Worrying about cops didn't last long on my drive, though, as sheets of water began falling from the sky, dramatically limiting visibility and causing me — and everyone else on the road — to add a few hours on the way from Miami to Daytona Beach.
Several shouted «fight like Ferguson» or «I ain't worried about ISIS, I'm
worried about the cops,» while many huddled solemnly on the sidewalk, the bright red - and - white awning of DeJoy's Red Top Cars glowing above them.
If you're afraid or intimidated by your tween or teen,
worry about the cops coming to your door because of trouble he's gotten into, or if she's been expelled for bullying peers or taking a weapon to school, your child's behavior has now moved into Conduct Disorder.
Not exact matches
If you trust the ACLU you can pay money to not
worry as much
about cops randomly kicking in your door.
Many of the representatives at
COP 22 are
worried about a Trump presidency because he has called climate change a «hoax,» pledged to «cancel» the Paris agreement, repeal many of Pres. Barack Obama's climate initiatives and has promised to revive the U.S. coal industry.
Evan Brand: Yeah, some people
worry a lot
about the vitamin K because we've talked before
about the whole traffic
cop analogy of vitamin K helping to direct and keep calcium where it belongs and not into your arteries and things like that.
Personally, I'd rather
worry about Nick than the
cops breathing down my neck the rest of my life, although there is a subplot involving a life insurance policy that neither party claims to know anything
about, further confusing the motives.
There probably isn't much to
worry about if you send directions to your office to a client via email, for example, even if your client's spouse or employer or a
cop reads it.
Plus, you don't have to
worry about your blood pressure going through the roof the next time a
cop pulls behind you.
While I wouldn't need to
worry about acting out any specific scenes, Virgil did receive the full backstory treatment, and a couple weeks before SXSW, Giant Spoon and writer - director David Wally offered me several takes on Virgil: he could be a confident fourth - generation lawman, a tentative rookie, a corrupt
cop, a skittish coward scared of Sweetwater's tougher elements, or a sadistic deputy who thought residents needed harsher punishment.
Cops have reassured me that his game is to mess with me and bully me, but that I should not
worry about being hurt, that he is basically the biggest scumbag in town.