I've lost money, and my reputation has taken a hit
for taking the high road to protect my dignity, to protect children, and for other good causes.
I learned a lot and
took the high road in knowing how to be a good person, and make good moral decisions.
An almost constantly surprising coming - of - age film with a dark twist that manages to
take the high road with what is well - exploited material.
Whatever your dispute with trouble tenants might be, it's always best to
take the high road as your first course of action.
Are you ready to take responsibility for your part in a failed relationship and now
take the higher road of integrity to make amends?
Parag, some of those obits say, was a contrarian value investor and money manager
who took the high road in serving his clients, first at his firm's PMS and then at his mutual fund.
I should really
take the high road here — um, except there isn't one... OK, after all the aqua - shenanigans in the past year, I'm no longer prepared to place any kind of value on USOP's claimed resources.
Whichever
candidate takes the high road by campaigning to protect its citizens from a water market, an expensive pipeline, higher taxes, and encroaching suburban (Calgary) growth is likely guaranteed the Highwood seat.
Inside The NFL, Season 6, Episode 10: When asked if he ever wants to lash out at critics, Tony
Romo takes the high road, but that doesn't mean he hasn't thought about what he'd like to say.
These companies have found ways to
take the high road from a social and environmental standpoint, without undermining their growth and profitability — and in some cases making their business even more successful in conventional financial terms.
It'd be easy to make a really bland blog in the name of just having a blog, but it looks like
Shopify took the high road on this one.
In the political realm, the concern about tariffs has been lessened as Chinese President
Xi took the high road with some silky conversation.
However, when the events presented in the film are laid on this thick, they lose their power by
not taking the high road, effectively rendering a noble endeavor as tainted goods.
In a smart commentary on the shrill Republican silence in the face of the «Obama is a Muslim» nonsense, Slate's John Dickerson wrote that «with so much traffic on the low road in American politics, you'd imagine a politician or two might
take the high road simply to beat the congestion.»