Sentences with phrase «not out of my readers»

I like taking the fees out of Amazon, and not out of my readers.

Not exact matches

At the same time, I don't want my readers to come to my site and see a brand that is totally out of sync and have that affect my credibility.
An ISIS e-book published in the early days of the Islamic State encouraged readers to check out anti-Israel protests with non-Muslims calling for «the fall of Zionism,» if not to draw recruits from this demographic then relying on their rhetoric to hammer away at the «financial elite.»
Did you know that 80 % of readers decide whether something's worth checking out or not based on its title?
So Mic is rolling out reader - response surveys on some of its stories, which give users a sliding scale of worthiness they can choose from to express whether a post was deemed time - worthy or not.
Not only will you get more content out of the effort, but you'll also have better results because readers won't be nearly as overwhelmed.
After my comparison of H&R Block and TurboTax came out, a reader reached out to tell me that FreeTaxUSA was another good option for people who want to file their taxes without having their intelligence insulted (his words, not mine).
The best talk in the world will land flat if it's introduced at a moment when the audience isn't ready to hear it (just as, entrepreneur readers will note, even excellent, groundbreaking products fall flat if they're out of the sync with the market).
One opinion out there says that content of a certain age doesn't matter, that Google (and Panda) knows that older content is often ignored by readers and is more or less irrelevant.
One of the most well - established ways to hear from readers, the NYT public editor pointed out — although not the only one, by any means — is through comments on news stories.
On top of this, Bluetooth creates a truly hands - free experience because shoppers would not even need to take out their phones to tap them to a reader.
Carley's book offers readers an abundance of clever trading strategy and risk management techniques in that easy - to - read format, but she doesn't leave out the harsh realities and heartbreak many overzealous speculators face.
At the county fair this weekend, we ran out of pocket change, so we did not have a chance to see the Tarot Card reader to get a confirmation.
We're not sure what's in the water in Pennsylvania, but after one school district in the Keystone State distributed buckets of rocks around school to pelt shooters as a last resort, and another handed out tiny baseball bats to thwart would - be attackers, we asked readers what you thought of these...
Instead I have decided that the best course of action to ensure that this project continues to be worthwhile, and remains interesting for you readers, is to introduce a secondary goal (if you don't know what the original goal is, check this out).
This post was originally intended to be a look at ALL of my highlights in my beaten paperback copy, but it turned out to be over 8,000 words, which is not a particularly reader friendly length for a quote roundup.
Readers of NFU know that I give little credibility to any data out of China for I can not trust a nation that blocks the free flow of information over the Internet.
Email readers will need to come to the site to watch the video: And if you fascination with quantitative managers doesn't end there, we highly recommend checking out Scott Patterson's The Quants which focuses on the likes of Jim Simons (RenTec), Ken Griffin (Citadel), Cliff Asness (AQR) and more.
It points to Jaume's basic limitation: he's wide reader of what went into Tocqueville's mind, but not a deep one of what came out of it.
I'm going to go out on a limb here «Bottom Line», and assume for the sake of argument that you've never been dead.How else can the readers of this blog ascertain how asinine your comment is if you haven't?
From writers who are creatively exhausted from managing a constant stream of online feedback, to readers who can't seem to pull themselves away from their smartphones, to activists who are burned out from responding to yet another crisis with a social media campaign, to foodies who can't enjoy a meal without snapping a photo for Instagram, our writing, reading, and sharing habits consume more of our time and mental energy than ever.
And if you've ever read the Koran, you know it's a death cult, and when you see Islamic terrorism carried out, it's merely the reader following the commands of the Koran (not so with the bible when grammatical - historical exegesis is used).
Smith reminds readers of the idea of divine accommodation, which suggests that «in the process of divine inspiration, God did not correct every incomplete or mistaken viewpoint of the biblical authors in order to communicate through them with their readers... The point of the inspired scripture was to communicate its central point, not to straighten out every kink and dent in the views of all the people involved in biblical inscripturation and reception along the way.»
He outlines the theological history of that split, but he does not share with the reader the philosophical integration and synthesis that has been taking place since at least Etienne Gilson as a result of drawing out from the metaphysics of St. Thomas what is implicit in his writings.
This doesn't look strange to us, but the «of whom» is feminine, and for contemporary readers it stood out like a pink dress at a funeral: Jesus was born of Mary, but not Joseph.
3Eslick points out that at the crucial passage in Process and Reality in which Whitehead says Descartes» concept of substance is a true derivative from Aristotle's, Whitehead refers the reader not to Aristotle's Categories but to W. D. Ross's book about Aristotle (SCCW 504).
One important item I'd like to point out to the readers of this article and the author, is that the simple 10 question survey provided on this page IS NOT the same quiz given in the actual survey.
But McCarthy's best work does not appear in these volumes, and readers would do well to seek out her essays, her correspondence with Hannah Arendt, and Memories of a Catholic Girlhood, a justly celebrated memoir.
Not all of the past is communicated, but the author allows the reader to participate in an experience that would otherwise be out of range.
Here Whitehead and Russell emphasize «the primitive ideas are by means of descriptions intended to point out to the reader what is meant; but the explanations do not constitute definitions, because they really involve the ideas they explain» (PM 91).
I haven't commented on your blog in several years (not since the «free grace wars» petered out) but it is one of the blogs that I follow via my news reader.
Peter Whittle pointed out in the September Standpoint magazine that «If faced with a group of gang members playing music unbearably loud in the car next to them at traffic lights I personally know of nobody - nobody, from Daily Telegraph reader toGuardian reader - who would risk asking them to turn it down... but it's not just the gang culture.»
I can't be silent out of fear of offending someone or losing fans or readers.
As Marius lays out the crucial lectures, sermons, treatises and confrontations of these early years, he aggressively sells his thesis, drawing the reader's attention again and again to Luther's obsession with death — not hell, purgatory or even judgment, but annihilating death — and the younger Luther's equation of this fear with unbelief.
Surveys show this, but any reader can verify it through some judicious questioning of an average teenage Churchgoer (let alone the multitudes who do not go): for example «What is given out at Communion?»
«My goal with this book,» he writes, «is to assure people of faith that they do not need to feel anxious, disloyal, unfaithful, dirty, scared, or outcast for engaging these questions of the Bible, interrogating it, not liking some of it, exploring what it really says, and discerning like adult readers what we can learn from it in our own journey of faith... We respect the Bible most when we let it be what it is and learn from it rather than combing out the tangles to make it presentable.»
This will not be the first time that First Thoughts readers have heard from me on the virtues of Mr. Lionel Trilling, but readers interested in learning more about one of America's greatest critics and intellectuals can check out my piece in today's Wall Street Journal....
I assume that you will flesh it out over the course of the chapter and that the «shock value» of the title will not offend readers as you work out your thesis.
One of the challenges of this view is that if Mark truly ended his narrative here, he seems to have concluded by deliberately not concluding, by dangling something incomplete and unsatisfying before the reader in the final verse: «So they went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.»
He had experienced this himself, putting it off from week to week: «I broke out of the vicious circle and took part in the Sacrament, even without making confession» — he assured the reader that he had not been guilty of any gross sins.
But not when it comes at the cost of slaying both Moses and God in order to exalt a Yahwist who turns out to be nothing more than the mirror image of two clever 20th - century readers.
The Apocalypse of John is not so out of keeping with the rest of the New Testament as much later readers were inclined to think.
These various statements of the limiting criteria differ from one another, and Ignatieff's readers must figure out for themselves where they come from, why these criteria and not others should be employed, and what it might mean in practice to design defenses against terror that involve evil actions whose punishment may be mitigated by the extreme circumstances.
While most readers seemed to enjoy today's post, «25 Things That Shouldn't Scare Christians,» I understand that some felt I was picking on conservatives disproportionately, insinuating that those who oppose gay marriage and «happy holiday» greetings do so solely out of fear.
I was telling one of my most loyal readers that I just couldn't make them, and the next thing I know she had bought me a cookbook on Macaroons (Thanks G) So after reading through that I have learn't a few secrets and worked out a recipe that some how miraculously worked.
I know they don't like to brag, so I have to tell you that they found out that one of my readers was having major surgery this week (from her comment) and they contacted her to send her a box of «get well toffee from the toffee elves».
I've always been a reader, and I am thrilled that my kids can't keep their noses out of books....
I don't yet know what to do with the dried almond meal perhaps some of your readers have idea, they are not blanched!I'll have to figure it out soon as I'm running out of room in the freezer!!
Worrying about how I'm not making any money from my blog and still doing all the work in creating recipes and writing blog posts that connect with readers was sucking the soul out of me.
Trust me, the reader comments that call me out on my use of canola oil and cooking spray have not gone unnoticed!
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