«Instead of wasting money and having to wipe herb death juices from the bottom drawer of my fridge» LOL I'm
dying at this sentence, although it's true!
Not exact matches
It is not inconsistent — in fact, it is wholly reasonable — to say that some people (people guilty of multiple child murders for example) absolutely «deserve to
die,» but
at the same time to say that the state shouldn't be trusted with the discretion to hand out that
sentence.
Jesus talked about Hell quite a bit, and eternal damnation is infinitely worse than a mere death
sentence of a mortal that had a 100 % chance of
dying at some point anyway.
I found in Ford far more than I had hoped for: a writer who, by his own account, had «apprenticed» himself to America; whose stories and characters so spring from their landscapes and physical situations as to personify the spirit of the motels, roadside bars, lakes and highways where we encounter them; and who may well be, as his friend Raymond Carver (who
died last summer) said, «
sentence for
sentence... the best writer
at work in this country today.»
Of course diet is relevant to diabetes, smoking to lung cancer (though as you said, not always... I know a guy whose good friend
died of lung cancer
at 31... never smoked... they said when you get that type of lung cancer, it's pretty much a death
sentence), etc..
Ippolito
died in federal prison
at the age of 78 in June after being
sentenced to 27 months for evading taxes on $ 2 million in outside consulting fees.
The public prosecutor had demanded 4 - year suspended
sentences for the two main protagonists, pediatrician - endocrinologist Jean - Claude Job, who headed the defunct association in charge of collecting the hormone - containing pituitary glands from cadavers and who
died after the trial ended, and Fernand Dray, who was in charge of purifying the material
at the Pasteur Institute.
One of the most widely depicted saints throughout the late Gothic and Renaissance period, Saint Sebastian was persecuted and
sentenced to death by arrows, but did not
die (he was later successfully beaten to death
at the Emperor's command).
There were finally, the two peasant boys whose story is related in Gunther Weisenborn's Der lautlose Aufstand (1953), who were drafted into the S.S.
at the end of the war and refused to sign; they were
sentenced to death, and on the day of their execution they wrote in their last letter to their families: «We two would rather
die than burden our conscience with such terrible things.
Kwesi Millington, the RCMP officer who Tasered Robert Dziekanski the night he
died at Vancouver's airport, has been
sentenced for perjury but released on bail.