Sentences with phrase «do grave»

However, it might be necessary if the other spouse is a threatening person who could do grave harm if told in advance.
Such laws infringe on the rights of responsible dog guardians and do grave damage to the efforts of shelters and humane societies to place adoptable dogs of prohibited breeds.
Bet You Missed It — p. 8 by Bruce Strauch — What do grave robbers and soccer hooligans have in common?
The quality of state assessments matters enormously to children of all ability levels, but today's tests do a grave disservice to high - achievers.
I also think that you do a grave disservice to Drs Greger and Fuhrman (and Dan Buettner, John Robbins and even Weston Price) if you lump them in with naturopaths, osteopaths, homeopaths and peddlers of dubious cancer «cures».
But it wasn't nearly success enough for Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrats who insist that despite the change, the GOP tax reform plan to be released Wednesday is likely to do grave damage to the state.
In response New York Governor Andrew Cuomo labeled the two lawmakers «the Benedict Arnolds of their time», claiming that the loss of the deduction would cost New York State taxpayers nearly $ 15 billion and do grave damage to the state.
«The Tories» Europhobia, which we regretted last time, could now do grave damage.
Our letter concludes by indicating how theologians and pastors who teach and put into practice any of these eight positions can thereby do grave harm to many souls, and pointing to some ways in which this may happen.
If you don't get that, if you can't overlook your personal religious beliefs when someone is before you dying, then you are doing a grave disservice not only to those people but to your beliefs.
«The religious terrain is full of the graves of good words which have died from lack of care — they stand as close in it as do the graves today in the flats of Flanders or among the hills of northern France.
If you refuse to spar a woman in a controlled environment because you are too much of a «gentleman» you are doing her a grave disservice.
Long before Joseph Smith, some early Christians believed that the Son brought his celestial flesh down with him from heaven, but the Church Fathers thought this idea did a grave injustice to Mary, because it treated her as an empty vehicle through whom Jesus passed» in Valentinus» chilling image» as if through an aqueduct.
I can't help but think of Matthew Scully, who put it this way, «Justice is not some finite commodity, nor are kindness and love... a wrong is a wrong, and often the little ones, when they are shrugged off as nothing, spread and do the gravest harm to ourselves and others.»
I, like Lewis, agree that drawing these immediate conclusions does a grave disservice to our notions of friendship.
If Europeans are unable to look at the failings of their system and muster the determination to tackle them, they will not only face a dismal future, but they will have done a grave disservice to liberal democracy around the world.
«During his short, undistinguished career, Mr Miliband has done grave damage to British politics.
«Hiding the truth three weeks before an election does a grave disservice to voters who deserve full disclosure from a Congressman seeking re-election,» said NRCC Chairman Tom Cole.
If you rely on them to guide your dietary choices, you risk doing grave long term damage to your health.
Visually, Renaissance is so unorthodox that even if this DVD did grave injustice to the filmmakers» intentions, it'd be tough to tell.
The editorial Making Room for Charter Students does a grave injustice to ALL public school students.
We would be doing a grave disservice to not only the beautiful car, but to the spirit of the men who designed and built the Daytona by not including an example in our Fantasy Garage.
The words Auto Expo 2018 would automatically conjure up visions of the latest car and bike models, futuristic concepts, etc, but to put down the largest automobile exposition in the country to a parade of hot wheels would be doing grave injustice to it.
All I will say is that this writer was done a grave injustice.
You are doing yourself a grave disservice then.
The fault lies partly in the uniform lighting; partly in Selldorf's choppy and somewhat clunky installation, which misuses the famed 15,000 sq ft of open space to rob the sculptural work of adequate breathing room; and to a larger extent on too great an emphasis on Stella's enduring vigour, which, given that the later works were farmed out, rings hollow and does grave disservice to the impregnable place of his early work in a meaningful history of art.
Crichton may be doing a grave disservice, but he isn't an atmospheric scientist any more than Mary Shelley was an anatomist.
Finally, what OTLA has forgotten, and by doing so, done a grave disservice to its members, is that ABS provides an exit strategy for lawyers seeking to retire from law.
Therefore, he's doing himself a grave disservice by borrowing the format, writing style, and tone, then pasting his career story in between that of someone else.
This does a grave disservice to the client and can be detrimental to the couple relationship.
Then the public does not get to see anything and therein Aitken will have done a grave disservice to the public and competition.

Not exact matches

The company did not suffer any fallout from the Florida anthrax cases, but Leveen harbors grave concerns for the future of direct mail.
«It really goes cradle to grave in terms of how people do
There may come a point at which you say, hey, this is a grave threat, and you can't agree with anything the president does.
And they'll be able to do it without the founder sending a product - destroying signal from beyond the grave every time there's an upgrade.
China's out - of - control space station is finally resting in a watery grave, and thankfully it didn't hit any humans as it fell back to Earth.
He hasn't changed his tune on that issue, but he does express grave concern over the dismal consequences that kind of shift would have on the workforce.
That's the EPA's «cradle - to - grave manifesting» requirement, by which you have to supply manifests to the EPA or your state regulatory agency on request, and it doesn't require a warrant.
«I don't want to rule beyond the grave,» the notoriously press - shy de Carvalho - Heineken told Fortune «s Most Powerful Women International Summit in London on Monday.
So how did Holmes go from con man and grave robber... to killer?
Even if they do, they often end up making grave mistakes.
They left with grave concerns and did not meet with him again.
Finance minister going all out against Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is definitely a reason for grave concern for the Indian cryptocurrency investors as he said that the government does not consider these virtual currencies as a legal tender.
Trump had no problem allowing Congress to release the GOP's memo without any redactions, even though the FBI said it had «grave concerns» about him doing so.
At a time when central banks have far less ammunition than they did in 2008, the consequences could be grave.
«All these guys who thought they were being disruptive to the old ways of doing things have instead amplified the censorship, information control, and social manipulation to levels that would have Orwell turning in his grave
In spite of the Ten Commandment's ban on «graven images» (and the worship of them), many Christians have become so used to visual representations of Christ that we often don't give them a second thought, nor consider what they say about our mental picture of the Son of God.
1: Have no other gods — NOT A LAW = > In God we trust is on our legal currency 2: Make no graven image — NOT A LAW = > intellectual property is a God to many, we have tones of laws protecting against false copies 3: Don't take the name in vain — NOT A LAW = > false testimony is a crime as is swearing in some states 4: Honor the Sabbath — NOT A LAW = > employment law in many states prohibits forced labor on religious days 5: Honor thy father and mother — NOT A LAW = > minors have limited right to transact commerce under 19.
If Christians are wrong, they will only rot in the grave as unbelievers do; but if Christians are right, they will live forever in a painless, righteous world with eternal bodies, while unbelievers suffer forever in torture.
My niece once asked, which was correct -(1) when a Christian dies, they go to heaven right away or (2) do they stay in the grave until Jesus returns to earth?
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