Sentences with phrase «touches nerves»

The story is sad, crazy, and wonderful all at once and touches nerves in the times we live in.
My recent column on the importance of establishing an ethos of strong customer service that extends all the way from the CEO's office to the front lines touched a nerve for some readers.
«Iron Man» touched a nerve by setting much of its action in a war ripped from the headlines (Afghanistan).
The success of coffee, and these two companies in particular, shows how brands and even whole industries can touch a nerve with the public, one sip at a time.
His post, titled «It's Time to Revolutionize Race Relations,» laid bare his own experiences as a black man and touched a nerve.
The story of a reserved English butler slowly coming to terms with his dark past, The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro clearly touched a nerve with the Amazon founder.
Haberman, who recently won a Pulitzer Prize for her reporting on the Russia investigation, responded with a tweet of her own, correcting the spelling and noting that the story seems to have «touched a nerve
Here's the story that seems to have touched a nerve.
HFT is a nuanced and highly complex part of the investing world, but despite this, the book seems to have touched a nerve with people wondering what really goes on when stocks are traded.
So, by flipping the post and doing the opposite, I touch a nerve.
I guess I touched a nerve with all you unbelievers, i was just making a statement not judging anyone.
I do not mean to have stepped out of my place, (/ sarcasm) Obviously I have touched a nerve.
I clearly touched a nerve with some of these bigots.
Its conclusion should touch the nerve of every Christian's conscience: «A large proportion of mental patients at present, as in the past, are not treated in accordance with democratic, humanitarian, scientific, and therapeutic principles.
This really touched a nerve.
I think you touched a nerve
The odd selection touched a nerve for readers of O'Connor's fiction, who rightly note the author's penchant for depicting humanity darkly.
But soon I realized, my «zingers» were being overlooked and I was touching a nerve in some folks.
They know if they touch a nerve they will make a bunch of money but hide behind some made up meaning.
It was 1948, and Merton had touched a nerve, not only in America but all over the world.
Wide Open Spaces Jim Palmer With Divine Nobodies, emerging church leader Palmer touched a nerve with readers who gravitate toward cutting - edge evangelical writers like Brian McLaren and Donald Miller.
Must have touched a nerve.
I was hoping Arsene would ignore it and speak about getting balance right but it did seem to touch a nerve and then Wenger decided to defend the matter.
Seem to have touched a nerve there with mr wenger's attack poodle..
Did I touch a nerve?
Chesser: It touched this nerve about the perennial loser who wins.
Maybe it has touched a nerve?
I don't think you're over-reacting; clearly the «likey» was, in my opinion, created by someone with a heapload of ignorance, but doesn't mean it can't, or shouldn't, touch a nerve.
The «pink slime» controversy has touched a nerve in the school food community and underscored how little parents know about what their children eat at school, said Kate Adamick, a noted school food consultant and author.
I wasn't expecting so many supportive comments here, but I clearly touched a nerve.
That's how some people see him, that would touch a nerve, and I would find it equally offensive.
The New Yorker could have also touched a nerve by a cover of McCain in a delivery room holding a woman down and forcing her to give birth, with a choir in the background cheering him on.
Touched a nerve did we?
«I thought all along that she not only had a great narrative in the campaign, she's certainly touched a nerve with many people who feel as though they're disenfranchised,» said Monroe County Democratic Chairman Joe Morelle.
Few of Trump's actions have touched a nerve among Latinos across the political spectrum in the United States quite like his pardon of Arpaio, the former Arizona sheriff who was found guilty of criminal contempt after defying a federal judge's order to stop targeting Latinos based solely on suspicion of their immigration status.
This definitely touched nerves particularly that of President Rawlings and Hon. Dr. Obed Asamoah.
He says it's an issue that touches a nerve with poor neighborhoods» older, more stable, residents - and he saw that during his door - to - door campaigning.
He seemed to touch a nerve with the audience when he criticized the «pressure testing» mandated by the Common Core education standards, which he said that he would try to overturn.
«I think he's really touched a nerve with the voters of the county.
It quotes skills minister David Lammy's admission that «Cameron has touched a nerve, reflecting a big gap in our political narrative».
A junior minister has become the first member of the Government to publicly admit that David Cameron has «touched a nerve» with the British people.
«The truth is that the Tories» change in language has touched a nerve, reflecting a big gap in our own political narrative,» Mr Lammy says, before going on to attack the Tory leader's lack of depth.
Miliband's warning that the party must move out of the «New Labour comfort zone» also seems to have touched a nerve:
Her most recent book is Touching a Nerve: The self as brain (W. W. Norton)
And those are the ideas, I think, that touch a nerve,» Lieberman says.
«Hornbacher will touch a nerve with readers struggling to cope with mental illness,» writes a reviewer for Publisherâ $ ™ s Weekly.
It touched a nerve, and I'm flummoxed as to why.
A film about a male teacher getting it on with his female student ought to touch a nerve in the era of #MeToo.
That touched a nerve with me!
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