On Monday morning in USA Today I argued,
against bloggers like Beliefnet's Rod Dreher, that the religious commitments of judges matter.
Not exact matches
I will begin with a backhanded compliment, thanking you for making it easy for
bloggers like me to issue one - way rants
against the people we don't
like while maintaining the appearance of a conversation.
When I have on occasion visited those sites or observed people
like yourself on here who are likely normally on those sites, I tend to feel the comments come across as a kind of
bloggers version of pinning someone up
against the wall and shouting in their face to literally bully them into agreeing with you.
I'd
like to encourage food
bloggers, public health advocates, lunch reformers, etc to enlist parents to make good choices (without guilt) but to also recognize that the deck is stacked
against parents.
In an article for The Telegraph, commentator Ed West has argued,
against the views of Spectator
blogger Alex Massie, that UKIP's critique of phenomena
like multiculturalism and political correctness is entirely compatible with a liberal or libertarian outlook.
For their own inane reasons, movie critics — from professionals for the dailies to
bloggers wearing footed pajamas as they tap away in their rec rooms — turned in mass
against Shyamalan several years ago
like lemmings catching wind of a nearby cliff.
Making matters worse, many
bloggers are urging supporting performances «go lead,» which will also tip the scales
against the veterans in favor of other younger actresses
like Alicia Vikander in The Danish Girl.
When it comes to dealing with book
bloggers many have made choices to reduce the number of requests and often this has nothing to do with the author who happens upon their blog, yet many times I've seen authors take it personally
like the
blogger was
against them.
He warns would - be promoters
against mass - emailing press releases to random people, advice that should be really obvious, but... I've gotten a lot of DEAR
BLOGGER, BUSY MOMS
LIKE YOU NEED OUR EXCITING NEW PRODUCT which makes it pretty clear that the sender has no idea who's receiving the pitch.
The positions the
bloggers and commentary took
against reinvesting dividends centered on whether the stock price would be good at the time of the reinvestment; and it mentioned strategies
like pulling the dividends out and either putting them into a high - yield savings account or accumulating them until such time there was enough to make a new investment into some other stock or stock fund.
A company
like Chillingo can put budgets that most indie studios can only dream of
against ad spend, you don't need to spend afternoons tracking down the contact details of a mobile gaming
blogger in Newcastle when you can globally carpet bomb every major gaming site with ads.
Standing
against a glittery curtain and wearing a wig cap, Tsang reads a statement written by autistic
blogger Amanda Baggs: «The thinking of people
like me is only taken seriously if we learn your language.»
Bart V: I have little confidence in any scientist or group of scientists who imagines that they are up
against «a well - orchestrated and well - oiled misinformation campaign» when said campaign is actually composed of a hodgepodge of retirees,
bloggers, commenters, and maverick scientists, and depends to no small degree on top climate scientists behaving
like a combination of Orwell's Ministry of Truth and the Keystone Kops.
«Then they wouldn't do stupid things
like issue threats of libel suits that they can't win
against bloggers who, it turns out, have lots of friends willing to make the law firm and its client look bad for it.»
Several days ago, the
blogger Phil Wolff, on Skype Journal, went through a series of hypothetical remedies that the courts could have required of Microsoft, covering areas
like interoperability but also other areas of consumer rights, such as the fact that Skype in its terms of service apparently doesn't allow users to file class action lawsuits
against the company.