I was intrigued by what is happening in Iceland, so the following is a piece I've written on it. It has some introductory macro-economics in it,  which I think it is good to keep in perspective as we consider the frantic attempts being made to prevent an economic depression.
I've received moving notes in response to other pieces I've written on Charlie Gard — including from people who wondered whether, because of their decision to remove a ventilator for their child, they were guilty of euthanasia by omission.
These are some of the easiest to understand
pieces he has written that I have ever seen.
Anyway like I said, very good piece you've written.
Ever since the goofy movie «Snakes On A Plane» was released, travel writers far and wide have come up with their own variation of the title for a piece they've written.
What a wonderful
piece you have written!
This is another great piece you've written.
The vigorous, vehement and vexed reactions to
any piece I have written that mentions climate change, combined with the power of greed on the one hand and the struggle for subsistence on the other, have convinced me there is no chance that governments will significantly reduce the output of industrial greenhouse gases in time to stave off considerable change to the planet's climate and to human habitats.
I can email you a more detailed piece I've written.
With that being said, I figured I'd do some shameless self - promotion and share with you some of the recent pieces I've written or websites I've been featured on.
Wild, insulting speculation as to a hidden motive behind a piece I've written is not criticism.
Around that time, I was also touting this Slate article about Obama's detached relationships with people and institutions and a 2008 piece I'd written about Obama's elusive support for local control in Chicago schools.
It may seem in the pieces I've written that I'm wearing only my evidence - based education hat.
But I had no idea what kind of
piece he would write in this context.
Here are a couple links to
pieces she has written on the subject: http://www.sfwa.org/other-resources/for-authors/writer-beware/thumbs-down-agency/ http://www.victoriastrauss.com/advice/safest/ Hope that helps
I'm not sure if this qualifies as a shameless plug or not, but it is certainly a plug for a piece I've written over on EoinPurcell.com:
Some quoted to me recent
pieces I had written.
Searching my blog, I was surprised to find how many
pieces I have written in 2008 on the topic.
I arranged Cody's pieces along with
the pieces I had written using the Commodore SID chip for most sounds and a little Juno 106 here and there for warmth.»
POSTSCRIPT: responding to schmidt's 20 nov piece, a poster on RC referred schmidt back to a november 2006 piece he'd written about lord monckton & WUWT / junkscience.
Polar bear specialists Andrew Derocher and Steven Amstrup recently spent inordinate energy trying to refute the opinion piece I'd written for the Financial Post in celebration of International Polar Bear Day last month, ignoring my fully referenced State of the Polar Bear Report for 2017 that was released the same day (Crockford 2018) and the scientific manuscript I'd posted last year at PeerJ Preprints (Crockford 2017).
Following some Twitter discussion (must get Storify working properly for things like this) Chris Berg pointed to a piece he'd written arguing against such a use of secondary boycott legislation (and against such legislation in general).
Four days later, one Nicholas Plagman uploaded
a piece he had written about the April 11 incident to Associated Content, a website, which permits registered users to publish content on topics of their choosing.
If you're interested in learning even more about those differences, you can read some other pieces I've written:
From time to time I'll be reposting blog pieces I've written for the web page Science of Relationships.
I found myself asking that question when I read a heartbreaking comment from Amina, a Muslim mother who had postpartum depression, on
a piece I had written about postpartum depression and different religious faiths.
Such an inspiring piece you've written today = hence your name — so apropos.
Not exact matches
Prof. Ragan
has a tendency to
write pieces I wish I
had thought of; here he
has done it again.
The final
piece of this process is reviewing what you
've written and playing with ways to turn ideas into clients and revenue.
We recently
wrote a
piece saying that earnings
would not heal the troubles in the market.
In his March note to investors, Marks admits that when he set out to
write about liquidity, he didn't believe the topic was all that interesting or profound; in the month since Marks
wrote the
piece, it
has been the market's chief concern.
According to the chart below — not to mention every single
piece of research
written by Hussman over the past year and change — the first qualification
has been more than met.
«Maybe you
've set a rule for yourself that every time you find yourself wanting to eat something sweet, you
have a
piece of fruit instead, or if you're tempted to
have a cigarette, you chew a
piece of gum,»
writes Wise.
I
have been wearing them for about six months and since I can't shout this from a rooftop to effectively convey how amazing they are, I'm
writing this
piece to tell you that they are life - changing.
But instead, he
wrote a 350 - word
piece letting his colleagues know that things
had gotten out of hand.
I began blogging regularly in 2010 and
have written more than five hundred
pieces since then.
There is one
piece that I can share, though, and that's when you
write a recommendation on our app for somebody, they
have to pick whether they know you personally, professionally or from dating.
Once I
've been successful with one
piece of content, I go to every content publisher I can find and tell them that I can
write a guest post on their blog on a topic that I
've previously
written about, that more than 50,000 people
have read and loved.
You
have to consider whether Google will like a
piece of content every time you publish something, and that extends throughout the brainstorming,
writing, and copyediting states as well.
In response to a post by a Twitter user which said Musk should provide «some very strong arguments in a well
written blog
piece to win over the (myself included) skeptics,» the Tesla and SpaceX CEO
wrote: «Movie on the subject coming soon...» Now, why hasn't anyone thought of that before?
In her widely circulated
piece, O» Donnell
writes that Millennials
have a misperception of their relationship with employers, in that it's the employer's job to provide training and professional development.
I'm
writing an expert advice
piece and am reaching out to all the big players in the [topic] field, and I think your contribution
would be very valuable.
Here's what she
had to say in a
piece she
wrote for Serious Eats:
In a previous Inc
piece I
wrote, titled The Advantage Chicago
Has Over Silicon Valley, I threw Chicago's hat in the ring to be considered next in line.
In a 1991 Esquire interview, he said: «You know, it doesn't really matter what [the media]
write as long as you
've got a young and beautiful
piece of [expletive].»
The results of this radical experiment are now in — Roberts
has written about his experience in a long, thought - provoking
piece for Outside magazine.
Journalists at the Star
have been asked to think differently about how they tell stories, to
write shorter
pieces and to experiment with multimedia.
As John Herrman at The Awl described so thoroughly in a recent
piece he
wrote about the disintermediation of journalism by the web and social media, one of the biggest shifts in media of the past decade
has been the ability for anyone — journalist or not — to pick up a phone and share information with vast numbers of people.
You rush to your inbox, scan every headline, pull out two or three you think
would make great stories and begin
writing a timely, fresh
piece that will resonate with your target audience and capitalize on trending topics.
Companies in the top quartile for racial and ethnic diversity are 35 % more likely to
have returns above national industry medians, SAP chief diversity and inclusion officer Anka Wittenburg
wrote in a
piece for Fortune, quoting a McKinsey study.