Sentences with phrase «thing as treating»

These are things as treats, food, toys, water and food bows, shampoo, detergents, collar, harness, training pads, dog lead, bed and brushes.

Not exact matches

Maintaining high standards for how people treat each other is a wonderful thing as we live in a world that's rife with animosity and discrimination.
There will certainly be other things that come up in due diligence, but a reasonable outline of how to treat items that fluctuate, such as inventory, liabilities, pre-payments, accounts receivable, and so forth, should be covered.
Internet entrepreneur Cody Brown makes a compelling case that the inability of Facebook (and Twitter, YouTube, Reddit, etc.) to enact consistent and enforceable policies around things like fake news and inflammatory speech arises from their foundational decision to treat users all over the world as a single audience.
One thing, however, is clear: Although both the public and the crypto community refer to bitcoin and altcoins as virtual currencies, the IRS treats them as property for tax purposes.
But, as inevitable problems arise, the older and more experienced investors treat these things as business as usual: problems to be dealt with rather than major catastrophes that are about to kill the company.
Conversely, the law and economics movement (yes, it's a political platform as much as an academic one) takes a decidedly dim view of government and regulation, treating those things as sand in the gears of the market.
We certainly get a mental boost from seeing them, but that can be a bad thing: Research has shown these motivational pick - me - ups can trigger the same kind of psychological reward as doing the work itself, treating us with endorphins we don't deserve and actually reducing our capacity to do real work.
It's easy to see where that growth will come from, following Election Day victories — medical use for treating such things as cancer and glaucoma was approved or expanded in Florida, Arkansas, Montana and North Dakota, and recreational use was approved in California, Massachusetts, Maine and Nevada.
But that's at least in part because those of us who get paid to write about such things have been conditioned to treat inflation as a non-story.
But it assumes that the disrupter has to take into account things like the actual terrain on which he is fighting and that he must treat his adversary as stable and unchanging.
Without significant competition, Dollarama has managed to treat things like state - of - the - art inventory management systems as unnecessary luxuries, according to Tyghe.
One nice thing about the IRS treating crypto as an asset is that we can look at how the IRS treats people that «day trade» stock and often don't keep great records / have lots of transactions.
Now the pressures of the sexual revolution are tempting the Church to loosen her claim on the bodily act that Scripture consistently treats as most deeply implicated in spiritual things — sex.
«Critics who treat «adult» as a term of approval, instead of as a merely descriptive term,» he said, «can not be adult themselves... When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown - up.»
To address the actual topic, homosexuality is not the same thing as pedophilia and should not be treated as such.
BUT... if the Church is going to claim and treat sexual deviance (if in fact that is what they believe it is) with such force over and against all other indiscretions, how do they justify that... and how isn't it hypocritical of them when they simply wink at other things that are clearly outlined by Jesus» own words as grievous.
Set in a Bronx Catholic school in 1964, shortly after the massive changes ushered in by the modernizing Vatican II conference in Rome, the story quickly sets up a conflict between the old - school nun who serves as principal and runs the school like a prison (played by Meryl Streep) and the young, new priest (Philip Seymour Hoffman) who wants to shake things up by treating the students as fully rounded young people who deserve doses of freedom and respect as well.
For one thing, it tends to treat them (indeed, by legal requirements of equal protection, must treat them) as interchangeable units of the citizenry, and too often this means impersonally.
'» In acedia, all being is treated «as something to possess and discard,» and the slothful «violate the integrity of any and every thing
Modern psychology treats most things as «addictions», therefore removing personal responsibility for choices we make every day.
And who looks and search for the thing gets it but does not come alone with out effort... Some have reached levels with their knowledge and names of God to make thing happen just as Jesus was able to do but they are not sorcerers although might have got treated as ones.
In the US we are «free» to do many things, but not all things are productive in achieving our goals of being treated as equals, regardless of our non-beliefs.
The more personalistic aspects of God are then treated as having inferior status in the real order of things and for religious experience as well.
The great trick that humans developed at some point in the last few hundred thousand years is the ability to circle around a tree, rock, ancestor, flag, book or god, and then treat that thing as sacred.
[4] «cf. Meilaender, Gilbert, The Giving and Taking of Organs, First Things, March 2008, where he emphasises that humans are called to live their bodily life as a personal gift to others and that «presumed consent... does go a long way toward treating persons as handy repositories of interchangeable parts to others.»
Moreover, God, who alone sees all things and what is necessary, treats us as the unique individuals He created us to be; not a «one size fits all» approach, and He answers prayers and gives gifts on that basis, not simply on whether or not they are a believer.
If this is a space for Julie (and Becky and Mojojules) to speak about how she was treated, as David claims in an earlier comment, then that is one thing.
Moreover, God, who alone sees all things and what is necessary, treats us as the unique individuals He created us to be; not a «on...
«Whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery... the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed... they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator.»
the closest thing I ever got as an apology was from a SF, CA EC leader who treated me reprehensibly said, «some of what you said may be right.»
I've been accused of the things I've been studying to treat and grew up as an ACOA (adult child of an alcoholic).
Take 10 minutes from patting yourself on the back and take a look at my blog / websites, and / or my comments on other threads here, and you'll be quickly disabused of the notion that I treat the Scriptures «as though they are written directly to 20th Century A.D. Americans» (For what it's worth, I'm not American, so why would I do such a thing).
There's a full - on atheist in the film; her atheism is treated as a local secret, the kind of thing the adults know but children must be kept from hearing.
Treating these things as an obligation of believers, gaining these things by coercion, is counterproductive and illegitimate.
Doing so would not lead us to treat animals like people but rather to treat the weakest people like animals, opening the door to such things as conducting medical experiments on the cognitively disabled, which has already been proposed in bioethics literature.
Rainy, one thing you will probably never understand is unconditional love, As God loves all his children and he made them with their atributes they are given and what is important is not their orientation, but how we treat them.
If, during that voyage, a traveller needs fantasies and fairy tales to keep them acting civilized, to do the right thing, to treat others as they would themselves like to be treated, then I welcome those fantasies.
Useful as it may be to abstract types of things from the welter of everyday experience, we must not commit what Whitehead called the «fallacy of misplaced concreteness» whereby these abstractions are treated as if they were the actual realities under consideration.
However, if that's all we did or if that was the main thing we did, we might be in danger of, as it were, pandering to a split - level world, treating spirituality as a private hobby.
From an awareness, where life is sacred, we might treat all things as sacred.
I saw things in Racine years ago that continue to haunt me, for they were outrageous, and showed that many people in our democracy are viewed and treated as less than human.
All of those things that would have made a mere human being mad as hell were treated with Grace and Serenity and He got worked up enough to turn over the tables on the «money changers» using a place of worship for profit.
When Pannenberg broke onto the scene in the 1960s, he was treated as the new candidate for these laurels, the latest thing from Germany, the land of giants.
Rorty argues that the philosophical tradition from Plato to Kant has treated truth in terms of correspondence to reality, and the human mind as a kind of mirror which reflects back to us how things really and truly are.
It is based on a vision that the self and the other should be treated as of equal worth; that despite differences in power, things should be fair; that everyone should be responded to and included and that no one should be left alone and hurt (Gilligan, p. 63).
He could have repeated his warning that we not treat them as some kind of a final vocabulary which corresponds to things as they really are.
Education is treated as a bad thing here and if your too smart then you must have the debble in ya.
Writing in Premier Youthwork magazine (November 2015) Rev Rachel Mann, a male to female transgender vicar, advised: «Perhaps the single most important thing to remember is that... trans people are, ultimately, people... Trans people of all ages are often seen through a lens that treats us as curiosities, freaks or alien people.
The best way to bring the sinfulness of such sins home to us is to point toward the places where humans in fact act wrongly: in home, school, business, contacts with others, and the like, where by pride, self - seeking, neglect of our neighbors, ugliness of behavior in our homes, and so much else, we often behave in a reprehensible manner or we subtly and insidiously treat other persons as mere «things
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