Importantly, margarine made from trans fats should be avoided like the plague.
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K. Chesterton The approval of the public is to be avoided like the plague.
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If the Democrats pay close attention, they're about to see that candidates like Pritzker should be avoided like the plague.
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No Angry Men Dear Diary: Jury duty is something I've avoided like the plague ever since I became an adult.
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In a sad twist, the only people Atwell can ever truly talk to anymore are the ones he would have previously avoided like the plague—journalists and police officers.
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Just like her Monterey counterpart, Julia is the only woman of color in sight, and in the same way that Bonnie was whitewashed in the HBO series, the subject of Julia's race is avoided like the plague in Unforgettable.
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"It was a lot harder for me to get out of acting, because at the time, there were a lot of kids from Nickelodeon or Disney who wanted to do music," she says, recalling the 360 deals she avoided like the plague.
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The book has also received attention for the numerous negative reviews it has received on Amazon.com. The Herald Sun stated that Messenger's book is very dangerous and should be "avoided like the plague".
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Kostas Axelos summarizes that for Marx, in capitalism "work renders man an alien to himself and to his own products." "The malaise of this alienation from the self means that the worker does not affirm himself but denies himself, does not feel content but unhappy....The worker only feels himself outside his work, and in his work he feels outside himself....Its alien character emerges clearly in the fact as soon as no physical or other compulsion exists, it is avoided like the plague.".Marx-Engels, in Zeitin, 1968:87Purdue, William D., Sociological Theory: Explanation, Paradigm, and Ideology, Mayfield Publishing Co., Palo Alto, CA, 1986:325 Marx also wrote, in a curtailed manner, that capitalist owners also experience alienation, through benefiting from the economic machine by endlessly competing, exploiting others and maintaining mass alienation in society.Bertell Ollman (1976) # # Alienation: Marx's Conception of Man in Capitalist Society Chapter 23: The Capitalist's Alienation. Cambridge U.P., 1971; 2nd ed.
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There, he boldly proclaimed the radical republic he once supported to be "avoided like the plague" (se tenir éloignés comme de la peste) (Discours, III.5). From there, he went to Grenoble. On 26 September 1872, he proclaimed the future of the Republic to be in the hands of "a new social level" (une couche sociale nouvelle) (Discours, III.101), ostensibly the petite bourgeoisie to which his father belonged. Léon Gambetta, by Alphonse Legros (1875). When Adolphe Thiers resigned in May 1873, and a Royalist, Marshal MacMahon, was placed at the head of the government, Gambetta urged his friends to a moderate course. By his tact, parliamentary dexterity and eloquence, he was instrumental in voting in the French Constitutional Laws of 1875 in February 1875. He gave this policy the appropriate name of "opportunism," and became one of the leader of the "Opportunist Republicans." On 4 May 1877, he denounced "clericalism" as the enemy. During the 16 May 1877 crisis, Gambetta, in a speech at Lille on 15 August called on President MacMahon se soumettre ou se démettre, to submit to parliament's majority or to resign.
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