Sentences with phrase «air personal attacks»

Social media should not be used as a personal sounding board to air personal attacks or inappropriate comments at others.

Not exact matches

A University of Melbourne researcher has found that one - third of Australians report health problems — ranging from migraine headaches to asthma attacks — when exposed to common fragranced consumer products such as air fresheners, cleaning products, laundry supplies, and personal care products.
There were the pressures of available airtime, a source who doesn't want to be named, and an old - boy network in Texas that brags, but doesn't want to go on the record to contend with, but when the story aired on 60 MINUTES II, reported by veteran newsman Dan Rather, during the 2004 presidential election, the reaction wasn't to the substance of the story, but instead on the minutiae of ancillary issues, and the credibility of Mapes and Rather themselves, which led to personal attacks that had nothing to do with their professional competence.
WB's Maximum Movie Mode (last seen on Watchmen) allows director McG to give us a personal tour of the film, including picture - in - picture demonstrations, storyboard comparisons, a Terminator Mythology Timeline, and eleven Focus Points also accessible directly from the menu: «Digital Destruction,» «Enlisting the Air Force» («Molten Metal and the Science of Simulation,» «Building the Gas Station,» «Creating the VLA Attack,» «Exploding Serena's Lab in Miniature,» «Hydrobots,» «An Icon Returns,» «Terminator Factory,» «Stan Winston Shop,» and «Napalm Blast.»
If I find myself in disagreement, I focus on issues rather than airing grievances or complaints in the press or online, or engaging in personal attacks of any kind.
As a result over the past year, it seems obvious to everyone that Subtweeter decided to wage war on YALSA and part of that was relentlessly attacking one of this year's Printz winners over comments that were ridiculous but not worthy of the vicious personal attacks the Subtweeter has kept going all month, which sucked the air out of any healthy discussion.
Our regulars — Scott McCartney of The Wall Street Journal discusses the effects of terrorist attacks on tourism and travel rates and whether it is worth it to apply miles earned from credit cards on your next flight, and Roger Dow of USTA talks about the trend of taking vacation days to travel, the effect of travel on personal health and well being, and the best way to book travel plans from restaurants to air lines.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z