Not exact matches
And it's
much easier to do that than to say, «Well listen, we have free markets and we have democracy and both those things are incredibly messy and no one is
really controlling it,» but if I give you a few symbols and attach a name to it, all of a sudden you have an
evil villain that you can pin the blame on.
Despite all their boasting about being good fiscal managers and the
evils of accumulating debt, the Conservative government doesn't seem to
really care that
much about reducing debt.
We need a
much more realistic approach to the problem of human
evil, and I am perfectly certain that no
really effective way of dealing with it will be found apart from the rediscovery of true religion.
It gets
much worse when you consider the problem of
evil: If God
really exists, and he is
really all powerful, and
really morally perfect, then why do so many horrible, senseless things happen?
Jesus is indignant that the scribes and Pharisees (1) will not enter the kingdom of heaven themselves and stand in the way of others entering it as well; (2) will do almost anything to win a proselyte only to make that proselyte twice as
much a child of hell as they are; (3) confuse people by senseless oaths, telling them that if they swear by the Temple, their oath is not binding, but if they swear by the gold of the Temple, it is binding - the fools ought to realize, Jesus says, that the Temple includes all that is in it; (4) tithe some of their money but neglect justice and mercy and faith, which are weightier moral matters, when they ought both to tithe and perform these greater acts of righteousness as well; (5) are careful about outward cleanliness but careless about the inward disposition, so that they are filled with extortion and greed; (6) appear righteous but
really are hypocrites, because their appearance hides all manner of iniquity inside; (7) pretend to revere the prophets of history whom their parents killed but continue to practice the
evil of their parents by rejecting those whom God sends to them now (Matt.
So
much in Christianity had me seeing these kinds of things only in the light of demons and
evil and satan, that when I started reading and understanding more (when I was in junior high school) and comprehending the concept of the birth - life - death - rebirth cycles, and how there needs to be death and decay for their to be birth and growth... it
really made a huge impression on how I saw the world.
«My impression is that so
much of the literature that has
really dominated our thinking about the church derives from generalized abstractions about what the church ought to be or about what the
evils of the church are by theologians who are at best uncomfortable in trying to apply that to particular congregations.
This is a question from Monika — «What would you say to someone who wants,
really wants, to live following Jesus but has seen so
much evil and brokenness in Christianity that they don't see a way to make it work anymore?»
We don't use any of these products, I try not to buy too
much processed foods as it is... but this is
really useful for when I explain to people why Nestle (and many other such companies) are
evil.
Is it
really the seed of all
evil, or is this all
much ado about nothing?
I'm convinced that bread (especially white) is
evil for me, because when I slipped and ate too
much bread a few times, my belly got
really bloated and I felt like crap overall, plus experienced over-night weight gain.
It seems like Alvarez didn't
really get what made the original
Evil Dead movies so successful, and so he basically eliminates the bizarre humor that made them so
much fun and now goes for a bloodbath of pure gore that is entirely derivative and relies on ridiculous cheap scares.
Jeremy Piven, playing an almost stereotypically
evil Dean, doesn't
really get
much to do, but his presence is always appreciated.
Resident
Evil: The Darkside Chronicles is a solid sequel to The Umbrella Chronicles, but it's not
really much of an improvement
We do get a few newer characters such as Thranduil (Lee Pace), the elf king and father of Legolas, but he is
really just a big cliche in terms of the «villain that you know you can't trust and has way too
much power and seems
evil just for the sake of being
evil,» But again, he doesn't get a whole lot of focus, and to be honest, how he is portrayed is not very interesting, the character has this interesting backstory that is somewhat brushed over, and again, he doesn't get a whole lot of screen time.
Lily James («Downton Abbey») gives a star - making performance opposite the excellent Cate Blanchett, who
really sinks her teeth into the role of the
evil Stepmother (Blanchett receives top - billing but doesn't have as
much screen time as you might expect).
Resident
Evil: Operation Raccoon City is a fun game that is simply buried under too
much to be
really great.
It should be seen in repertory with
evil - children movies like Rosemary's Baby and Night of the Living Dead2 as
much as it should be seen with Leone's quartet of Spaghetti westerns — signposts, all, along the road to the paranoia cinema of the 1970s, where the conversation's not about the dissolution of traditional societal mores, nor even
really about mitigating the collateral of the coming apocalypse.
Released under the misleading title and ad campaign as The
Evil Eye to stress the film's quasi-supernatural element, Mario Bava's last black & white film, La ragazza che sapeva troppo / The Girl Who Knew Too
Much, is a
really a weird hybrid of black comedy, Agatha Christie mystery, and prenatal giallo (some of it co-written by future Mondo Cane co-director, Franco Prosperi).
This makes the casting of African - Americans Smith and McBride sort of interesting, and it makes the dynamic between the robots and their
evil Bill Gates - inspired manufacturer (Bruce Greenwood) sort of interesting, but it doesn't
really do all that
much to explain why the main robot character is pasty white with blue eyes — except that it makes for a more striking tableau when it and Smith shake hands in slow motion, of course.
doesn't
really dispel the derision and anger that was directed at Tonya Harding in the 1990s as
much as it transfers those emotions to new targets, particularly Eckhardt and Harding's mother (Janney is deliciously
evil, and also too easy to hate).
Audrey Tautou (A Very Long Engagement), Jean Reno and Alfred Molina all put in strong performances also, in roles that don't
really demand too
much of them other than to be the generic heroine, cop and
evil Bishop.
No one
really complained too
much, not at least the big music guys, when iTunes was selling 90 percent of music files, but when Amazon has 60 or 70 or 80 percent of the market, all the publishers see Amazon as
evil, something to beat down, not as a company to co-ordinate with and to work with and help make the industry grow.
The concept of going through an
evil - looking demonic gate into an even more
evil land is, quite honestly, a
really cool one, but it face two big problems; apart from being turning everything bright red it didn't
really feel that
much different from the normal world, and the second problem was that every damn gate as the same!
It's unusual in a game like this a name's lead character to be given this
much personality of his own, but he's a decidedly witty fellow back up by some pretty good voice acting, although it does have to be said that for someone tasked with the saving of the world by way of defeating an ancient
evil he doesn't
really seem in that
much of a rush to get anything done.
You
really shouldn't miss out on the likes of Killer Instinct, Lego Batman 3, FIFA 15 and Diablo III: Ultimate
Evil Edition which are all
much more fun when played with a sofa buddy.
I realise that is quite a big statement, but when you strip back the visuals and everything else, until you're left with just the bare bones that is the concept, the two games are opposite sides of the same coin and a League of
Evil really is not that
much of a bad game.
Resident
Evil 7 did so
much right in terms of throwbacks to previous games and
really taking the franchise back to its more survival horror roots.
I think it would be
really tough to do in a game because what I like so
much about Ganondorf in Wind Waker is his choice to be
evil: it's both inevitable but it's something he affirms.
When you finish it the first time, you unlock a new difficulty level entitled Mayhem, along with a few new abilities and weapons, but there isn't
really much by way of replayability — if only it had a similar mode to Resident
Evil Revelations» Raid Mode, which was essentially a zombie - wave survival game like Call of Duty's zombies.
Thanks not to so
much as a smidgen of
evil intent but to normal, understandable human nature, they do not
really see, when push comes to shove, the need to do
much about the litigation system.
I think this system is pure
evil and
really does not do
much to promote the «protection» of children in the best possible way.
Every media report refers to the
evil realtors making so
much money and failing to offer the public choice, no where do I read anything explaining what MLS
really is, the competitive choices that exist to the consumer, the responsibilities involved in agency relationships and the liabilites that realtors assume.
I
really don't like Halloween anymore (especially the way the occult side of it has almost taken the place of Christmas to a lot of people, in extreme)-- it's so
much more
evil - centered than the innocent time it was in the 60's when I grew up.