They will
make false claims like the bible claims the earth is flat, and twist your own words against you.
Not exact matches
Claims like, «That's just how business is done over there,» and «No one really gets hurt,» or «We've always done it that way,» or «That's the only way we'll
make our sales targets,» are often
false and seldom provide cogent support for the moral conclusions they are intended to support.
You may not
like the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, you may not agree with their tenets, you may even feel you are such an expert on what
makes someone a Christian and have the right to
make the judgement on who is and who isn't, but spouting off inaccurate
claims indicates no credibility, and inasmuch as Jesus said «thou shalt not bear
false witness» I guess it doesn't leave you looking much
like a Christian.
Reality, just
like you Pharisees (Zionist Jews of today) of those days
made false claims against Jesus to have him crucified, you did the same to Paul.
Often the ads
make inflammatory and
false claims with what the Democrats called fictitious «AstroTurf» names such as «NYS Public Schools» or «People for Parks» that sound
like grass - roots organizations.
The Justice Department is targeting companies who are
making false health
claims (
like weight loss and building muscle) on supplement labels.
These quick fix gadgets are usually very expensive and their
false claims and promises
make many people buy them while these results can be achieved with few basic gadgets
like an exercising ball, a set of dumbbells, etc..
When it comes to dating after 40, marketing yourself is
like marketing anything else — play on the good points but never
make false claims.
Some studies have shown that products for animals,
like kibble that's fortified with probiotics, may
make claims that are
false or misleading.
Dear Wayne: Your recital of statements supposedly
made to you by the people of Burma — «we'd
like people to tell our stories» — shows a pitiful acceptance of the
false stories spread by the military thugs who rule that country... Your
claim that «not all the hotels are in the thrall of the military dictators» is absurd; every penny you spend in Burma supports the regime.
I know that sounds bonkers crazy
like a double negative... It's called avoiding the
false positive of
making an untrue
claim, or avoidance of being the boy who called wolf when there really wasn't one... which could harm scientists» reputations & science in general.
Including
making comments on newspaper domains and attack the
false claims of the
like of David Rose of the Daily mail the moment they appear and debunk them with hard facts and DEMAND retractions, including writing private complaints to the editorial boards relentlessly.
Following up on the news whirlwind that was the uncovering of
false claims made in Mike Daisey's This American Life piece on conditions at Apple manufacturer Foxconn's factory in China, American Public Media's Marketplace program sent reporter Rob Schmitz to get a first hand look at what life was really
like for workers.
It's a
false claim,
like most assumptions
made when environment and science are used for a political agenda.
How can a scientist
make clearly
false demographic
claims like this?
When people
like her
make so many
false or misleading
claims, while
claiming to be scientists, that's great for sceptic recruitment.
It is the persistence of the climate committed in sticking to their
claims no matter how often proven
false and no matter how divorced form facts that
makes the
like of Cox interesting.
Like the general misleading advertising provisions of the Competition Act, the general impression is relevant to determining whether a
claim made by a telemarketer is materially
false or misleading.
«These congressmen have been pressuring the Peruvian government agency that oversees international funding to launch investigations into NGOs
like Promsex,
making false claims of corruption,» said Chavez.
Although the Arizona Republic rated the
claim as «mostly
false» when Martha McSally
made it in 2015 — noting that evidence was mostly anecdotal — the idea that large events
like the Gem Show lead to a spike in sex trafficking has remained a popular talking point.