Not exact matches
Quite frankly, I'm not interested in any «intelligent discourse which is little more than a circle
jerk of a discussion where privileged people sit around and abstractly theorize
about what the «
real problems» of and «solutions to» marginalized people's problems that doesn't center the words and experiences of actual marginalized people and their own understanding of their own problems.
If God is
real you should be ticked off
about what a
jerk he / she / it is.
Now as much as that may have been too hasty a verdict and too much of a knee
jerk reaction to a few below par games, it is also too son to say that the
real Mesut Ozil is back and that the German international is
about to set the world on fire.
When placing my Jeep gear it will
jerk real hard, then when pushing on the gas the Jeep will hesitate and lose all power, I too drive to work in heavy traffic I am scared to death that I will be in a fatal accident, last year I took this Jeep to the dealership and explained what the Jeep was doing he explained to me it was bad gas, it now does this a lot, I once again took it into the dealership he explained to me this time that it was the transmission module which of course is not covered in Chrysler wonderful life - time powertrain warranty how Nice this is going to cost me a pretty Penny, so I have been reading on all these complaints
about the same problem come on Chrysler recall
Anything that is porn doesn't count — we're talking
about writing, not
jerking off on a page, which has always had different «marketing» attached to it — and those
real books that have gained a mainstream audience have done so specifically because they were eventually traditionally published, i.e. pulled out of the self - publishing slush pile.
There are a variety of reasons why it's so darn easy for many members of the public to get
jerked around by the reason - of - the - day: «global warming is not
real», «it's inevitable anyhow», «there's nothing we can do
about it», «it's the sun», «we'll just have to acclimate», «we should acclimate», «there's no consensus», «it's all the fault of Love Potion Number 9», or whatever.
Amid a media landscape of knee -
jerk reactions and hyperbolic predictions, we think there is a significant need for thoughtful, well - informed commentary
about, and engagement with, the intersection between potentially transformative technologies and other innovations and the
real - world, well - established, everyday practice of law and provision of legal advice.
That's an interesting one because online abuse can be notoriously hard to track down in
real life; sure, the
jerks who post in the YouTube comments section probably aren't thinking
about masking their IP addresses or using a VPN so they're harder to spot, but it can still be a resource - intensive task to find abusers.