Sentences with phrase «people out of the conversation»

We are tired of the empty rhetoric that has come out of Albany for far too long; we are tired of the empty promises never fulfilled; we are tired of the inside baseball being played keeping the voices of working people and disenfranchised people out of the conversation.
We are tired of the inside baseball being played keeping the voices of working people and disenfranchised people out of the conversation.
There are so many reports, records, and research showing that these standards are flawed and they left a lot of people out of the conversation.

Not exact matches

For us because timing isn't really of the essence, it's not because they're nearby right now, the question is how can we help facilitate people getting conversations going and moving offline after you just match, so I think that means some sort of follow up where you can continue to communicate with your matches almost en masse to say, «Hey i'm free this week» or «Hey check out this Instagram photo.»
«My hunch is the next phase of media,» he says, «will come out of authentic, chill conversation about things that matter to people
There are always people who want to take the conversation down the merit road, but the focus should really be on the incredible number of qualified women out there.
Dig Deeper: How to Boost Traffic at Your Trade Show Booth How to Get the Most Out of a Conference: Networking Strategy When you're killing time between sessions and making connections, don't join another conversation unless you've read the body language of the people already talking.
It's a more human conversation, even if it's going out to thousands of people.
Cook argues that augmented reality is preferable to virtual reality for many applications, because «most people don't want to lock themselves out from the world... With AR you can, not be engrossed in something, but have it be a part of your world, of your conversation.
In a fascinating post on The Conversation blog, Maynard makes an argument that won't surprise anyone who has read any fictional account of human's interplanetary future — colonizing other planets probably won't bring out the better angels of our nature, and any attempt to put people on Mars will require overcoming serious social and political problems, such as:
Trump reportedly told multiple people, including Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt, that he would be pulling out of the deal, according to three sources with knowledge of the conversations.
Another way to do — to get out when there is that lull in the conversation, say, «Hey, I want to introduce you to someone, I think you'll have lot in common» and then take that person over there but make sure the person that you are dumping that person off actually would get something out of that conversation because that would just be rude — if there was anything there.
«The reason for that is that even if you do a social media release that goes out and targets everyone, the nature of social media is that it moves so rapidly between people and the conversation quickly grows organically.
To allow for a freer flow of ideas through media, in a way that does not degrade quality and that elevates conversation and has impact, requires a new mindset: Business people need to be out there talking about what's happening in their industry without making it about themselves, their companies and their product.
Or, it could be the beginning of an uncomfortable conversation; the person just does not know how to come out and say it.
Not only did he want continuity at the Fed, but the president said he needed Summers by his side in the White House as he tried to lift the economy out of a deep recession, according to people familiar with the conversation.
«The interesting part is when people just want to talk about you because of either the products you're delivering, the conversations you're having in social, or the creative that you're putting out there.»
Groups tend to be unproductive for several reasons: the flow of conversation is often chaotic, some people do not dare speak out of fear of being judged, and group members tend to focus on consensual ideas.
What I can tell you from my conversations with clients is that more and more people are starting to see bitcoin as money and the potential to replace the current fiat central banking system that has gotten out of hand.
However easy it is to demonize and to hate from a distance (I won't provide links, but, trust me, the demonization and the hate was quite evident online), it's a bit harder to do so in the context of a small college, where habits of conversation are encouraged, where people talk the talk (even if — sinners as we all are — we don't always walk the walk) of fairminded openness to the truth, and where Others (not «The Other,» which, as a colleague rightly suggested, is too abstract) are people we encounter day in and day out.
Sean Doherty of Living Out (and my conversation partner later in this article) has reflected that: «People can have a particular sense of shame and wanting to hide this from God... I think secrecy is common in lots of parts of the Church.»
I'm trying very hard to put myself in the place of one of those people in the discernment group AFTER the emergency oh - my - gosh - Julie's - found - out - and - boy - is - she - pissed conversation.
There was a helluva lot more than one email exchange that I caught wind of here — this included taking private emails where you and I were discussing what I was led to believe was s confidential conversation regarding how to help a mutual friend only for me to learn that you forwarded portions of my email out of context to that person without including your own comments.
We go to church, we participate in leadership meetings to shape the conversations of our communities, we pray for our friends, we make meals, I write posts and articles and books about God, we wash our minivans, we set up the sprinkler for the neighbourhood kids and hand out freezies to hopeful hands, we go to work, we talk about the people we know.
But there are people out there who are being really sort of vicious and disrespectful of the office and I feel it degrades the public conversation.
One sure sign that this has begun to happen will be a shift in informal out - of - classroom conversations from talk about course work, or even from talk about people in the school, to talk about the school itself.
Having something even as simple as a bottle of water to give out is often a good way to meet people and begin a conversation.
I am well aware that all of us make assumptions about people we talk to everyday, it's pretty much impossible to carry out a conversation otherwise.
In my conversations about this, people usually then turn to the book of Revelation and point out how when Jesus returns a second time, He is going to kill so many people that there will be a lake of blood 200 miles wide and as deep as a horse's bridle (Rev 14:20).
My sermons began to grow out of the conversation between the people and the Bible and the place where they lived.
(I even found out that I stood up for one of them in an online conversation, I didn't even remember this, but it really touched that person.
Please don't be watching peoples comments on this site so you can categorise and pigeon - hole us into your groups, that will lead to the cessation of free speech here — not all of us know everything, we are often learning by the process of conversation and don't have lots of black and white answers figured out.
«The conversation now needs to change from helping people get a job to helping people move out of poverty» she says.
Just as in conversation the tension between the meaning which the word I use has for me and that which it has for my partner can prove itself fruitful and lead to a deeper personal understanding, so out of the tension between the image of a person and the existing person a genuine understanding can arise.
I have met a lot of Mormons and they are nice people as long as you leave religion out of the conversation.
Sometimes I worry that people of goodwill miss out on important conversations because they are scared off, so fearful of saying something wrong and having their character and motives questioned that they retreat to the safe and familiar — often returning to the privileged, closed - off communities from which they came.
Here is the curious thing: As I interact with people of other religions, and through the course of conversation find out why they hold their beliefs, I find that nearly all people of all religions have these same four basic arguments for why their beliefs are true.
They might argue even (against Paul) that doing such things sends people to hell, rather than seeing references to the «Kingdom of God» or «Kingdom of Heaven» as Jesus used them, as being about out lives here and now and what we might accomplish as we follow Christ (to which a «beneficial» conversation is much more fitting).
As Christians, we strive to live out a life of worship in whatever it is that we do — through our conversations, our interactions with other people, the way we spend our free time and, of course, through our work.
Questions of calling were being played out among people who in some cases pieced together two or three part - time jobs, and who, with less time for leisure and contemplation, were making ethical and moral decisions that rendered absurd our late - night conversations at the student coffee shop.
With the guidance of a mentor or the help of a conversation partner, you can allow another person to observe, to help you watch out for ways that you are not allowing fasting to teach you.
Steve Saint: I remember the conversation because people have been wanting to make a movie out of this story since I was a boy, but Mart presented it differently.
It would be more helpful to this conversation to stick to the conference rather than a litany of people who want to drag out their pet peeves about every other thing they dislike about MacArthur.
They're the people responsible for getting me out of bed in the morning, keeping my eyes open during boring conversations, and making me generally not a terrible grumpy person.
Maybe it's you that needs to stay out of other peoples conversations and quit pointing fingers at me.
Groups can pressure, judge, shame and blame people into things that are unhealthy — like staying in a bad marriage out of fear of being shamed (not to mention communities that are dangerous cults, but that's a different conversation).
There are a lot of different people in this conversation, and I appreciate you pointing to the more level - headed ones — and subtly calling out the more ridiculous ones.
I don't know if straight people hear comments like this, but as a gay person, your ears are a little more primed to hearing the word «gay» being dropped in and out of conversation with ease - mostly in the derogatory sense.
My doula work is committed to supporting those who are traditionally left out of conversations about their rights and choices around reproductive justice — especially women of color, trans and queer - identified people.
[Theme Music] SUNNY GAULT: Alright, so before we dive into conversation today we have a segment on the show called «mama hacks», I love this segment, it was actually created by you guys somewhat unintentionally because people kept sending us their hacks when it came to breast - feeding and pumping and I'm like we need to make a segment out of this, so that's exactly what we did.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z