Sentences with phrase «which brings back»

Which brings me back to the start of this article and its title: Everything Old is New Again.
Mapping a Process is not easy, and I recommend engaging someone who is an expert in Process mapping (which brings us back to People).
This is likely to be what Ghomeshi argues, which brings us back to the Welch case, cited above.
Which brings us back to Malone and its footnote.
Which brings us back to the original question of accessibility.
Which brings us back to the question of, «What will people see about you when they go to find out more about you as a lawyer on Google?»
(Actually, they were tigers, which brings us back to the theme of this thread.)
Which brings us back to one of the key issues: transparency.
Which brings us back to Elefant and her shingle.
Which brings us back to the minimalist signature.
Which brings us back to today.
Which brings us back to Fox, who says the situation raises very real questions of employment law:
Which brings me back to where I started.
Which brings us back to the Mobility Agreements.
Which brings us back to Kazakhstan Kagazy.
Which brings me back to the Citizen headline that exploded across our screens this week.
Which brings us back to Stephanie Neely and her lawsuit; the New York Times said she has been repeatedly criticized by Chicago cop Michael K. Shields in his regular column in the F.O.P. News (Fraternal Order of Police newsletter).
Which brings us back to the question: does audience matter?
Which brings us back to where we started in this post — Estavillo's plans to subpoena Gore and Ryder as expert witnesses on alienation.
Which brings us back to the main issue of trying to infer a change in surface temperature from the increase in radiative flux.
Which brings us back, first, to that federal investigation into the scientists and those drowned polar bear cubs.
Which brings us back to Soyeon's new CD.
Which brings me back to my original point.
Which brings us back to wind turbines, doesn't it?
~ Which brings us back to that new IPCC report, which represents a continued move away from Mann, climate alarmism, and the devices required to advance it.
Which brings us back to the fact that this issue is considered noise and interference amongst the more important matters they are dealing with.
Which brings us back to Peter Gleick's resignation as president of the Pacific Institute.
Which brings me back to the climate industry.
Which brings us back to the limitations of CERES and other low Earth orbit instruments.
And their way of looking at the world exists outside of the climate debate, which brings us back to the Royal Society, and what it and its presidents were trying to do with their scientific authority.
Which brings me back to human judgment.
Which brings us back to the 1910 to 1945 time period.
Which brings us back to the mainstream scientific position, which is that the forced trend will dominate on a centennial scale.
Which brings me back to my issue with Global versus regional paleo reconstructions.
Which brings me back to this storm.
The very well researched review you link to is from a site called «Environmentalism is Fascism,» which brings me back to the question in my first paragraph.
Which brings us back to Shepherd.
Which brings us back to Rose and the Met Office.
Which brings us back to what degree of certainty you need before you act.
Which brings us back to motivated reasoning.
Which brings me back to the red carpet itself — an odd spongy plastic stuck to the concrete steps of the cinema.
This is because there is a band of frequencies present in random, noisy and chaotic data, which brings us back to our initial point: any number or curve can be split into a multitude of different components, most of which will not have any physical meaning.
All of which brings back to mind my quandary over whether the best soundtrack for the treaty process comes from the Talking Heads («Same as it ever was....»)
Unfortunately it isn't, which brings us back to the frustrating activity of trying to figure out why there has been such a minimal policy response to the IPCC projections (as most recently exemplified by the G8's fuzzy statement).
Which brings us back to the sun.
Which brings us back to climate sensitivity.
Rail: Which brings us back to your haunting, dark still life paintings from the»80s, which included objects like a hammer, a cup, a shovel, sometimes a bundle of vegetables or a bouquet of flowers.
Which brings us back to Spring Street and the bed.
He's immersed in a period of roots rediscovery, which brings him back, this time joined by the HSPVA Jazz Ensemble.
Still, my opinion strongly concurs with the prevailing discussion, which brings us back to 1991 again and the exchange of ideas about the Master Narrative, Gender Politics, Hillary Clinton, and the Gorilla Girls.
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