We should just agree to disagree until then — with the one caveat that it would be great if you stopped interpreting posts
as attacking authors.
It also is a perfect foil for a certain group of folks who have attacked us here at MGC because they view
us as attacking authors who decide to go the traditional route.
Not exact matches
I want to make it clear that none of this post should be construed
as a personal
attack on the
authors of various Safe Withdrawal Rate studies.
Two months after the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001, Turkish
author Orhan Pamuk published an essay in the New York Review of Books (titled «The Anger of the Damned») in which Pamuk, who is often mentioned
as a contender for the Nobel Prize, tried to explain the violent resentment that Muslim societies feel towards the West.
So a Christian who was a fan of this book (and the
author) commented that this was the stupidest review they had ever read... Another Christian weighed in and said that the commenter was stupid
as well for just using cut - and - paste
attacks upon people who write critical reviews.
Much stronger, it would seem to us, is the
author's
attack on classical economics
as being fundamentally misguided, and lacking in relevance to the real world.
My first thought after reading your review is that his view of the Bible
as dialog would seem to deny the Holy Spirit
as being the
author of Scripture, and would
attack the idea that the Word — a.k.a. Jesus — became flesh and pitched his tent among us.
These
attacks on Fanny show that their
authors are
as incapable of seeing her qualities
as Mrs. Norris is, and indeed incapable of following Austen's clear directions for judging Fanny.
One
author, for example, wrote that God had to create the protective womb of the «spirit» for the Holy Spirit to dwell in
as the «soul» was open to demonic
attack.
Homosexual activists like the playwright Larry Kramer and the writer Gabriel Rotello,
author of Sexual Ecology — an important weaving together of ecology theory, epidemiology, and sexual politics — have been ferociously
attacked by their fellow gay activists for publicly acknowledging that AIDS results
as much from human behaviors
as from specific microbes.
Pro-sod
author Leigh Rutledge describes the
attack in her book The Gay Decades, June 16, A fist fight broke out at a Philadelphia playhouse when ten gay activists interrupted a lecture by David Rueben and denounced him
as a criminal for his views on male gay.
Pro-sod
author Leigh Rutledge describes the
attack in her book The Gay Decades, June 16, A fist fight broke out at a Philadelphia playhouse when ten gay activists interrupted a lecture by D.r. David Rueben and denounced him
as a criminal for his views on male gay.
In the recent book, Civil Liberties Under
Attack, one of the
authors mentions the case of a government official with an impeccable record who was placed under charges because unidentified informers asserted he «advocated the Communist Party line, such
as favoring peace and civil liberties,» and «his convictions concerning equal rights for all races and classes extend slightly beyond the normal feelings of the average individual «1
I am also perplexed
as to why this is so heated and why
attack the
author because she says non-CIO is what she wants to do.
The
attack on Soros matters not because,
as some have argued, it might give comfort to neo-Nazis, or because it may have offended Jews, but because it reveals something rotten about the ideas in the minds of its
authors.
An
author and one - time elected official under New York Gov. George Pataki, McCaughey has made her name largely with blistering
attacks on health care reform efforts offered by Democrat Hillary Clinton in the 1990s and then eventually passed into law
as the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare.
Based on his experience
as a marine ecologist and Congressional Fellow, he
authored «Learning from the Octopus: How Secrets from Nature Can Help Us Fight Terrorist
Attacks, Natural Disasters, and Disease» (2012), among several other recent books.
«However, studies have shown that HDL doesn't work
as well in people at high risk for heart
attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular diseases, and that the functional ability of HDL matters
as much
as its quantity,» said senior study
author Montserrat Fitó, M.D., Ph.D., and coordinator of the Cardiovascular Risk and Nutrition Research Group at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute in Barcelona and at the Ciber of Physipathology of Obesity and Nutrition (CIBEROBN), Spain.
The
authors measured the proportion of patients in each group who received cardiac catheterization, a coronary revascularization procedure or future noninvasive test,
as well
as those hospitalized for heart
attack (acute myocardial infarction, MI).
The
authors and editorialist express grave concerns that there will be many needless premature deaths
as well
as preventable heart
attacks and strokes if patients who would clearly benefit from statins are not prescribed the drug, refuse to take the drug, or stop using the drug because of ill - advised adverse publicity about benefits and risks, which may include misplaced concerns about the possible but unproven small risk of diabetes.
As you say, it's still a mystery and it may be that the answer in the end is that there is not just one single cause that's leading to this colony collapse disorder; as the authors of this article outline, people studying this problem have noticed that in fact we do seem to have an unusually large number of problems with certain kinds of parasitic mites that can attack the be
As you say, it's still a mystery and it may be that the answer in the end is that there is not just one single cause that's leading to this colony collapse disorder;
as the authors of this article outline, people studying this problem have noticed that in fact we do seem to have an unusually large number of problems with certain kinds of parasitic mites that can attack the be
as the
authors of this article outline, people studying this problem have noticed that in fact we do seem to have an unusually large number of problems with certain kinds of parasitic mites that can
attack the bees
Dr. Scheinbaum is the
author of Functional Medicine Coaching: How to Be Part of the Movement That's Transforming Healthcare,
as well
as two books on using the Functional Medicine approach to stopping panic
attacks, Stop Panic Attacks in 10 Easy Steps and How to Give Clients the Skills to Stop Panic A
attacks, Stop Panic
Attacks in 10 Easy Steps and How to Give Clients the Skills to Stop Panic A
Attacks in 10 Easy Steps and How to Give Clients the Skills to Stop Panic
AttacksAttacks.
«If you have too much sodium and too little potassium, it's worse than either one on its own,» said Dr. Thomas Farley, New York City's health commissioner, who has led efforts to get the public to eat less salt... «Potassium may neutralize the heart - damaging effects of salt,» said Dr. Elena Kuklina, one of the study's
authors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention... The research found people who eat a lot of salt and very little potassium were more than twice
as likely to die from a heart
attack as those who ate about equal amounts of both nutrients.
In contrast, Dr. Alexander Haskell (
author of «Hope for Hashimoto's») and Dr. Mark Starr (
author of «Hypothyroidism Type II»), report that for some patients, natural thyroid formulations from animal thyroids, such
as Armour ®, may be perpetuating the autoimmune
attack due to containing thyroglobulin and TPO, and they only recommend compounded and synthetic thyroid medications for people with Hashimoto's (6,7).
Stiff arteries heighten your risk of cardiac problems, heart
attacks and strokes, however, the muscle tissue vs. arterial tissue flexibility link was only identified in middle aged and older adults, and the
authors noted that some degree of arterial stiffening is to be expected
as we age.
A fan of the famous 19th century
author believes many of Austen's lessons on love, found in her famous tomes such
as Pride and Prejudice and Sense and I'm not just referring to the countless iconic celebrities we lost, but the lives of people lost during so many, many terrorist
attacks as well.
The Second Bakery
Attack is based on the story of the same name by Japanese
author Haruki Murakami, and stands
as one of a very few adaptations of the
author's works.
This modern - day Jekyll - and - Hyde story was to star Donald Sutherland
as a celebrated
author who suffers from
attacks of blindness.
Abstract: Having
as departure point her learning
as a participant of the Second Forum on Education for Global Citizenship, held by UNESCO in Paris, shortly after the January 2015
attacks, the
author shows that the best antidote to violence and fear - that paralyzes and generates more violence — is to educate people to see themselves
as part of a single humanity.
This is an
attack on our democracy and goes against the so - called critical thinking that the NYCDOE purports to be promoting through Common Core,» states Katie Lapham, English
as a New Language teacher and
author of the education blog, Critical Classrooms.
The
authors of the bill argue it would be better for teachers and taxpayers, but Michigan union groups are
attacking the bill
as being anti-teacher.
The current era of corporate education reform began with the 1983 publication of the Reagan administration's report A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Education Reform, prepared by a committee of prominent professors, politicians, teachers, and business executives.5 Not only did the report
attack many of the equity - minded federal education reforms that preceded it, A Nation at Risk also manufactured a narrative of public education in crisis, steeped in the language of Cold War military paranoia: «If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it
as an act of war,» the
authors wrote.
My «rage» is frustration at the obfuscation - and personal
attacks - and also,
as an actual self - pubbed
author, of seeing yet another venture apparently aimed at exploiting the dream of becoming a writer.
Things came to a head following the infamous Goodreads Bullies wars (Amazon brought into it
as the owner of Goodreads, but refusing to get involved) in which
authors and reviewers waged war online, often devolving into personal
attacks.
The ethical beta reader does not use the
author's other books
as a platform to review and
attack a different book or the
author.
If a person makes a post
as a review that has nothing to do with the book but demeans and insults the
author, it is not a book review, it is a personal
attack and the poster is not a reviewer but a troll.
As anyone who follows me on social media (I'm @RachelintheOC on my
author / advocacy Twitter account) can see, whenever I share advocacy articles, I'm regularly
attacked, regardless of whether the information is about male or female survivors.
Pinterest can be another mode of
attack when developing you
as an
author!
There are so many
attacks on indie
authors that you might think that people would be wising up about them but unfortunately the opposite is probably true,
as in where's there's smoke there's fire.
The news that
author Lauren Howard was pulling the release of her debut novel over this kind of mob - mentality after she was virtually brutalized by some members of the Goodreads community resulted in an outpouring of support from
authors and readers alike; had the news of the vicious
attacks on her and on her book not been shared so readily —
as the Beihang study indicates — many online community members may have never even heard of Howard or her novel.
In addition to Doctorow's striking metaphor, his response also
attacked the logic of DRM
as effective protection for the publisher and
author.
The previous Taleist survey, the results of which were published
as an ebook that
authors and publishers could purchase in order to learn more concrete information on self - publishing, came under
attack for a variety of reasons, including a having a relatively small pool of respondents and the unquantifiable nature of some of the questions.
As it is now, if an
author is
attacked, the only recourse the
author has a right to is to flag the abuse and contact the GR managers for help.
While you take my grammar mistake to
attack me
as an
author, I am using it
as an example of something that totally drives my point across.
Apparent plans by Amazon to test a monthly subscription library for e-books has been savaged by Australian booksellers
as cultural vandalism and an
attack on
author royalties.
A very interesting post I also think it's a bit silly for people to be
attacking Amanda Hocking; I mean, if I were pottering along
as an Indie
author and then some big publisher waved two mil in front of my nose, I'd be all like «sign me up, biatches».
One reader will
attack the book, the
author, editor, proof - reader, publisher and everyone else associated with it,
as if mere publication of this book was a personal insult.
So here, in opposition to events in which
authors have paid to have good reviews of their books posted — or posed
as others in order to praise their own work — we're now talking about Jackson fans
attacking the book they don't like.
The report has been
attacked by critics who point out the figures don't include cash paid to
authors as part of book advances.
The
author also points out that these bugs may start off only biting one person in the house (although they will soon start
attacking others
as well).