Sentences with phrase «hyperbolic rhetoric»

My own personal bias is that conspiracy ideation, and offering hyperbolic rhetoric is not disproporationate on one side of the climate wars compared to the other, and further, that what we know about human psychology and cognition would make such an outcome implausible.
The man who succeeded disgraced former vice presidential candidate John Edwards as leader of a special poverty center at the University of North Carolina School of Law is no less hypocritical — in his luxurious living versus his hyperbolic rhetoric — than his predecessor.
«Grimm's repeated use of hyperbolic rhetoric and distortions of Domenic's record are of no surprise coming from a man who has been indicted on 20 criminal counts, including lying under oath, failing to report over $ 1 million in profits and stealing from his own workers.
And remarkably they've only been doing all that since Saint Ronnie whom they all claim to worship but whom they also do not emulate in that they actually try to act on the hyperbolic rhetoric instead of just recognize it for the base stirrer it is.
But whether Cambridge really discovered some powerful new digital techniques, or whether it was made up of relatively ordinary political consultants with a penchant for hyperbolic rhetoric, things didn't end well for either Cambridge or SCL — both are shutting down, the Journal reports.
«Hyperbolic rhetoric and provocative actions» by North Korea and President Donald Trump prompted the move, the magazine said.

Not exact matches

Comparing trade negotiations to war is standard fare for the Trump administration, where hyperbolic, confrontational rhetoric is the vernacular.
I hate watching Arsenal get bitch slapped by a mid table team and all the hyperbolic doom and gloom rhetoric from the plastic Gunner fans out there but sadly losses like these will not be the exception to the Wenger rule this year and if monunental changes to the team set up as well as heavy investment arent made in the next few weeks IMHO Arsenal will be out of Europe for the first time in nearly 20 years.
Unfortunately, most people didn't bother to look beyond its headlines to the actual article, where writer Ashley May's rhetoric was slightly less hyperbolic.
It was a bit of brisk honesty at an event that, if anything, demonstrated the publishing industry has settled on politeness and dialed back the hyperbolic «end of the world» rhetoric and «come to Jesus» digital evangelizing that has marked such gatherings in recent years.
As someone who gets very annoyed at the hyperbolic «we're all going to die» rhetoric from the usual suspects, I have to say this all detracts from the underlying message.
I could be wrong, but my sense is that the bigger issue that Joseph was getting at is that Judith's rhetoric was hyperbolic.
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