Not exact matches
(Sex, Economy,
Freedom, and Community, pp. 126 - 128) Hence, the Porchers should want to move from the current system to one in which a) the habits and beliefs of certain Porcher influenced or protected communities, and b) the
hard -
fought -
for legislative prerogatives and jurisdictions of said communities (vis - a-vis national and state authority — esp.
tradition
hard to break.the tradition of marriage is older and more meaningful than any other we know it crosses all religions and non religions, and races and cultures.it won't change easy.calling it something else
for some people may make it easier to change.but what about those people who want that time tested tradition
for themselves
for their own self worth.it is a civil right give it to them today.this issues has divided my community as much as any other, but as we have
fought to gain right after right, we have lost sight that all deserve the right of
freedom of happiness.No gayness here, just can't
fight the battle to keep someone down after being held down
It's sad a group that has had to
fight hard for rights would deny others that
freedom
«Living off our
hard earned
freedoms»??! I
fought for those
hard earned
freedoms and they didn't have anything to do with your christianity.
The lesson
for Kenya is clear: never take democracy
for granted, or the
freedom that we have
fought so
hard for could quickly evaporate.
If anything, it should be a day in which
hard - won,
fought -
for freedoms that Americans died
for and which are supposed to define us as a nation, such as THE RIGHT TO VOTE, be practiced openly to show that a bunch of psycho killers from the Middle East can't ever ever take that away from us.
As I look around today and see the rates of sexual violence against women on a terrifying rise, as well as what can only seem like a backwards slide of the very
freedoms we
fought so
hard for, I can not help but look to my two daughters and pray that they will have in their lifetime the
freedom that I have had.
she sniffs — and it's lovely, particularly as Beatrix also finds, in Norman's sister, Millie (Emily Watson: The Proposition, Tim Burton's Corpse Bride, just delightful) a female soulmate, a happily unmarried woman who can commiserate with Beatrix over the constant uphill battles women face:
for respect,
for self - determination, and even in allowing themselves the
freedom to find new flexibility in their own
hard -
fought philosophies when love requests it.
Memorial Day, time to sit back, enjoy the smell of new - mown grass, remember those who
fought so
hard to protect our
freedoms, throw some encased meat onto the grill and prepare
for the greatest racing weekend of the year.
I
fought long and
hard for this country's independence, gentlemen, and I did not risk my life
for its
freedom to join in some tawdry scheme to undermine its financial integrity.»
And, to be honest, they inspire me as their lawyer to
fight even
harder for their
freedom.
My grandfather and great grandfather
fought so
hard for their
freedom so it would have been disrespectful to enter another form of indentured servitude.