Sentences with phrase «fester because»

Holtz said low academic proficiency rates in areas of poverty continue to fester because of a state bureaucracy that bogs down teachers and a status quo mentality at DPI.

Not exact matches

In fact I'm sure that we see more in religions because the crazies deem it a good place to justify themselves or to just hide out and fester until everyone else is infected with their disease.
Frasca quotes one editorial published after the war which claimed that Mexico lost because Catholicism was «the festering canker - worm... infecting every organ of vitality and every fibre of strength with the poison of premature rottenness and decay....
The superpatient individual may become inwardly festered with an interior malice which Gregory can only call «the mother of vices,» because it is so much the opposite of that agape which is the root of all behavioral excellences.
My incapacity to make sense of the world as the creation of a personally caring Creator because of the magnitude of sin and suffering is, to extend the metaphor a long - festering sore that simply will not heal.
It's even harder for shepherds to bring sheep home from the psychologized pew because many splinters have been left to fester.
The country has a festering problem with crack cocaine addiction, because the Colombian couriers distribute the drug as salary to their Belizean assistants, who sell it for a relative pittance on the streets of Belize City.
It's sad, because our laws in the US are setup in such a way that adults can fall through the cracks easily like this, and be left to fester alone.
They don't explode into rebellion or fester into addictions or plummet into depression because they've been punished, suppressed, and ignored.
This is because the featured Philips Soothie pacifier is constructed of just one piece, ensuring that no germs can fester between cracks.
Also, Gov. Andrew Cuomo vowed last month to «step in» and fix the festering problem because de Blasio «can't manage» it.
Farmers will probably continue to insist on culling, Streicker notes, because even uninfected bats can harm livestock by causing festering wounds.
This is because most sugary foods and drinks contain corn syrup — a sweetener that coats the teeth and hides in cracks and crevices, giving it time to fester and decay your teeth.
This only exacerbates the obsession with food, because it's more than likely we're going to spend several hours festering on how we ate the whole thing now.
So, let's tackle these emotions head - on, because one thing is for sure: Letting these problems fester without addressing them is not conducive to reaching your dating goals.
So, let's tackle these emotions head - on, because one thing is for sure: Letting these problems fester without addressing them is
«You can't leave things up in the air, flying around, because then they fester as such and they become worse.
In good measure, the failures of the current system have festered as long as they have because many of the advocates of test - based accountability simply didn't want to face the evidence.
What would be bad is letting the feeling stay and fester, which you will not do because you are part of the wonderful supportive author community and have been educated on the seven deadly sins for romance authors.
An abscess is a pocket of infection beneath the skin, and because the surface layer may heal more quickly, it seals the festering wound so that the sore expands inward.
Getting hacked is not only annoying, it can also affect your Google search ranking because the attacks are usually attempts to turn your once beautiful website into a festering mass of spam links, or a hulking, horrifying redirect.
Which leads us, because we're in the life insurance business, to what we believe is the biggest financial lie, a lie that has already ruined the life insurance portfolios of millions and is a festering wound on the financial plans of everyone who has purchased a traditional universal life insurance policy, a variable universal life policy or it's new cousin, the indexed universal life policy.
It does not usually end up in more satisfaction for anyone involved, because the teenager isn't moving into the household AS a happy person, but bringing into that household the baggage of all those underlying, festering and still - unaddressed issues that instigated the desire to move.
In fact, studies have shown it's the couples who don't argue who are more likely to divorce, because they let problems fester and don't express their dissatisfaction when necessary.
In this example, the resentment is short - lived, and not threatening to your relationship because it didn't have time to fester and create larger problems.
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