Sentences with phrase «make ridiculous claims»

The anonymity of the interview harkens back somewhat to the Project Café era, but unlike the anonymous «leaks» we had back then, this employee doesn't make any ridiculous claims — his comments seem -LSB-...]
Sixpackshortcuts is very similar to Vince Delmonte actually, they make ridiculous claims about fat loss and muscle gain, i also hate it when people use misleading thumbnails too.
They want to be more «sensical» about it (ok I had to...:D... last one), as in not make ridiculous claims and then fall flat / lose face when people realize they are another Pipe Dream - Pie in the Sky.
rating are things that are deliberately false and «make ridiculous claims».
Every year a team punches above there weight, then fans and «experts» get all emotional and make ridiculous claims then the team inevitably comes back down to earth.
When you make ridiculous claims like that to make your point, it just seems like you're utterly prejudice towards us.
He doesn't like the word «religion» so he makes this ridiculous claim that his belief system is somehow not a religion.
@AVGPAGUY... we are not angry, but TIRED of the church making ridiculous claims on a daily basis, We really don't care what delusion you choose, we simply want a reasonable show of evidence, since it is put under our noses continuously.
be mad all you want i could care less if i offend anyone or not afterall the atheists get to say their peace and same with the all knowing scientists who claim that darwin was right - side note - he became a christian a few short years after he made those ridiculous claims - anyway you people can say and believe and choose whatever you want..
go check out there schedule for making ridiculous claims.
Whether it's Gazidis making ridiculous claims about our supposedly successful transfer window, even going so far as to suggest that everything went according to plann, or it's Wenger having the audacity to speak about taking a much more proactive approach to the re-signing of players with less than 2 years left on their current deals; which on it's own is a nothing story, it's football management 101, but let's not forget just a few weeks ago he was proudly championing his «ingenious» plan of having his best players playing in the last year of their respective contracts.
The huge difference between Sony and Microsoft on this one is the fact Microsoft is trying to make claims that it will significantly make the Xbox One so much more powerful, Sony is giving very realistic answers to how it will be used for now, they aren't making any ridiculous claims about their cloud compute tech. . .
It is a technique that I have seen contrarians use before on threads — barge in making ridiculous claims, then sane and rational people get frustrated and then you cut and paste their comments out of context and say — see how mean tow «extremists» are.
That prevents rates from rising more than necessary, because if people thought there was a source of free money by making ridiculous claims against insurance policies, they'd exploit it all day long.

Not exact matches

«He's made outrageous promise after outrageous promise after outrageous promise, he's put forth one ridiculous claim after another, and every single one of them has been borne out or come true.»
According to an opinion by columnist Ronald Littlepage in the Florida Times - Union, «A representative of the Northeast Florida Builders Association, Neil Aikenhead, went so far in another e-mail as to make the ridiculous accusation that the higher standard «would be a crime against the environment» and that «this crime would be perpetrated by the St. Johns Riverkeeper, who while claiming to be working for the river, is in fact knowingly doing the precise opposite.»
Coindesk's Editor - in - Chief decided to get off Twitter after the brawl, claiming Vitalik made an «absolutely ridiculous claim».
You claim the that magic and miracles are ridiculous and then you try to say that science uses them when it is religion that makes use of them.
And those that don't say that stuff instead opting to argue and dissect and article or argument for / about god doesn't show they make any positive claims to the existence of such a being, but instead to show how ridiculous and irrational somethings are.
@KatMat: your analogy would begin approaching realism if: — during the pledge of allegiance kids were forced to say «one nation under The Orioles» — our nation's currency said «In Dallas Cowboys We Trust» — if millions were slaughtered, tortured and burned to death because they weren't fans of The Pittsburgh Penguins — if NASCAR fans endlessly attempted to have Intelligent Car Driving taught beside Evolution in science class as a possible explanation for how mankind developed — if «the 5 D's» of Dodgeball (Dodge, Duck, Dip, Dive, Dodge) were constantly attempted to be made into law so everyone would live by the same ridiculous notions, even if those notions knowingly discriminate — if nutters constantly claimed America was founded on the principles of Darts, even though our country SPECIFICALLY calls for a separation between Darts and State because the founders knew the inherent dangers of Darts becoming government instead of staying in the realm of sport where it belongs
As ridiculous as their claims are, it makes sense to me that these are the lies that they need to tell themselves in order to find peace with their entrenched worldview.
Gender ideology seemed a ridiculous and improbable threat when I first considered its claims of male brains trapped in female bodies, but its rapid ascendancy in law and public opinion has made the term «transgender» a household word.
The show wasn't going to feature scholars refuting the (ridiculous) claims made about Islam.
To comment on such happenings by saying that God always provides the information needed to make the better outcome possible, but finite occasions willfully and freely ignore that information — to make this claim is ridiculous.
I agree it IS laughable that anyone would make such a ridiculous claim without any support whatsoever.
The claim made by Mr. Nye that somehow believing in a Creator disqualifies a person from being able to do any meaningful science is disaapointingly simple - minded and ridiculous on its face.
In a pathetic attempt to remain relevant, you use «treading now», and make an absolute ridiculous claim about atheists without one iota of data.
Once more it makes almost ridiculous the sentimental claim of certain segments of our world that religion is a narrow area of life to which clergy ought to confine their attention, leaving the rest of the world to go by.
I am on one hand shocked and yet not so shocked at the utterly infantile, ridiculous, illogical, and irrational claims so many of you unbelievers here make.
More excuses, more bad decisions, more ridiculous claims and more delusional comments by the big man... Wenger talks about keeping Ox for years to come yet no contract, then talks about Wiltshire being back in the squad for the season («new signing») and finally he makes a statement that seems to suggest that our club will be sellers not buyers in the current transfer window... will this insanity ever end?
«It seems that the Tories will go to ever increasing lengths to make David Cameron's ridiculous claims about broken society seem credible,» Lib Dem home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne said
Thus, they can claim to be making a conservative assessment because they refute the most extremist — and ridiculous — alarmist claims but keep the scare alive.
made sure there was absolutely no hype or ridiculous claims... only a very limited line of the most effective research - backed products without any BS or confusing «stacks».
«Gain Muscle FAST» — This was a parody of the ridiculous claims made on YouTube and explanation WHY there is no such thing as gaining muscle fast.
You are making the absolute most ridiculous claims I have heard yet.
Diet books use other ridiculous claims like «eating junk food makes it harder to eat muscle,» or «eating red meat damages your heart and blood muscles,» or «saturated fat clogs your arteries,» or a more popular one recently, «grains give you cancer, headaches, and cause pretty much every other health problem.»
So many others muddle the picture and make claims that come off either ridiculous or reactionary or both.
So claiming that RT has some sort of malicious intent or deliberately set out to make indie authors feel second class is, quite frankly, ridiculous.
Also, it's rather ridiculous to make this claim: «The ability to surf the web has prompted many customers in China to bypass the Great Firewall by way of the AT&T tower in Taiwan.»
This applies even if the claim is false, frivolous, directed at the wrong person entirely, stupid, ridiculous, inane, vindictive, fabricated, incorrect, inaccurate, undeserved, or just plain made up.
because my mom worked and what they claim made «too much» its ridiculous and is so stressful being part time abd paying over $ 1000 in student loans.
It's clear that your real fight is Men Vs. Women, going so far as to make the absurdly ridiculous claim that the legal system «overwhelming [favors] the woman.»
Making a claim like that that you could not back up when the state dept looks into it would be just ridiculous.
It would be ridiculous to claim that interactivity made games the overall superior medium.
Despite their successes in crowdfunding, despite their continual growth as a company, despite the monumental levels of progress made, and despite their ridiculous level of information blasts from their studios around the world (their newsletters alone blow my mind every time they come out with a new one), there is still a corner of the web that claims they are vaporware because they aren't a released product yet.
Not because I dug the setting and atmosphere, but because of the ridiculous claims made by games media outlets.
It's possible that the New York Yankees winning the world series could trigger a mass extinction but that idea is just as ridiculous, and just as unobserved as making up claims about extinction and global warming without any evidence.
Making groundless claims about 50 % extinction from global warming is shameless and frankly embarrasing, but scary enough that you are asking me about the uncertainty more than uncertainty in Hansen's ridiculous claim.
His opposition stemmed partly from the valid argument that they impose real hardship on Iranians, but also from the very dubious claim that they make war more likely, and from the legally ridiculous assertion that western use of financial tools to block oil sales «is a financial blockade, and blockades are acts of war.»
It's bad enough when it's a leading polar bear biologist making such a ridiculous claim but there is no reason at all to take the scientifically baseless word of Sebastian Copeland on this matter.
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