Sentences with phrase «just simple justice»

«Fifteen dollars an hour is just simple justice,» Hawkins said.

Not exact matches

I wept because I had been made to see, for the first time, that all the justice that must be shown the black man, all the help given him, everything that should be done legally to give him his rights, will never do what a simple act of love can do: make him know that he is accepted, cared for, yes, really loved by those who do not just «do good to him» but who feel with passionate concern that he is a human brother.
There are so many times you dress up with the desire to not necessarily get into heels but find all your simple footwear just isn't doing justice to your look, this is where the flat mules come in.
I would like to know can we be a gud frnds n later let's we decide further steps in lyf I just wanted lead ma lyf in a simple n in a justice way
And of course, Young Justice will push their missions, often turning a simple assignment from Batman into something much larger, often discovering that what they?ve been tasked to do is just the tip of the iceberg.
The announcement comes just weeks after announcing a new e-reader, the $ 139 Barnes & Noble Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight, and weeks after the U.S. Justice Department filed suit against Apple and publishers for e-book price fixing.
As I write this I have become homeless, unpaid rent on my small apartment in London is just another nail in my proverbial coffin, The 8 years I waited on the register doesn't count or the 20 years with the Housing Association, so even if I were to finally have justice in court and return to the UK my status is simple... Homeless.
Finally, to paraphrase Scott Greenfield, author of the Simple Justice blawg: «Just because anyone can write a blog, doesn't mean everyone should.»
From the point of view of this class — a class I'll just call «lawyers» — it's too clear for argument that (i) law has things to do so that some instrumentalist theory has to be adopted; (ii) few things are simple, so that no single theory will work in every case, whether it's «wealth maximization», «corrective justice», «contract as promise», compensation or deterrence; and (iii) the demands of practice, the solicitor's need to create relations which will be projected into the (uncertain) future and to control the risks his or her client faces, the barrister's need to conduct litigation at a price the parties can afford and in the context of the adversary system, powerfully limit the consideration that a lawyer can give to theory.
«We all thought early on that computers were going to solve all our problems in litigation because the answer to everything would be at our fingertips with the simple press of a button,» said Nova Scotia Justice John Scanlan, «but in many ways just the opposite has happened.»
-LSB-...] Posted by Kramer on June 3, 2009 Generation Y has a bad rap in the workplace these days. We're lazy, don't want to show up on time or actually do any work, and we expect to have the corner office from the day we walk in the door. And if law is your chosen field, you can't really do that. Over at his fine blog, Simple Justice, Scott Greenfield took issue with Gen Y lawyer and blogger Adrian Dayton, that Gen Y isn't really lazy, we just want our work to actually have a point.
One theory is very simple: the job is just too demanding, and after a few years many justices want out.
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