They do not
in fact
bury their
heads in the
sand as the old wives» tale tells it, but the fact that most of us believe that myth to be true only makes a stronger
point: if the move you choose is to burrow
in deeper to protect the current nest on which you rest, the odds are high that you're leaving yourself a sitting duck (or ostrich, as it were).
As soon as one proves one's
point, as
in the case of the first amendment outlawing all faith - based legislation, or CO2 being just as dangerous for its effects on ocean pH as it seems to be on climate, people just
bury their
heads in the
sand.
In his opinion in Gonzalez - Servin v. Ford Motor Co. in November 2011, Posner included photos of both an ostrich and a man in a suit with their heads buried in the sand to reinforce his point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.&raqu
In his opinion
in Gonzalez - Servin v. Ford Motor Co. in November 2011, Posner included photos of both an ostrich and a man in a suit with their heads buried in the sand to reinforce his point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.&raqu
in Gonzalez - Servin v. Ford Motor Co.
in November 2011, Posner included photos of both an ostrich and a man in a suit with their heads buried in the sand to reinforce his point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.&raqu
in November 2011, Posner included photos of both an ostrich and a man
in a suit with their heads buried in the sand to reinforce his point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.&raqu
in a suit with their
heads buried in the sand to reinforce his point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.&raqu
in the
sand to reinforce his
point that» [t] he ostrich is a noble animal, but not a proper model for an appellate advocate.»