After all,
people do all sorts of things.
People do all sorts of things to symbolize strongly held beliefs.
I don't know if you have ever been in prayer meetings where
people do this sort of thing.
Some people do all sorts of things, that doesn't mean I commend them.»
It would also make a great last minute gift idea, since it's that time of year where
people do that sort of thing.
Now these are general principles, yet
people do all sorts of things with the combination of sets, reps, rest between sets, and exercise type to find the best combination for them.
When you walk through that park, you see all sorts of
people doing all sorts of things.
I have also seen
people doing all sorts of things under the guise of positive psychology without any rigorous research supporting what they do (e.g. appreciative inquiry — I haven't been able to find any peer reviewed studies on AI — just case studies which could be all Hawthorne effect).
Not exact matches
When Lyft first launched, recalls the company's director
of marketing strategy & operations Gina Ma, «it felt like really asking
people to participate in this really big
sort of social experiment almost — the idea
of doing these
things that your mom always told you not to
do.»
While most
people would never dream
of doing the
sorts of things that got Louis C.K. or Harvey Weinstein into trouble, we
do all still have the same tendency to grow less empathetic as we become more powerful.
One
of the most important
things a municipality can
do is to recruit more businesses and shoppers to the downtown area, and using social media and even SEO (Search Engine Optimization) techniques to ensure that
people can see what
sort of exciting
things South Orange is up to is critical.
«It's quite normal for Americans and Western
people to behave like this — they live in free sex societies where nobody cares about this
sort of thing, so what
do you expect?»
To say that someone has a right to something is quite different from saying merely that «it would be good if we
did this» or «good
people and good companies
do this
sort of thing.»
I would imagine in urban areas like Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal, which have significant populations
of recent immigrants, there's probably a significant subset
of people who fled from countries where governments
do all
sorts of nasty
things with the information they collect about their citizens and who aren't all that keen to provide such information here (you might say, «sure, but Canada's not Iran», to which the answer would be «exactly»).
These are all the kinds
of things that HR managers and talent developers obsess over, and also the
sorts of questions
people ask themselves when they're deciding between job offers: Should I work at Company A, where I'd have better benefits but a worse commute, or Company B, which
does important work but doesn't pay very well?
«We are in a valley
of people who challenge the status quo, so it
sort of seems natural that we have venture investors who are thinking about how to
do things differently,» said Aileen Lee, founder
of Cowboy Ventures and a former partner at Kleiner Perkins.
We need
people out there to debunk stereotypes, because these
sorts of things don't get fixed on their own.
People do goofy
things on all
sorts of things so I don't really understand what your point is.
Now we see all
sorts of disgusting
things come out dealing with kiidie perverts.And they still
do disturbing
things.They want to beatify a priest from Yugoslavia who had blessed the Utashe movement a movement in WW2 that was responsible for killing 100,000's
of people in very heinous ways.
I am looking for authenticity, relevancy, no ovewhelming bands that take away from the experience
of worship, clergy who are willing to answer my hard questions, who understand doubt is a stepping stone to deepening my belief, who accept everyone as Jesus
did (and we know Jesus was a rebel who accepted and led all
sorts of people), who don't feel the need to try to be hip, who speak about
things without inserting politics, who are wiling to trash the temple to bring us back to the truth, who will step out
of the box
of comfort and be real.
I think just because
people abuse this
sort of thing doesn't mean we should shy away from it.
I call this the King Cyrus argument, that God's used imperfect
people in the past, that [the president] is
sort of this King Cyrus figure — that God may be using to
do some really good
things.
I know these
sorts of statement will make
people mad, but here's the
thing: I believe that these debates about who truly believes the Bible and who doesn't are just the smoke and mirrors
of religion.
People are afraid to
do this
sort of thing.
Often the best way to establish a community is to get different
sorts of people doing things with one another.»
And I really wish Christians would make up their minds about Jesus's place in the big scheme
of things: is he a co-equal third
of a trinity
of ent.ities who somehow make up one large god, or is he a lesser god sent by his greater father god to suffer in order to straighten out the weird sin situation he created and didn't get around to fixing for thousands
of years (the whole John 3:16
thing people are so fond
of quoting only makes any
sort of sense in the second situation).
We
do not need to approach
people we know with our theology, Bible verses and those
sorts of things.
Since I was trying to imagine how such a criminal might come to
doing such a stupid
thing, I tried to make that clear, but you flew right past that and think that I'm some
sort of super-criminal because I was talking about possibilities and how some
people can react in such a way.
Hell to me is eternally without the fellowship
of God - imagine being next to someone who constantly talks about themselves and
does nothing except
things that benefit themself (
sort of like the
person who
does good to make himself feel better in your previous post), with no cognizance
of my existance - I would hate to be next to that guy for eternity, that would be hell!
It may be why some
people don't take religion seriously, because this
sort of thing is absurd.
There are all
sorts of people who are either evasive about, or downright dismissive
of, the authority
of God in scripture, but who continue to affirm the resurrection
of Jesus and all
sorts of other
things that
do not fit with human reason.
It's the
sort of internet - y article that feels intentionally designed to get a rise out
of people who don't have enough actual
things to get mad about in their own lives, and in this respect, it succeeds reasonably well.
The way
things are (and have always been), Christians believe and practice all
sorts of crazy, heretical, outlandish
things, but
people feel like it's «okay» because they have priests, clergy, and seminary - trained pastors who teach them to believe and
do these
things.
How could anyone
do these
sorts of things to other
people?»
People do all
sorts of bad
things to each other and God is always the one to get blamed.
It doesn't say that it was a good
thing, but the
people involved are betrayed as honourable and righteous, with the incident not treated with any
sort of condemnation at all.
If one culture or group
of people looks at the laws
of another culture or
people, whether it is the 10 laws, the 600, the 6000, or the 60,000, and says, «It
sort of worked for them; we'll
do the same
thing,» they will end up treating each other more miserably than any other culture.
Some
of them are quite vengeful toward
people who didn't worship them, and will
do all
sorts of wicked
things to you.
Doesn't this
sort of thing,
people suspending and assuming religious belief at will, suggest that religious belief is unfounded?
A lot
of people try to cover
things about themselves that they don't like by what they wear and that can lead to all
sorts of psychological issues.»
-
People swear up and down that «God» has told them directly to
do all
sorts of abominable
things, or they use their «Scriptures» to justify the most hideous cr @p.
Sorry I'm at work I'm saying all
sorts of things but yea I think a lot can be taking literally... I don't think that's anything new but most
people I meet are totally against literal interpretations
As far as when I've told others that I'll pray for them, depending on the situation, I've either
done the «state
of being» with a
sort of «positive thoughts sent their way»... sometimes more
of a reflection, a «holding you in my heart»
sort of thing... and sometimes, because regardless
of what it means to me, I know what it means to the other
person, an actual on my knees prayer to god.
People need to understand we need to uphold the freedom
of religion in this country so that this
sort of thing does not occur.
I've seen
people fake all
sorts of things (they have admitted to it afterwards) because they didn't want to appear less spiritual than those around them.
Though Kohan didn't give too many other details about the plot, she said the new Netflix show has «got some
people nervous,» adding, «There are all
sorts of things where we cross lines — and there are crazies out there.»
The fact that good
people and bad
people believe all
sorts of things, and some
of those
things are true, or false, or good, or evil, and that
people do both good and bad
things, has nothing to
do with a belief being «real».
These steps, and countless more specific steps in the life
of each and every
person, are the
sorts of things God has
done on our behalf to call each
of us to believe in Jesus for eternal life.
Unfortunately you make it sound like EVERY time
people do ANY
sort of imposition
of expectations it's a bad
thing.
So it's ok to slander someone you disagree with because others who you also disagree with have said
things you don't like — even though the
people you are slandering have never anything
of that
sort and have no connection at all with the fundamentalists you sited?