Most of us are master caretakers to
everyone in our lives except ourselves.
We'd gotten really good at taking care of
everyone in our lives except each other.
Not exact matches
If you remove the need to income split by taxing the family unit of those
in married or
living common - law relationships and then adopt a flat tax for
everyone — say 20 % — there really is no need for small business to incorporate,
except for perhaps liability issues.
Without God, we are torn
in two directions: universities praise diversity, but students still form cliques; politicians promise a bright future, but our news programmes are distressing; people are obsessed with scientific explanations of everything, and equally obsessed with the sentimental love expressed
in pop songs; sexual abuse with a minor is the most shameful of all crimes, but
everyone has a right to complete sexual liberation once they reach the age of consent; we relocate all over the world, preferring to
live anywhere but home, yet we still agonise over our local sports club; we own many things, and still feel we don't have enough; we believe
in discipline at school or at work, but we all have a right to «let ourselves go» at the weekend; we tolerate everything,
except people that don't agree with us.
Yet it is very likely you will die as
everyone else will and nothing will happen,
except that those of us who don't spend countless hours praying, going to church, believing
in fairy tales and giving our money away will actually make most of our
lives while we exist.
Except... by that logic
everyone should believe
in God because
everyone fails at
life... It's called death.
The sad one is what Rev. Moon apparently chose; the one at Matthew 24:48 about «that evil servant»; but Rev. Moon could have made it all to the crown of
life:
except for the fact he and all the members
in the Unification Church tried to deny what I was told by my Angel when I was given the Word of God; yet Rev. Moon told
everyone that the Word of God was where everything began and ended when dealing with anything
in the Providence.
Without God, we are torn
in two directions: universities praise diversity, but students still form cliques; politicians promise a bright future, but all our news programs are distressing; people are obsessed with scientific explanations of everything, and equally obsessed with sentimental love
in every pop song; sexual abuse with a minor is the most shameful of all crimes, but
everyone has a right to complete sexual liberation once they reach the age of consent; we relocate all over the world, preferring to
live anywhere but home, yet we still agonize over our local sports team; we own many things, and still feel like we don't have enough; we believe
in discipline at school or at work, but we all have a right to «let ourselves go» on the weekend; we tolerate everything,
except people that don't agree with us.
Except this: 1) we know our kids need to be challenged at the right pace and experience failing — just like yours, 2) we know they need healthy social experiences (and guidance) to grow into healthy adults — just like yours, 3) we know being «gifted» is absolutely no guarantee
in life for anything despite what
everyone else seems to think otherwise, 4) we know being «gifted» can sometimes actually be a pretty heavy thing, and 5) we keep believing
in the power of the human spirit.
According to Ossai, who is from Delta State, the law presumes
everyone to be innocent until proven guilty,
except that the
life of a security official was seen to be
in clear danger.
Blah, blah, blah... I am no different than most
everyone else who wants the same things
in life...
except I do understand that what I desire is authenticity above all else... pretentious people bore me.
Thinking of
everyone I know from the US that is
living / has
lived in Asia, they are all very well off,
except for one that
lived in Beijing for a while working as a journalist.
It was just like
in the old days, when art stars like Kehinde Wiley were opening shows and crowds spilled onto the street —
except now,
everyone was angling to get
in to check out the movie props and costumes made at home by the six Angulo brothers, who, until Crystal Moselle's recent documentary The Wolfpack, were unknowns
in the most extreme sense: For most of their
lives, Bhagavan, Govinda, Narayana, Mukunda, Krsna and Jagadisa Angulo were held captive
in their Lower East Side apartment by a megalomaniac patriarch.
«uncertainty» equals no consensus but consensus is not proof this is just one classic example of just more humans trying to justify their existence and no the IPCC Judith Curry and
everyone else involved continue dancing on the head of a pin whilst Mr Ordinary gets his wealth sequestrated
in order to pay for these guys to indulge
in their pet hobby when the person who is making their
life possible derives no benefit whatsoever
except higher and higher energy bills, more restrictions on their ability to travel whilst again the lauded few get to travel across the planet 1st class to tout their jaded theories of how what and where and all I hope and pray is that we get another five years of flat temperatures then you are all toast and
in a great need of having to work for a
living or get another hobby.
You consider that although science has found that a random manifestation of the first forces could have had billions of possibilities, and that
everyone of them,
except the one which happened, would have resulted
in rapid dissolution and entropy, short circuiting all forms of
life and most elements, to be «infinitely improbable»
The section reads:
Everyone has the right to
life, liberty, and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the provisions of fundamental justice.
Section 7 of the Charter grants
everyone «the right to
life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.»
Section 7 states: «
Everyone has the right to
life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.»
Criminal lawyers work every day under the mandate of section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: «
Everyone has the right to
life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice».
While the Court stopped short of conferring a freestanding constitutional right to healthcare, it stated that s. 7 of the Charter (which provides that
everyone has the right to
life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice) confers a right to equitable access to medical services legally available
in Ontario.
The notice of civil claim rests on s. 7 of the Charter, which states, «
everyone has the right to
life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.»