Sentences with phrase «much bigger evil»

Romney is a much bigger evil than Obama.

Not exact matches

Because we have shared so much... because I believe Him to be a big, teddy bear under the sometimes rough exterior... because He protects me and is there for me... because I have seen Him sacrifice for others... I can not even conceive of Him being evil.
I've known Jesus for as long as I've known my name, and still I use other people like capital to advance my own interest, still I gossip to make myself feel important, still I curse my brothers and sisters in one breath and sing praise songs in the next, still I sit in church with arms folded and cynicism coursing through my bloodstream, still I talk a big game about caring for the poor without doing much to change my own habits, still I indulge in food I'm not hungry for and jewelry I don't need, still I obsess over what people say about me on the internet, still I forget my own privilege, still I talk more than I listen and complain more than I thank, still I commit acts of evil, still I make a great commenter on Christianity and a lousy practitioner of it.
I'm talking about the kind of «feel bad» that comes from watching one of those men - are - evil movies on Lifetime TV, starring some actress whom you either thought was dead or a much bigger star, and it feels so good to feel so bad about the men in your life even though 10 minutes ago you loved your husband just fine?
Much of the wealthy within the US is generally against using their money to finance social constructs (healthcare is a big one here, but it's used against a pretty wide array of social programs) and a consistent tactic to whip up support is to use the lines «this is socialism, all socialism is communism, communism is evil, therefore «insert hot topic like universal healthcare» is evil.
We do get a few newer characters such as Thranduil (Lee Pace), the elf king and father of Legolas, but he is really just a big cliche in terms of the «villain that you know you can't trust and has way too much power and seems evil just for the sake of being evil,» But again, he doesn't get a whole lot of focus, and to be honest, how he is portrayed is not very interesting, the character has this interesting backstory that is somewhat brushed over, and again, he doesn't get a whole lot of screen time.
I think Fantastic Beasts the title and Newt and his creatures are a way into this world, but there's a much bigger story here about good versus evil that she wants to tell, and you haven't seen much of it in the trailers and the clips of the film.
What I feel, what I get the sense of, is that Newt and his case and the beasts are the catalyst and the entrance — our eyes — into this much bigger story that she wants to tell about good versus evil.
With so few big budget horror games on the way and the remaining kings (Silent Hill, Resident Evil, Dead Space) either dying slow deaths or losing much of what made them special in the first place, The Evil Within stands out as a potential «savior» for the survival horror genre.
Anderson has been a big proponent of 3D since James Cameron's Avatar came along, and here uses the effect in a much smarter, more effective way than he did in the much - hyped Resident Evil: Afterlife 3D.
«Part 1» may technically be the worst installment in the series, but at least that movie felt like a necessary evil in order to deliver a satisfying payoff in «Part 2,» which is why the latter is a much bigger disappointment.
Anyway, dear Cora nominated the entire Mad Genius Club to Damien - lite as the big «fascists» of the genre, along with such heinous creatures as Tom Kratman, Larry Correia, Vox Day (whatever you think of him, if there's a Glittery Hoo Haa making a list of the most evil people in SFF, Vox will be on that list — and I would not object to his sales figures, thank you very much), and of course our very own Sarah Hoyt.
If she had, she might have realized there is much more involved in the issues publishing is facing than just The Big Evil.
No one really complained too much, not at least the big music guys, when iTunes was selling 90 percent of music files, but when Amazon has 60 or 70 or 80 percent of the market, all the publishers see Amazon as evil, something to beat down, not as a company to co-ordinate with and to work with and help make the industry grow.
The concept of going through an evil - looking demonic gate into an even more evil land is, quite honestly, a really cool one, but it face two big problems; apart from being turning everything bright red it didn't really feel that much different from the normal world, and the second problem was that every damn gate as the same!
On the other hand, I haven't played a Call of Duty since the original Black Ops back in 2010 and now just play retro indie craft beer shooters like Ion Maiden and Amid Evil instead, so it's not like they were going to win me over no matter how much they spent on hiring one big - name actor for the single - player campaign anyway.
The boss fights here do not stand out as much as bosses from previous Resident Evil games, though there aren't too many bosses to deal with thankfully, with the biggest fight, against the Overseer, being left until the finale.
I realise that is quite a big statement, but when you strip back the visuals and everything else, until you're left with just the bare bones that is the concept, the two games are opposite sides of the same coin and a League of Evil really is not that much of a bad game.
Update: We haven't heard very much about Beyond Good and Evil 2 at all recently, though we imagine Ubisoft is saving the big news for E3 2018.
Of course, this will be a big fall to Earth for the Leftist - libs who in their delusions of grandeur enjoyed so much seeing themselves totally invested in saving the Earth from the evil business of capitalism; and, in particular, saving nature from Western civilization; and, in particular, saving humanity America — the keeper of the torch of individual liberty and the only active participant on the globe supporting people yearning for freedom from tyranny, despotism, neo-atheism and liberal fascism.
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