Whatever you said is just your assumptions, nobody
cares about your assumptions.
Not exact matches
Eventually, since they feel that their efforts have been ignored (or rebuffed), they make negative
assumptions about their co-workers along these lines: «They don't really
care» and «They aren't that great, anyway.»
The fault in your argument is your
assumption that believing someone
cares about you equals pride.
To hold that same - sex marriage is part of the fundamental right to marry, or necessary for giving LGBT people the equal protection of the laws, the Court implicitly made a number of other
assumptions: that one - flesh union has no distinct value in itself, only the feelings fostered by any kind of consensual sex; that there is nothing special
about knowing the love of the two people whose union gave you life, whose bodies gave you yours, so long as you have two sources of
care and support; that what children need is parenting in some disembodied sense, and not mothering and fathering.
I'll start: I feel most at home in a church that 1) takes its mission to
care for the poor and marginalized seriously, 2) does not make
assumptions about its congregation's political positions nor emphasizes political action to begin with, 3) speaks of Scripture in terms of its ability to «equip us for every good work,» 4) embraces diversity (theologically, ethnically, etc.) and allows women to assume leadership positions.
In the company of discerning teachers and learners, my education was being shaped out of certain
assumptions that had as much to do with living life as with thinking
about it: that we are «in relation» whatever we may think of that fact, that the most basic human unit is not therefore «the self but rather «the relation»; and that this intrinsic mutuality demands — and should be the foundation of — our ethics, politics, pastoral
care and theologies.
I suspect, however, that Christians may find on analysis that they are in greater tension than they think with many of the
assumptions about care and the Value of survival embodied in modern medicine.
It is a dangerous fallacy to establish the
assumption that many churches don't
care about others while implying that the disfunctional and corrupt government does.
You're living under the
assumption that He is in control, He
cares and He can do something
about your circumstances.
Yet it also raises some questions
about a frequent
assumption: that during the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust, the world was silent and largely apathetic, and that mobilizing an effective response to such crises depends largely on informing people and getting them to
care about what is happening elsewhere.
Perhaps it challenges their comfortably individualistic
assumptions about abortion because it is too close to what they themselves do when they feed the hungry, clothe the poor, or
care for the sick.
We can explore our
assumptions about infants and parenting and become more aware of the family patterns or habits we are bringing to the daily
care of our babies.
It invites them to question their most basic
assumptions about raising kids while offering a wealth of practical strategies for shifting from «doing to» to «working with» parenting — including how to replace praise with the unconditional support that children need to grow into healthy,
caring, responsible people.
(1) Your question is based on the ridiculous
assumption that economy and politics is a zero sum game and that somehow being «for» middle class means you're «against» (or «don't
care about») poor; (2) Leaving that aside, championing the case of 75 % of population over 25 % seems like a lot less of a political suicide than championing the case of 25 % over the 75 %, unless I don't quite understand how voting works in a democracy.
David Runciman argues that «political parties are founded on the
assumption that most people don't
care enough
about politics to do the things that would make a difference: they have to be corralled into the political arena and then bribed to stay there long enough to effect change».
The Conservative belief that a referendum on Europe is a vote winner (see Grant Shapps at 2.44 pm, for example) is based on the
assumption that people
care about the issue.
«Mr. Spock [donates] just because he
cares about the outcome for the child,» Gneezy says, but this
assumption is «a mistake» because it ignores the main motivation for giving: «It makes us feel good.»
«Our goal here was to get a picture of what is happening when patients go to a SNF after hospital discharge, and we found that some of the
assumptions about the impact of nursing home quality on outcomes may have been overstated,» says the study's lead author, Mark Neuman, MD, MSc, an assistant professor of Anesthesiology and Critical
Care and Senior Fellow in the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
But the monkeys violate the
assumption that all they
care about is the amount of food they get.
It's disappointing, and it undermines our
assumptions about HIV
care.»
This simple recipe suggests that Coke, secure in being one of the world's most recognizable trademarks and the
assumption that their customers may not
care about sugar intake, may feel less reason to lie
about the sugar they sell.
The sequence only logically works if viewers make a lot of
assumptions about timelines, cause and effect, human psychology, and medical
care, but that doesn't make it any less effective in the moment.
I began teaching under the incorrect
assumption that my students would somehow naturally know that I
cared deeply
about their success and livelihood.
«I had all kinds of
assumptions about inner city kids, being from the rural Midwest — «Oh, big cities, their parents might not
care.»
Woven into this highly personal narrative
about a boy's journey from silent sidekick to hero are themes that translate to public education: the challenges of finding the right school or instructional method to meet a student's individual needs; the impact of social stigmas on expectations and performance, particularly for «discarded students» in low - income neighborhoods, and the need for a culture of high expectations to counter those negative societal
assumptions; the importance of tireless, focused,
caring teachers who do whatever it takes to help students succeed; and the ability for all children — regardless of learning challenges or race or income level — to learn.
There is, of course, a long - standing contrast between the
assumption that people in the past were fundamentally just like us and the belief that they made different
assumptions about the world and
cared about different things.
There's an
assumption that expressing concern over cruel acts against animals or advocating for laws to better protect them means a person doesn't
care as much
about their fellow humans, but that's not the case.
Ever hear that joke
about how a group of aliens visits Earth and see us (humans) feeding, bathing, picking up poop, and otherwise
caring for our pets and they make the
assumption that the dogs and cats are the ones in charge here on Earth?
Alot of breeders do rescue dogs and puppies but it is very sad when people can make
assumptions about breeders and say we do not love
care dogs, nor our puppies and money is all that matters.
A note on families who surrender their animals A common
assumption is that people who surrender their animals to the CCSPCA don't
care about them.
The governing
assumption in the vast majority of GCM / climate studies is that natural variability is a) small, b) integrates to zero over time and therefore its un interesting when it comes to answering the questions we
care about: How much warming will human forcing cause.
In the end, as a governing rule, I would prefer
care and effort - with as much openness
about biases as possible, over
assumptions about negative unintended consequences being proportional to the magnitude of the intervention.
I don't
care about the real DALR in the real atmosphere, which is an utterly dynamic quantity that is basically never precisely observed and which is derived, using a bunch of approximations and
assumptions that include active transport of air parcels and «0» conductivity, to provide us with some insight into why the atmosphere does remain warmer at the bottom than at the top.
You need to start with the
assumption that all IPCC scientists are either corrupted or idiots, then not
care about getting it at all right.
Well, it seems to me you have yet to present a good reason why I should accept your
assumption, upon which all of your arguments rest, that the climate is not deterministic albeit complex, on the timescales that humans
care about, and therefore predictable given adequate information.
In Mulholland, before the hearing of an appeal, it became clear that
assumptions about the cost of the appellant's nursing
care were wrong.
«We have personal health information laws in Canada in a number of provinces and it's kind of an odd divide because in most of these laws there is the
assumption health
care providers are the ones who are the repositories of health information and we worry
about how they
care for information.
liz: This unsupported cause - and - effect speculation
about the future also contains the illogical
assumption that the documentary was
about «fathers,» and the political buzz phraseology («share in the
care and upbringing») of joint custody rhetoric.
However, the study author has warned against making
assumptions about the cost of coaching relative to other forms of
care, saying that the study found that in most cases it did not reduce health
care costs and, in some cases, could increase them.
So while the
assumptions about mother
care hold, then the
assumptions should be followed?
The court also found that Tammen did not «exercise reasonable
care» in obtaining or communicating this information, as nothing in the record indicated any source for his statement other than his own
assumption about the sources of water from the pipe.