinking that our future will continue on the same trajectory as our past.
From the forbes.com
We want teachers who demonstrate perseverance coupled with ambition, steady improvement over time, and achievement, without succumbing to complacence.
From the theatlantic.com
Candidate Holtzman was probably helped by the fact that she is a McGovern supporter and by an undeniable complacence on the part of Celler backers.
From the time.com
My concern is that more than a decade of international complacence about the failure of Somalia as a viable state has made the current situation inevitable.
From the post-gazette.com
Should a UBC be enacted either by people's complacence, or firearm companies'compliance, we will become the most surveilled society the world has ever seen.
From the infowars.com
Precisely because these documents offer nothing new under the sun, it's important to learn the lessons of short-sightedness, complacence and misguided intelligence that preceded the war.
From the denverpost.com
The complacence may be reinforced by a series of later events like the success in publishing an autobiography, even further consolidated by TV appearances and speaking engagements.
From the nation.time.com
More examples
Complacency: the feeling you have when you are satisfied with yourself; "his complacency was absolutely disgusting"
Contentment is the experience of satisfaction and being at ease in one's situation.
Being complacent; a feeling of contentment or satisfaction; complacency; Pleasure, delight; Complaisance; a willingness to comply with others' wishes