Sentences with phrase «prominent people end»

Not exact matches

They, personally, find it «distasteful» (although it is AMAZING how many prominent anti-gay people end up being exposed as gay), and, because they can use their delusion to justify such an inhuman and anti-American stance, they feel the need to force their stupidity on everyone else.
Now that the issue is much more prominent than with the Bruin player, I would love to see another front - page piece from the hockey editor reinforcing the seemingly obvious ideals that the office is bigger than the person who currently holds it, and that if one really wishes to see a decline in political divisiveness and overheated rhetoric, one has an obligation to make personal contributions to those ends.
Prominent photos of the not incredibly telegenic candidate capitalize on the fact that he is hoping people will associate him with his very similar looking father, Raúl Alfonsín, who was the first and widely respected democratically elected President after the end of the dictatorship in 1983.
And what they say may be true... But context is often the key to putting forward a message, and Google creates a prominent platform for Wikipedia, and with most of its competitors essentially copying Google — perhaps due to its success; I'm not a «Master Mason» so I wouldn't know all the insider practices of businesses — doesn't Wikipedia end up being the defacto source for «Truth Creation,» that is, the go - to source for those who wish to access a truth becomes a go to source for those with an interest in governing by creating those things which people believe to be true, assuming most people live their own lives according to what they believe...
For instance, eHarmony, a prominent online - dating service, touts the results of a survey conducted on its behalf by Harris Interactive, a market - research firm, that concludes it was responsible for an average of 542 people getting married every day in America between the start of 2008 and the end of June 2009.
But, before that era ended, those people must have been very wealthy to have owned such a large, prominent downtown structure.
The most recent, high - visibility version of this would be the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme, which was supposed to pay back great returns for investors, but ended up wiping out significant sums of money from many prominent (and a much larger number of not - so - prominent) people.
As I dug deeper I was struck by the sense of outrage and loss this painting aroused in so many people: The family of Lea Bondi, determined to reclaim the stolen portrait she had failed to recover in her lifetime; the Manhattan District Attorney who sent shock waves through the international art world and enraged many of New York's most prominent cultural organizations when he issued a subpoena and launched a criminal investigation following the surprise resurfacing of Portrait of Wally; the New York art dealer who tipped off a reporter about the painting during the opening of the Schiele exhibition at MoMA; the Senior Special Agent at the Department of Homeland Security who vowed not to retire until the fight was over; the art theft investigator who unearthed the post-war subterfuge and confusion that ultimately landed the painting in the hands of a young, obsessed Schiele collector; the museum official who testified before Congress that the seizure of Portrait of Wally could have a crippling effect on the ability of American museums to borrow works of art; the Assistant United States Attorney who took the case to the eve of trial; and the legendary Schiele collector who bartered for Portrait of Wally in the early 1950s and fought to the end of his life to bring it home to Vienna.
At the end of my August 7th blog piece, I mentioned how any prominent person insinuating that industry money corrupts skeptic climate scientists seems to be separated from Ross Gelbspan by three degrees or less.
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