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"involuntarily" Definitions
  1. suddenly, without you intending it or being able to control it
  2. without the person involved wanting it to happen

718 Sentences With "involuntarily"

How to use involuntarily in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "involuntarily" and check conjugation/comparative form for "involuntarily". Mastering all the usages of "involuntarily" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And I just — maybe involuntarily, my hand went up.
And I just — maybe involuntarily, my hand went up.
In the first quarter, 6,175 passengers were involuntarily denied boarding.
He was involuntarily committed for mental evaluation for 72 hours.
Ngoc Lan, on the other hand, came to Leisureland involuntarily.
Some find themselves involuntarily reaching for rifles throughout the day.
So, those paranoid of being watched involuntarily can feel secure.
The judge also ordered medication be administered involuntarily, if necessary.
In 2015, about 46,000 people were involuntarily bumped from American flights.
Anyone involuntarily bumped must be compensated, per Department of Transportation regulations.
"For people who work involuntarily, it's the opposite effect," Pillemer said.
I must have winced, involuntarily, because they always changed the subject.
Well, you know how you laugh involuntarily if something is funny?
Instead, they arbitrarily selected four passengers who would be involuntarily bumped.
Instead, United invoked the rules allowing them to bump passengers involuntarily.
Last year, Buckingham was involuntarily expelled from the band Fleetwood Mac.
JetBlue and Delta were close behind, involuntarily bumping three passengers per 100,000.
I've shouted involuntarily at the jump-scare moments in Silent Hill games.
Reading this made every single part of my being involuntarily seize up.
To read Herrera is to be immersed, almost involuntarily, in the uncanny.
Prostitutes were often involuntarily inscribed with the initials of pimps and lovers.
Within hours, he would be involuntarily committed to a hospital in Indianapolis.
But they can also be involuntarily bumped, when there are no volunteers.
Here's what actually happens when you stop being vegan, involuntarily or otherwise.
Artist rendering of me, involuntarily dancing whenever "Kiss It Better" comes on.
I could allow him to leave, or I could admit him involuntarily.
Bladder and colon involuntarily empty, and the autonomic nervous system kicks in.
And teachers without assignments were involuntarily placed in whatever positions were open.
You know when you stub your toe and involuntarily utter an expletive?
She stopped, almost involuntarily, in front of a crate of miniature eggplants.
Still, in any given year 4 million Americans lose their jobs involuntarily.
And yet either of them could be involuntarily bumped, for the same compensation.
Each time, he found himself involuntarily jerking his hand out of the water.
"I just saw their soundcheck today and I involuntarily screamed," she told Fallon.
"Your vocal cords involuntarily spasm, creating this odd airflow," she told the outlet.
I involuntarily make a loud sniffing noise and it makes him look up.
And I knew that when you find love, you jump in, almost involuntarily.
Almost involuntarily, she found herself apologizing and begging to stay, to no avail.
The odds of actually being booted from a flight involuntarily are quite low.
In speaking this sentence, you turn, involuntarily, into a magical hen of loss.
Defeated, embarrassed, mouth involuntarily agape, I addressed the severity of what had happened.
Are the guys who come to see you for being involuntarily celibate overtly angry?
It is the tendency of brain due to which one sense involuntarily triggers another.
So, in 212, the Kremlin amended the law so organizations could be labeled involuntarily.
The mental health specialist concluded there were no grounds to have him involuntarily committed.
Indeed, many couples have involuntarily divorced so that sick children could qualify for Medicaid.
He was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility in San Diego a month earlier.
If you're involuntarily bumped, you are likely entitled to some money from the airline.
The evidence suggests a lot of people are still sitting on the sidelines involuntarily.
Lee had been "involuntarily removed" to China, British Foreign Minister Philip Hammond said earlier.
But after some spirited jousting with Rothfeld, Griffith fell silent — involuntarily, it turned out.
Employed people are cutting back spending involuntarily, because they cannot go out or travel.
However, it is below average for the number of people working part time involuntarily.
He temporarily upheld the city's right to hospitalize a mentally disturbed homeless woman involuntarily.
One patient has since twice been involuntarily committed in other states, Dr. Moore said.
The airline expects the number of involuntarily bumped passengers to remain low, she said.
Dick had his wife involuntarily committed to a local psychiatric center for two weeks.
He was legally prohibited from owning a firearm because he had been involuntarily committed.
In May, Ms. Wilson, some six months pregnant, followed him, involuntarily, on lesser charges.
This happens involuntarily in people with Parkinson's disease, which compromises the brain's reward centers.
Jones was involuntarily committed to mental hospitals for more than a week after his arrest.
This may be another contributing cause of drug overdose after involuntarily committed individuals are released.
Watch below and involuntarily place a hand on your chest, so touched will you be.
"It's fairly rare to be involuntarily bumped," said George Hobica, publisher of travel site AirfareWatchdog.com.
Sexsomnia is a medical condition that causes people to involuntarily exhibit sexualized behavior while sleeping.
My leg involuntarily twitches with vibration—was it my phone, or just a phantom feeling?
"Sympathetic viewers will involuntarily mimic her facial expressions, leading to emotional contagion," Mr. Plantinga said.
A Sagamihara city official said later Uematsu had been involuntarily committed to hospital on Feb.
My eyes began to dart involuntarily to call-outs of my name on social media.
" Ms. McCarthy said 957 passengers were involuntarily denied boarding in April, "a very challenging month.
" Beierle also seemed to identify himself as an "incel," or someone who is "involuntarily celibate.
In 2015, he was involuntarily committed again for up to five years, according to court records.
Instead, she makes Winnifred involuntarily loud and clumsy; her royal klutziness simply is what she is.
I did not find involuntary hospitalization helpful any of the three times I was involuntarily hospitalized.
As she blinked, or as her nose scrunched up involuntarily at certain moments, I watched her.
" Another former operations employee said even though he left the company involuntarily, he "immediately felt liberated.
And what are the consequences that you pay when you do cross them, voluntarily or involuntarily?
Warning: Watching these videos may make you start involuntarily muttering "Peppa" in a faux-British affectation.
Earlier in the trial, a psychiatrist testified Carter was delusional after becoming "involuntarily intoxicated" by antidepressants.
Watch the performance above and also probably find yourself bobbing your head involuntarily like I did.
That's compared to the 11,968 people who were involuntarily bumped between July and September of 43.
Legislation to prevent involuntarily bumping was one of the measures that had gained that most steam.
It is increasingly rare for an airline to involuntarily deny passengers boarding, but it does occur.
We made eye contact, and I smirked—involuntarily, if that mitigates things, which it probably doesn't.
Jeff Flake, Bob Corker, and John McCain, are on their way out, either voluntarily or involuntarily.
Soon I was carrying this structure with me everywhere, applying it involuntarily to everything I saw.
Prince's handwriting was beautiful, with a fluidity that suggested it poured out of him almost involuntarily.
Had Mr. Cruz been involuntarily committed, state law could have prohibited him from buying a firearm.
Several teams have made quarterback changes this season, both voluntarily and involuntarily, with drastically different results.
In 2015 alone, 46,000 customers were involuntarily bumped from flights, according to the Department of Transportation.
I still think about that hallway fight scene, and when I do, I involuntarily start smiling.
Hiccups happen when the diaphragm and external intercostal muscles involuntarily contract, causing someone to rapidly inhale.
Airlines are also bumping passengers, or involuntarily preventing ticketed passengers from flying, at a record-low rate.
Additionally, Parrott was an outspoken detractor of "cuckolds," a group he now seems to have involuntarily joined.
While she was involuntarily held in the hospital, doctors determined that she suffers from mental health issues.
This made Rodger a hero among "incels," an internet community of people who claim they're involuntarily celibate.
That's why Infowars (involuntarily) became the subject of two Facebook video events held with press his month.
The Supreme Court also ruled in 1967 that U.S. citizens cannot be involuntarily stripped of their citizenship.
"Federal law sets a maximum compensation amount of $1350 for passengers who are involuntarily bumped," he wrote.
In 2015, 46,000 travelers were involuntarily bumped from flights, according to data from the Department of Transportation.
We gather weight loss advice, voluntarily or involuntarily, from news outlets, social media and just about everyone.
About 18 months before the shooting, Peterson attempted to have Cruz involuntarily committed over mental health concerns.
Until as recently as 1996, the law allowed the government to involuntarily sterilize those with such disabilities.
The Department of Transportation has set minimum amounts passengers must receive if they are involuntarily denied boarding.
Such a policy requires the use of involuntarily collected taxpayer money to devise and manage such nudges.
Defense lawyers argued that the state failed to meet the legal requirements needed to involuntarily medicate Dear.
It will not be surprising if involuntarily he helps himself, as the French say, à la fourchette.
The instinct to say "yes" is so embedded that even as a grown woman you're conflicted, involuntarily.
Here's what actually happens when you stop being vegan, involuntarily or otherwise, according to a registered dietitian.
His testimony that the young defendant was involuntarily intoxicated by antidepressants has gotten alleged killers off before.
Why can't someone like Ms. Williams, who seemed clearly to have a delusional illness, be involuntarily committed?
As the virtual speedometer climbs, a human driver's jaw will clench involuntarily, or relax into a grin.
Under federal law, a person who has been involuntarily committed is never again allowed to have firearms.
Sometimes, however, a person's bladder muscles start to contract involuntarily and create an urgent need to urinate.
After handing an usher my ticket for entry, my body involuntarily waltzed over to the snack stand.
However, in some cases, the airline will involuntarily deny boarding, bumping a passenger to a later flight.
More than one-third of the company's work force has left voluntarily or involuntarily over the last year.
When the law was passed, about 80% of people in mental hospitals were there involuntarily, by some estimates.
Once you reach orgasm, the muscles in your vagina, anus, and uterus involuntarily rhythmically contract and then relax.
Every couple of seconds, I was hit with a vibrating sensation that forced the muscles to involuntarily contract.
After all, a man involuntarily entered a police van allegedly uninjured and left with a fatal spinal injury.
Earlier this week, two members of Congress introduced a measure that would prohibit airlines from involuntarily bumping passengers.
Nearly everyone on camera praises him and loves him; the participants often smile involuntarily while thinking about him.
The one person in your group who — seemingly involuntarily — makes a spastic funny face in Every. Single. Photo.
Cifuentes, before tending her resignation, said taking the cream, worth around 40 euros, had been an "involuntarily error".
She says police were called and she was involuntarily committed to a mental health facility for 5 days.
Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) on Tuesday unveiled legislation to ban airlines from involuntarily bumping passengers off flights.
In addition, carriers posted record low numbers for mishandled bags and for passengers being involuntarily bumped from flights.
PBGC has the right to involuntarily terminate Sears' pension if the company fails to put up enough collateral.
In hard-hit Massachusetts, an estimated 6,353 people were involuntarily committed for addiction in fiscal year 2016 alone.
My job was to evaluate whether he met the criteria to be involuntarily admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
A stalking victim ends up involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital — with the stalker possibly in the building.
That database wouldn't be used to involuntarily conscript people into service unless Congress drafted legislation to do so.
It would also restrict gun purchases or possession by those who have been involuntarily committed to a hospital.
"I was surprised that it caused my arm to involuntarily come out of the water," Dr. Catania said.
Blacking out doesn't mean drinking to the point of involuntarily falling asleep, as Kavanaugh suggested, she told me.
The messages are sent involuntarily – that is to say without the consent of the computer's owner – the NCA adds.
Yale's Bandy Lee has said it could be possible to get Trump involuntarily committed to a mental health institution.
"There are a lot of rights airlines retain including the right to 'involuntarily deny' you boarding," he told CNBC.
The odds of getting involuntarily bumped from an airline flight are slim, but it pays to know your rights.
From 2013 through last year, for example, Virgin America and Hawaiian Airlines involuntarily removed one passenger per 100,000 customers.
Am I going to going to involuntarily use my boyfriend's dick as a microphone while I give him head?
And, each year, as many as 7,957 service members are involuntarily separated where financial distress is a contributing factor.
"We strongly believe that coming out is a personal choice and we do not support involuntarily outing," Foster said.
Loesch decried the "mentally unfit" and Israel argued for expanded police power to involuntarily commit people with mental illness.
But employees acknowledged that they had never seen the residents laugh or cry involuntarily -- the hallmark indicators of PBA.
That figure includes both passengers who were involuntarily denied boarding and those who elect to take a different flight.
A doctor suspected that he had broken his back, and had him involuntarily committed and strapped to a board.
It also creates minimum dimensions for legroom on commercial flights and bans airlines from involuntarily removing passengers after boarding.
" United will no longer require seated passengers to involuntarily leave the plane, "unless safety or security is at risk.
" Sodini has been hailed as a hero by some in men's rights activist circles, and considered himself "involuntarily celibate.
Was consent lacking because the victim was unconscious, unwilling, voluntarily or involuntarily intoxicated, developmentally disabled, or otherwise physically incapacitated?
One way to be disqualified from possessing a gun is to have been involuntarily committed to mental health treatment.
" I flinch involuntarily every time I hear "between you and I" or "He gave John and I a gift.
The law prevents patients from being held involuntarily if they are not an imminent threat to themselves or others.
At one point, a patrol officer tried to have the would-be ruler involuntarily treated for a mental disorder.
But this is shortsighted: It essentially pits employees against each other involuntarily, potentially adding needless tension to the workplace.
In my living room, my mouth flew open involuntarily and emitted a scream I was not in control of.
Sia has said that the song took about twenty minutes to write, the words tumbling from her mouth involuntarily.
Among them: The airline won't remove boarded passengers involuntarily -- or call authorities -- unless there's a safety or security issue.
By the storm's end, a city official said, seven individuals were involuntarily brought to hospitals for mental health evaluations.
The same questions need to be asked about the possibility of people involuntarily making false lashes in North Korea.
When Jeremiah noticed, his upper lip began to involuntarily curl, and suddenly the stark difference between their faces was clear.
Not require customers seated on the plane to give up their seat involuntarily unless safety or security is at risk.
The Iraqi government has long had a policy of not accepting those who were being repatriated involuntarily to the country.
My nose sometimes scrunched at the smell, but involuntarily so — I enjoyed the act and took quiet pride in it.
"There were tears in my eyes, my nose was leaking and even my genital organ was involuntarily discharging," he recalled.
White recently had been involuntarily committed and later released in another city, according to Carter, who provided no other details.
Now, where it gets really interesting is when passengers are bumped involuntarily, like the four people on Sunday night's flight.
I didn't know, for instance, how depression can snatch away your sex drive, leaving you feeling newly—and involuntarily—asexual.
I'd go out in a civilian dress and shoes, meet an officer, and involuntarily raise my hand to salute him.
She's been placed on an involuntarily psychiatric hold in the past and has gone to rehab a number of times.
Identification: Right now, federal law prohibits people from owning a gun if they've been involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
According to the Department of Transportation, you may be entitled to compensation if you are involuntarily bumped off a flight.
As passengers refused that voluntary request, the airline said it would choose travelers at random to leave the plane involuntarily.
"The last thing they need while serving in a combat zone is to worry about being involuntarily separated," he continued.
Dozens of elderly men and women — some in wheelchairs, others whose hands tremble involuntarily — gather excitedly around the game tables.
He spent more than a month in a mental institution, although court records suggest that he was never involuntarily committed.
When that occurs, airlines are required to first offer volunteers compensation in exchange for their seats before bumping someone involuntarily.
Over half a million Americans were placed involuntarily in crowded, inhumane public mental hospitals, many of which resembled snake pits.
Lilly points in particular to that paper's record of involuntarily outing a transgender teacher who then took her own life.
Most in the group are now either pumping close to capacity, or are losing barrels involuntarily on a daily basis.
The day ended when he was involuntarily admitted to a hospital, taken there in an ambulance under a police escort.
Several days later, Ms. Terry convinced a judge otherwise, and the woman was involuntarily committed and removed from the home.
Others specifically ban gun ownership for those who have been involuntarily committed to a hospital because of mental health reasons.
Hong Kong police said in a statement: "Any suggestion that 'Mr Lee was involuntarily removed to the Mainland' remains speculative".
An existing law bars gun purchases to people "adjudicated as a mental defective" or involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
The travel website Upgraded Points recently conducted a study to determine which airlines are most likely to bump passengers involuntarily.
Here is a list of all the ways a president can leave office, involuntarily or voluntarily, before their term is up.
The alt-right emerged from the same parts of the internet as violently misogynist groups like incels, or involuntarily celibate men.
The seizures affect at least 17 percent of children in parts of Uganda, and make sufferers look like they're nodding involuntarily.
The animals are steering through the most extreme winds on the planet as they barrel through the storm, flying involuntarily downwind.
And it has also never been easier for our minds to involuntarily make judgements and experience feelings of jealousy and frustration.
In short, you can involuntarily get bumped from a flight that you've paid for, but airlines have to offer you compensation.
Beth Blecker, CEO of Eastern Planning, has seen about 10 clients involuntarily displaced from their jobs in the past several years.
What is‎ most infuriating is that there is no reason for anyone to be involuntarily bumped from an airline flight -- ever.
"We are examining the facts ... to determine whether he was taken voluntarily or involuntarily to Mexico," attorney Scott Brown told reporters.
The 12 top-revenue-generating airlines in the US involuntarily bumped just 2,745 people between July and September of this year.
More African people have migrated voluntarily in the last 25 years than were brought involuntarily through the trans-Atlantic slave trade.
Besides creating minimum dimensions for legroom on commercial flights, the bipartisan legislation also bans airlines from involuntarily removing passengers after boarding.
Carter's attorneys argued she had been involuntarily intoxicated by medication and not fully able to comprehend the consequences of her actions.
Mr. Goodwin said he was investigated by the agency for misconduct after he refused to be involuntarily assigned to Des Moines.
Roughly a week later, the boy began to cry as his limbs involuntarily spasmed and his jaw began to clench tight.
He then started arching his back and neck involuntarily and eventually could barely breathe, prompting his family to call for help.
Historically, experiments were conducted—many times involuntarily—on minority and other vulnerable populations (including the mentally ill and prisoners), Oh says.
Synesthesia affects people differently, but McCracken's form—known as chromesthesia—means she spontaneously and involuntarily sees colors when listening to music.
Dr. Hare said the study should also serve as a reminder that humans respond involuntarily to the actions of their pets.
They must learn to play "hard ball" and remember that a nonprofit cannot be involuntarily put into bankruptcy by its creditors.
Stoneman Douglas officials considered trying to have Mr. Cruz involuntarily committed for a mental-health evaluation, though they ultimately did not.
Going through education with only white female teachers is setting up children to involuntarily stereotype white people and women as educators.
Federal law prohibits felons, people convicted of certain domestic violence misdemeanors and people involuntarily committed to mental institutions from owning guns.
Passengers are involuntarily denied boarding when not enough volunteers step up to change their flights, although this scenario is relatively rare.
His mouth opens involuntarily—some delayed response of the nervous system, no doubt, but I take it as a last gasp.
The 30-year-old could be involuntarily institutionalized to undergo a psychological evaluation in accordance with Florida law, per the Herald.
But it is not clear whether there are any prior historical examples of a president testifying involuntarily for a state trial.
State bar officials want his law license involuntarily suspended because of claims he ripped off a client for more than $22016,22020.
The airline operator said in May it saw a 79 percent decrease year over year in passengers being involuntarily denied boarding.
Rouse was involuntarily discharged from the Nebraska National Guard in the fall of 2017, a spokesperson told BuzzFeed News on Tuesday.
I had a recurring sense that I was involuntarily watching the movie the way I listen to podcasts: on 1.25x speed.
I had a recurring sense that I was involuntarily watching the movie the way I listen to podcasts: on 1.25x speed.
And most of the studies explicitly exclude the violent including those who are involuntarily committed, hospitalized, in jails and in prisons.
In the early 1950s, he left the Memphis Police Department involuntarily, after he'd been caught selling illegal liquor under the table.
Poignantly, Mosse's photographs of the surveillance state reveal our own innate and deeply human capacity for surveilling others, whether involuntarily or otherwise.
Incel, the online community of "involuntarily celibate" men radicalized by their shared mistrust of women, has existed on the internet for years.
He previously had been involuntarily committed in 2003 to the mental heath facility for schizophrenia and arrested for threatening an ex-girlfriend.
The Morses say their son asked police to involuntarily commit him to a facility two weeks ago, but he was released recently.
EMS can "involuntarily activate" or wake up the quads, so that people don't totally lose their muscle mass or function, he says.
He thinks it will keep the more believing Ark-goers from shooting him dirty looks when he involuntarily sniggers at the displays.
As Christine grew more adamant that the boy wasn't her son, the LAPD captain had her involuntarily committed to a mental hospital.
When the web was first weaved in the 1990s, intellectual-property owners found their property had, involuntarily, been turned into a common.
As Keith Vidal's parents knew, it's much easier to have a person involuntarily committed when the police deliver him to the hospital.
Often during sex your breathing will halt and other body muscle groups (such as the legs or the lower back) spasm involuntarily.
The condition affects people differently, but McCracken's form, known as chromesthesia, means she spontaneously and involuntarily sees colors when listening to music.
Clement was one of 50 at Interior who received letters in early June that they would be involuntarily reassigned to other positions.
Police in the town of Tsukui near Tokyo contacted the suspect, Satoshi Uematsu, and he was involuntarily committed to hospital on Feb.
A socialist and advocate of non-violence, Rustin became more involved with gay rights in the '80s after he was involuntarily outed.
The year before, he was involuntarily committed to a mental institution, according to Bensalem Police Department Director of Public Safety Fred Harran.
There were 28 days in the last quarter in which United didn't involuntarily deny boarding to a single passenger, the airline said.
In the first six months of this year, 17,330 passengers were involuntarily bumped in the U.S., out of 332.4 million who traveled.
Her subjects include the alt-right, "incels" (young men angry that they are involuntarily celibate) and Jordan Peterson (an anti-feminist writer).
He was involuntarily committed to hospital after he expressed a "willingness to kill severely disabled people", an official in Sagamihara told Reuters.
Pain patients are being denied treatment and involuntarily tapered off of opioid medications, even if they've never shown any risks of abuse.
The non-criminal issues include being an undocumented immigrant, involuntarily committed or dishonorably discharged from the military, the Tampa Bay Times said.
My eyes involuntarily flick to the large vessel in the corner with the decapitated remains of a venomous variety of Okinawan snake.
"We are examining the facts… to determine whether he was taken voluntarily or involuntarily to Mexico," Couch's attorney Scott Brown told reporters.
California law allows doctors to involuntarily confine a person with a mental disorder if they are a danger to themselves or others.
Unless the involuntarily unemployed can continue shopping, there will be an unnecessary reduction in total demand, leading to unnecessary increases in unemployment.
Today Nellis also experiences constant pain from unhealed sores in her left nasal passage, which leads her to clench her jaw involuntarily.
The airline industry came in for a drubbing, especially after passengers were involuntarily removed from United and Delta flights in the spring.
The percentage of people involuntarily working part-time is higher, as is the share of people unemployed for more than six months.
Even being involuntarily bumped can work out in your favor, said Adam Goldstein, co-founder and chief executive of fare site Hipmunk.
Those laws have limits; they only allow the government to involuntarily isolate people who are actively contagious and a danger to society.
Federal law prohibits people who have been "adjudicated as a mental defective" or involuntarily committed to a mental institution from buying guns.
He had been involuntarily hospitalized when he was 17, yet Pennsylvania allows people with this on their record to purchase a gun.
The husband locks his gaze on the water bottle sitting in front of him so that his eyes don't start rolling involuntarily.
It allows us to take an individual to be - - against their will, involuntarily to go to a mental facility and be treated.
People who are fed involuntarily can lose muscle mass, Dr. Caplan added, and in the Texas case, prisoners could become infection-prone.
Republican party rules do not include a mechanism to involuntarily remove from the ticket a presidential candidate who has already been nominated.
Since 2008, these eager overbookers have involuntarily denied boarding to 553 and 16, respectively, of every 100,000 passengers who showed up to fly.
I would lie on the table, my hands involuntarily balling themselves into fists as his ungloved hands worked their way under my clothing.
Between 1909 and 1979, more than 20,000 people were involuntarily sterilized while living in California state institutions for the mentally ill and disabled.
The practice of overbooking flights and involuntarily bumping passengers is not uncommon or illegal, though problems are typically figured out prior to boarding.
A measure of unemployment that includes people working part time involuntarily fell to 8.6 percent in April, the lowest level since November 2007.
Scattershot staccato clattering, as your fingers are simultaneously sucked in and involuntarily hammer out a grapeshot of key strikes, is what actually happens.
One proposed change in both bills would prohibit airlines from involuntarily removing customers from a flight after they have already boarded the plane.
When Piper Perabo and Daniel Sunjata face off onscreen, you may duck involuntarily, afraid of being cut by a dangerously sharp zygomatic arch.
Federal law prohibits an individual "adjudicated as a mental defective" or involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility from owning or purchasing a firearm.
In Washington, for example, a person has to be involuntarily committed for more than two weeks to be prohibited from possessing a gun.
The other exception is if you're involuntarily denied boarding, otherwise known as getting "bumped" from a flight, which may result from airline overbooking.
The most recent figures from 2015 show about 18,000 guard and reserve troops remained involuntarily activated — mostly under that 2001 state of emergency.
Only about 1 in 10 of those workers who lose their jobs involuntarily ever earn as much per week afterward, the report found.
Democrats argue the bill is a compassionate — and economically fruitful — way to prevent the deportation of young immigrants brought to the country involuntarily.
Our lungs, after all, are often our first line of defense against what we are exposed to, both intentionally (vaping) and involuntarily (pollution).
In 0.0043, United involuntarily denied boarding to 3,765 of its more than 86 million passengers on oversold flights, according to the Transportation Department.
With the impeachment crisis in full swing, the Supreme Court may be forced involuntarily into the political fray of the 2020 presidential election.
The only thing he could do was involuntarily kick his legs, raising his hospital gown and leaving him naked from the waist down.
The practice of overselling flights and involuntarily bumping passengers is not uncommon or illegal, though it is typically figured out prior to boarding.
He followed up with tweets and replies saying he believes that some people are "choosing" to beg on the streets and aren't involuntarily homeless.
Confession: I began involuntarily tearing up about halfway through the film, and kept crying on and off until the movie came to an end.
"At some point people are involuntarily pushed out from where they are living, whether it is through the legal process or not," she said.
With Level One privileges at the psychiatric hospital where I was involuntarily committed in 2002, the patient was allowed off the ward for breakfast.
And if they were going to remove someone involuntarily, they didn't have to knock him onto the floor and drag him down the aisle.
It will also not require customers seated on the plane to give up their seat involuntarily unless it poses a safety or security risk.
But the practice of overselling flights and involuntarily bumping passengers is not uncommon or illegal, though it is typically figured out prior to boarding.
" At one point on Tuesday, Rayburn asked Breggin: "You formed your opinion that [Carter] was involuntarily intoxicated before you talked to a single person?
What it looks like: A screenshot of everyone you involuntarily share a Netflix account with, topped with two or three poop emojis and "#cashmeoutsidehowaboutdah."
Just how much involuntarily bumped passengers are entitled to depends on how quickly the airline can get the traveler to his or her destination.
"The wheels have finally come off as the Zimbabwe government has been cornered and forced to involuntarily de-dollarise without a plan," Mashakada said.
As new legislation narrowed the criteria by which patients could be involuntarily committed, many people affected by mental illness were left in the lurch.
Under New York law, what is the procedure by which a person like Ms. Williams, who's putting herself at risk, could be treated involuntarily?
German Klimenko, Putin's Internet adviser, has suggested Russia must be ready to disconnect itself or to be involuntarily cut off from the global Internet.
That I'd been involuntarily committed to Bellevue, the notorious psych ward to which we at Legal Aid routinely sent our most mentally ill clients?
"We're going to see a lot of disruption going forward as advisors get out of the business voluntarily and involuntarily," said Inspired Financial's Zohlen.
If Muthana is, as she claims, a "birthright" citizen of the United States, she cannot be involuntarily stripped of her citizenship for any reason.
Paul sees a news report about a political dissident involuntarily made tiny by an oppressive government and later discovers festering inequality around Leisureland itself.
Neurologists have long known that applying electric current to certain parts of the brain can make people involuntarily jerk certain parts of their bodies.
Mr. DiNardo was not legally allowed to possess a firearm because he had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution, according to police records.
In Tennessee, like most states, police can only seize guns if a person is involuntarily committed to a mental health facility and judged a danger.
However, some healthcare providers are concerned that allowing doctors to involuntarily detain people with substance use disorders will burden emergency rooms, reports the  Associated Press .
In the last six months, three men tied to the "incel" — or "involuntarily celibate" — community of men's rights activists carried out extreme acts of violence.
Unless you're involuntarily locked in the cellar of some Berkeley farm cooperative, being a Trump supporter does not make you an oppressed minority in America.
Washington (CNN)Hillary Clinton on Monday interrupted her stump speech involuntarily in a coughing spell -- and wryly blamed the incident on GOP rival Donald Trump.
And 60 percent of older workers who experience involuntary job loss end up retiring involuntarily, according to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
Last year alone, more than 23,2800 people were involuntarily denied boarding on 286 major U.S. airlines, according to data from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
You can't involuntarily commit a 32-year-old who you're not even married to because he thinks he's hearing century-old ghosts discussing transportation options.
Michael had never even heard of incels until he accidentally stumbled onto a YouTube video criticizing men whose identities centered on their being involuntarily celibate.
They say the confession of the then-16-year-old was involuntarily coerced and that there existed no physical evidence linking him to the crime.
After informing one of her supervisors about Wallace's alleged behavior, she says she was subjected to retaliation by being involuntarily moved to a new job.
President Donald Trump said on Monday he believed people with mental illness should be "involuntarily confined" in certain circumstances in order to prevent mass shootings.
Sometimes hidden, sometimes in plain sight, artistry sustains those who keep apartment houses running all over town the way it always does, completely and involuntarily.
The slower pace means you won't be involuntarily hammering away at the keyboard with your tongue hanging out, so the lecturer won't suspect a thing.
They determined that he was not an immediate danger to himself or others and that he could not be involuntarily taken to a mental hospital.
An alternative medication, promethazine, treats nausea but can cause a severe and uncomfortable reaction in some patients, where the face and other muscles spasm involuntarily.
The obvious irony is that victims who want justice for being made involuntarily infamous risk making their fame worse if they try to get justice.
And remember, at some point, voluntarily or involuntarily, you'll be moving out and returning to the highest honor our nation bestows: being a good citizen.
He was detained under the Baker Act, which allows for someone to be involuntarily held for up to 72 hours at a mental health facility.
Between 20053 and 22005, more than one in eight Milwaukee renters were displaced involuntarily, whether by formal or informal eviction, landlord foreclosure, or building condemnation.
But McQ's legs shook involuntarily beneath his dark jeans and his voice was hoarse with pain during a three-hour effort to tell his story.
In 2016, he legally changed his name to Jesse, and then "involuntarily" left his job at the prison, he said, declining to provide further details.
If Cruz had been involuntarily committed under the act, it could have made it difficult for him later to legally purchase a firearm Florida law at that time prohibited the sale of weapons to someone who had been involuntarily committed, but CNN legal analyst Mark O'Mara said that, while there is a database for Baker Act commitments, that information is not always consulted in gun background checks.
Rodger has become an icon among incels, a misogynistic community of men who describe themselves as "involuntarily celibate" and blame women for their lack of sex.
However, Rafful says that interviews with people taken involuntarily into the treatment centers in Tijuana showed that most of them weren't ready to stop using drugs.
So much so, that whenever he gets a splash of water on his whiskers, he involuntarily flaps his paws around like some sort of befuddled gentleman.
Authorities could, and probably should, increase the compensation owed to involuntarily bumped passengers and avoid some of the specific dynamics that gave rise to this incident.
I was involuntarily hospitalized three times, which I write about in the book, and none of those experiences were positive; I found all of them traumatic.
The rule prevents facilities from evicting or involuntarily discharging a resident on the basis of their sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, gender expression, or HIV status.
His statement came after a British Foreign Office report last month said it was likely Lee had been "involuntarily removed" to mainland China from Hong Kong.
Before the attack the driver announced on Facebook that a revolt of involuntarily celibate men—who resent women for not having sex with them—had begun.
But she said there are also potential dangers in having people in drug treatment involuntarily, and jurisdictions must be careful about how they run those programs.
According to an arrest affidavit obtained by PEOPLE, DiNardo is not allowed to possess weapons because he had previously been involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
American Airlines executive Kerry Philipovitch made similar commitments, saying the airline won't involuntarily remove a passenger who is already on the plane to accommodate another passenger.
Taunton, Massachusetts (CNN)A woman on trial for urging her boyfriend to kill himself was delusional after becoming "involuntarily intoxicated" by antidepressants, a psychiatrist said Monday.
United Flight 3411 was the subject of intense global scrutiny last week when Dao, a paying customer, was selected to be involuntarily bumped from his seat.
Given this, it's no surprise that private equity firms make a lot more risk than is fair to impose on those involuntarily along for the ride.
Friday's bill would prohibit the Pentagon from involuntarily separating or denying the re-enlistment of currently serving transgender troops solely on the basis of gender identity.
The physicians weren't convinced and placed her in a glass room for 10 hours before they committed her involuntarily to a local psychiatric hospital for observation.
The measure would also ban airlines from involuntarily removing customers from a flight after they have already boarded, unless it's a matter of safety or security.
Steven Soderbergh's new movie, "Unsane," is an effectively nasty, sometimes funny, sometimes grindingly unpleasant thriller about a woman who is involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital.
For their part, federal regulators could discourage airlines from behaving like this in the future by boosting the compensation required to customers who get bumped involuntarily.
Between January and March 2017, 900 passengers were involuntarily denied boarding on United flights; this year during the same time period, only 27 people got bumped.
In return, Icelandair will transport you from Point A to Point B and pay for a hotel (probably not the honeymoon suite) if you're bumped involuntarily.
Milicevic was involuntarily checked into an inpatient mental-health facility and found her time there life-changing as she refocused on what authentically brought her joy.
Federalists tended to see the mutineers as bloodstained murderers, while Jeffersonian Republicans viewed them as men held involuntarily who had a right to seek their liberty.
And even when people are involuntarily committed for treatment, the median length of stay, at only five days, is shorter than in almost any other state.
Last year, airlines involuntarily bumped about 40,600 people, a fraction of the roughly 660 million passengers who flew, according to data from the Department of Transportation.
That&aposs when a passenger is bumped involuntarily, and although they&aposre legally entitled to certain compensation and accommodations, it can be an incredibly frustrating experience.
Voters, whether voluntarily or involuntarily, assess the perceived costs to voting vis-à-vis its perceived gains when deciding whether or not to cast a ballot.
At that point, an ambulance took him to the hospital under a police escort and his parents — terrified, angry and wrung out — had him involuntarily admitted.
Likewise, in 22019, the Clinton Foundation's AIDs charitable arm had its license to collect donations in Massachusetts involuntarily revoked for failure to file the necessary paperwork.
Such companies collect information from banks on accounts that are overdrawn or involuntarily closed, perhaps because the holder overspent the balance and did not repay the money.
Meanwhile, American Airlines has announced that officials "will not involuntarily remove a revenue passenger, who has already boarded, in order to give a seat to another passenger."
The forced psychiatric evaluation was permitted under Florida's controversial Baker Act, which allows a person to be involuntarily committed to a mental health facility for 72 hours.
But if you don't volunteer and end up getting involuntarily bumped from the flight, under federal law you can ask for cash instead of an airline voucher.
However, Dean said, authorities did not feel then that he could be involuntarily taken into psychiatric custody (also known as a 5150, in reference to state law).
If treated equally, women officers should expect to be involuntarily assigned at an equal proportion to branches such as infantry just as their male counterparts are presently.
As we've reported, about 13 million working-age people in the U.S. are unemployed, involuntarily working part-time or have wholly given up on the job hunt.
It is apologising involuntarily when scooting past someone, both to warn of your presence and to express regret for any inconvenience your mere existence may have caused.
According to data from the US Department of Transportation, 46,000 passengers were involuntarily bumped from flights in 2015, the most recent year for which data is available.
For urge incontinence, alternatives include Botox for the bladder and a surgically implanted pacemaker for the bladder that prevents it from involuntarily contracting too much, Swenson said.
After his arrest, Jones was involuntarily committed to a hospital and then transferred a behavioral health center where he spent more than a week, court records show.
Then, take your first bite and prepare to involuntarily moan with sinful pleasure at the synthesis of smoky bacon, crispy chicken, tangy pickles, and creamy, spicy spread.
But Cantwell called for further changes in how an airline determines who to involuntarily deny boarding to when there are not enough volunteers giving up their seats.
In an interview with New Yorkmagazine, Luhn said that Shine even called her father once in the hopes of having her involuntarily committed to a mental facility.
States typically offer parents only two choices: reunify with their child after completing mandated requirements, or relinquish their parental rights (voluntarily or involuntarily) in a state adoption.
The U.S. government is put in an awkward position itself; it would be odd to accuse Putin now using information leaked involuntarily from its own secret sources.
The House legislation also contains new consumer protections, including language to prevent airlines from involuntarily removing passengers from their seats once they have already boarded the aircraft.
The refugee crisis could reach unprecedented numbers, with as many as 0003 million returning home, many involuntarily, by the end of the year, according to humanitarian organizations.
Federal rules dictate a carrier must first check whether anyone is willing to voluntarily give up their seat before then bumping flyers involuntarily if nobody comes forward.
Munoz claimed the passenger which had been involuntarily removed from the flight had "raised his voice and refused to comply" in an internal letter sent to employees.
The plans will act as insurance policies to protect against the possibility that water use will involuntarily be shut off due to insufficient supply to meet demand.
But if I knew that I could be involuntarily committed, I would never seek treatment again and would simply let my condition deteriorate until I committed suicide.
For now, I am content to listen to recordings while silently following the sheet music, my fingers twitching involuntarily like the post-mortem spasms of a cadaver.
Federal law forbids people who have been involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital and people found to be a danger to themselves or others from having guns.
LORD OF ALL THE DEADA Nonfiction NovelBy Javier Cercas An individual subjected to traumatic stress will often involuntarily suppress the memory of the event that caused it.
Communicating how it feels to inhabit a body that has been involuntarily politicized, The Destructors is a sympathetic study of people growing up in an unsympathetic world.
Women reported being regularly rejected for jobs if they were of childbearing age, or having contracts that were involuntarily converted to part time if they became pregnant.
"There is a big difference between recognizing something is very off about a person and them being actually adjudicated with a mental defect or involuntarily committed," said Cevallos.
Many a Saturday Night Live sketch painted Conway, Ivanka Trump, and Melania Trump as reluctant bystanders who involuntarily got dragged into something they wanted nothing to do with.
The police called in a team of mental health specialists who decided that Long did not qualify to be involuntarily detained for mental health evaluation under state law.
Sarah Toney, who was sentenced to 27 years in prison in January, filed an application for post-conviction release on May 18, arguing that she "involuntarily" pleaded guilty.
Well the body's natural reaction to cold temperatures is to shiver —this is where your muscles contract involuntarily or shake to generate heat, and it's controlled by nerves.
Similarly, a recent New York Times column suggested that sex robots might quiet the anger of involuntarily celibate men (or "incels") who believe that women owe them sex.
While protagonist Sawyer Valentini (Claire Foy) undergoes a heightened, Hitchockian journey after she's involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital, many facets of her experience are based in reality.
Stress and weight loss can sometimes go hand-in-hand, and it's sad that Dunham feels so unhappy that it's causing her to involuntarily alter how she eats.
The decades-old state law says that someone threatening to harm themselves or others can be involuntarily or voluntarily committed to a mental health facility for 72 hours.
He did, however, note that they were welcome back at the Magic Kingdom anytime, which seems like a pleasant way to be involuntarily ejected from a theme park.
He was prohibited from possessing a firearm because he had a mental illness and had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution for inpatient care, court documents said.
I'm pretty sure there's a nerve connection between the inside of my ear canals and the part of my brain that causes me to involuntarily sigh with pleasure.
"American will not involuntarily remove a revenue passenger who has already boarded in order to give a seat to another passenger," the airline says in its updated contract.
Breggin claimed that at the time Carter was encouraging Roy to kill himself, she was involuntarily intoxicated by SSRI antidepressants, which she was prescribed for an eating disorder.
Definitionally, a group of people who are "involuntarily celibate" are people who are not getting something they want, and the shared experiences they bond over are negative ones.
Early in his judicial career, he ruled that a mentally disturbed homeless woman who had been involuntarily hospitalized should be released and allowed to return to the streets.
Because white womanhood has culturally been treated as the standard, white women are most at risk for being involuntarily defined as princesses, and denied their autonomy and strength.
And half of millennials and 75% of Gen-Zers have left a job, both voluntarily and involuntarily, partially due to mental health reasons, according to a recent study.
Several advocacy groups have threatened to sue the first state that implements the 1115 waiver if it results in people being involuntarily cut from Medicaid or reduces coverage.
And when you realize that every trans woman in your life is involuntarily single, you have to wake up and realize that it's impossible that nobody loves her.
Several studies have suggested that it isn't just a reflexive response, the way your hand pulls back involuntarily from a hot stove, but a version of the ouch!
If the person was taken in for mental treatment involuntarily but was not requested to be held past 72 hours, he is not blocked from buying a gun.
People can't own a gun if they have been adjudicated as mentally ill; if they have ever been involuntarily committed for treatment; or if they use illegal drugs.
Between hot, salty tears, I squint down and see that I've involuntarily clenched both fists which have come to rest on either side of my ramen bowl. Shit.
To the point that instead of questioning him you find yourself involuntarily texting your friends about going out and finding an anonymous one-night stand of your own.
While removing passengers from overbooked flights — also known as "involuntarily denied boarding" — can be done legally, the Department of Transportation has also signaled an interest in the case.
People who lose their jobs involuntarily will be eligible for largely the same benefits under the program, which is more generous than its typical layoff package, the company said.
Yet incels see the idea of a female "involuntarily celibate" as an oxymoron; they believe that unless a woman is "severely deformed," she can have sex whenever she wants.
Every so often while watching television, regardless of the show, the dialogue being exchanged between characters, or the kind of day I'm having, I'll involuntarily burst into tears. Why?
Deutsche Bank -linked securities have also fallen markedly, notably contingent capital bonds, a riskier type of bond which can convert to equity involuntarily if the bank is in distress.
Federal regulations give airlines a relatively easy out in situations like this: They can bump a passenger involuntarily if they pay four times the ticket price (up to $20163,22016).
Broad unemployment including those no longer searching for work and involuntarily working part time fell to 81.43% in October, from 9.2% at the beginning of the year, Kolko said.
Restless leg syndrome, a disorder of the nervous system, occurs when the legs -- or other parts of the body like the arms or face -- itch, burn or move involuntarily.
In a video and transcript made public by Canadian police, Minassian said he planned the attack after becoming radicalized online among other "incels," or so-called involuntarily celibate men.
But absent a commitment by the Pakistani authorities to end all police abuses and stop its deportation threats, Afghan refugees will continue to leave Pakistan under pressure and involuntarily.
In this case, if you managed to get her to a hospital for treatment, or involuntarily committed — well, as soon as she's out, that's the end of that relationship.
Federal regulations give airlines a relatively easy out in situations like this: They can bump a passenger involuntarily if they pay four times the ticket price (up to $1,350).
United could and probably should have offered more, even if they wound up paying more than the federally mandated payment for involuntarily bumping, to avoid creating a PR nightmare.
The killer, while in the Air Force, had been convicted of domestic violence in 2012, involuntarily committed to a mental health care center and given a bad conduct discharge.
The Air Force doesn't plan to force anyone back on active duty involuntarily any capacity — even as it finds itself 1,500 pilots short, with the deficit growing, Koscheski said.
Government statistics count people as unemployed only if they are looking for work, a definition that excludes people who are voluntarily or involuntarily out of the labor force entirely.
Those ensure airlines will do things like provide passengers with water when delayed on the tarmac or, if overbooked, ask passengers for volunteers before others are bumped off involuntarily.
The new federal study, the Air Travel Consumer Report, also showed a sharp decrease in the number of passengers involuntarily bumped by Southwest Airlines in April, May and June.
At some point, someone near you will order the pancakes, and you will turn involuntarily to stare at the stack coated in hazelnut-praline-maple syrup and brown butter.
This means that currently, a person who consumes alcohol or drugs "involuntarily" is more protected legally if they are attacked that someone who is intentionally drinking or consuming drugs.
In court documents obtained by CNN, Buckingham claims that he lost an estimated $12 million in upcoming tour proceeds after he was involuntarily expelled from Fleetwood Mac in January.
She's losing her mind after an iMessaging stalker leads her to a mental institution, where she's involuntarily committed and, according to the newly released trailer, subject to some traumatic treatment.
These individuals are being directed toward general population shelters, and those who refuse will be involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward ahead of the storm, according to the Miami Herald.
He doesn't identify as "incel" per se, although he certainly meets the baseline qualification of being involuntarily celibate, which is how he found himself asking the braincels community for advice.
She was involuntarily outed by the Oregonian during one of her campaigns for public office, but she immediately embraced her public identity and became a fierce ally for LGBTQ Oregonians.
In what may be the most 2018 of complaints, users say that the personalized "For You" tab has been involuntarily reset to show types of content they never interact with.
Jane refuses to say that she's "ready to be cleaned," prompting the mystery voice to release a gas that will allow the "technicians" to scrub her mind of everything involuntarily.
Nowadays, they focus on feelings of deprivation (like being "kissless" or "involuntarily celibate") and on flipping feminist narratives to suit their own interests (I'm not oppressing you, you're oppressing me!).
The obsession with discharge is most prominent among those who are involuntarily hospitalized, as I have been, because those who've checked themselves in are permitted to leave at any time.
But after one, five, or ten seconds, it starts getting hard: Your hips dip with the weight, your heart thuds in your chest, you might start involuntarily shaking -- how fun.
It included "gaslighting" (trying to make someone doubt their own memory or even sanity) and "incel" (self-described "involuntarily celibate" men, an increasing number of whom have taken to violence).
The history of political union (sometimes, unfortunately, involuntarily) shows it was often positive but that it is perfectly legitimate to reject it without being cast as an ill-informed unfortunate.
After all, unlike during the Vietnam War period, the United States does not have a conscription law that involuntarily drags young Americans against their will to fight in faraway hellholes.
" When David was later chosen at random to leave the plane involuntarily, video footage shows him saying: "I won't go, I'm a physician I have to work tomorrow, 8 o'clock.
Additionally, with so many experienced workers losing their jobs and with so many workers retiring, voluntarily or involuntarily, the recession dealt a blow to the skills level in the economy.
At the same time, they miss people who have yet to be diagnosed, adjudicated mentally ill or involuntarily committed, including people who are suicidal or have pathological anger, he said.
About 60 percent of those who lose their jobs end up retiring involuntarily because they cannot get replacement jobs, according to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College research.
Your stomach doesn't yet betray the geyser of life involuntarily erupting within you, nor are you "supposed" to talk about it with anyone but your partner, and perhaps your family.
Mental illness colors much of Arledge's life; she was involuntarily committed to mental institutions at multiple points, and her similarly troubled only son died by suicide at a young age.
Here in California, as in most states, patients must be a danger to themselves or others because of mental illness before they can be involuntarily admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
He wrote it in 2016, after four hospitalizations, beginning when his parents had him involuntarily committed because he was babbling, smearing paint on the carpet and walking barefoot in traffic.
Another thing to keep in mind is that the number of involuntarily bumped passengers has plunged since Dr. David Dao was infamously removed from a United Airlines flight last year.
I don't even remember driving home, or my friend driving me to the mental-health ER, or my husband crying, or being involuntarily checked into an inpatient mental-health facility.
Sharing information with a friend or colleague you trust, however, is not the same as involuntarily learning that the slacker you share a cubicle with makes more than you do.
"Our current information indicates that Mr Lee was involuntarily removed to the mainland without any due process under Hong Kong SAR (Special Administrative Region) law," Hammond wrote in a foreword.
Yet unless someone has committed a crime or can be involuntarily committed to a mental institution, there's not much anyone can legally do to keep guns out of his hands.
It's hard not to feel some sympathy for the devil, when you consider what being shot, beaten, and involuntarily committed in the span of half a year could do to someone.
Our law enforcement sources say the guy -- in his 40's -- seems to have some sort of mental illness, and it's very possible they will try to get him involuntarily committed.
More than a dozen new gun laws passed by California lawmakers go into effect in 2019, including a lifetime gun ownership ban for those involuntarily admitted to a mental health facility.
For example, Venezuela's GDP is expected to plummet by 7.4% in 2017; food shortages there are so severe that three-quarters of Venezuelans have lost weight involuntarily in the past year.
The ones who use real profiles are more often than not in a band themselves, so if I publish anything about them, I would also involuntarily be promoting their shitty bands.
Compared with people who were not injured, injured workers were 30 percent more likely to no longer be in their jobs within six months of the injury, whether voluntarily or involuntarily.
Any time we read the words "CT scan" and "bubble tea" in the subject of the same sentence, we involuntarily hold our breath as we make our way towards the predicate.
Twenty-three states and D.C. consider substance use during pregnancy to be child abuse, and three states consider it to be grounds for admitting a woman involuntarily into a psychiatric hospital.
In terms of sexual attraction, though, the theory goes that the chemical signal that we involuntarily waft over potential mates is either interpreted as hot-to-trot or absolutely fucking disgusting.
The review also only looked at patients who volunteered to taper off opioids, meaning this research does not prove that involuntarily pulling patients off the drugs will lead to similar outcomes.
While a patient there, she was involuntarily sterilized; later, she was transferred to a psychiatric hospital, where she was deliberately starved to death in 1945, and buried in a mass grave.
The variables Glassdoor measured were: Change in employment levels since the financial crisisThe harmonised unemployment rateThe youth unemployment rateTemporary employment rateYouth temporary employment rateThe number of people working part-time involuntarily.
After he and colleagues offered 239 patients the opportunity to complete PADs, they found the 147 who did so had fewer crises that led to being involuntarily hospitalized, medicated or restrained.
Abuses had continued into the nineteen-seventies, when thousands of women—including some who were receiving public assistance in North Carolina and others who were incarcerated in California—were involuntarily sterilized.
Not all of them enjoy the eye rolls that involuntarily occur when I hear what they are considering, like when a friend asked me about the benefits of whole body cryotherapy.
Service members are entitled to $250 monthly Family Separation Pay (FSA) when they are involuntarily separated from dependents, but it kicks in only after the first 30 days of the separation.
Minassian's reference to an "incel rebellion" refers to the internet's self-described movement of the "involuntarily celibate" — men who are angry, often at women, because they've failed to find sexual partners.
The U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination cited estimates that up to one million Uighurs may be held involuntarily in extra-legal detention in China's far western Xinjiang province.
It nails the feeling of journalists who are involuntarily cooped up together far away from home, and it nicely conveys why war coverage could be just the thing for adrenaline junkies.
The "incel rebellion" refers to the involuntarily celibate community—people, though almost exclusively men, distraught with their lack of sexual experiences, and often expressing this disappointment as anger towards women writ large.
Emily's guilt is more straightforward — she feels bad for having made the call to involuntarily commit her mother to a rehab facility, and thinks that's what prompted her to end her life.
That law prohibits certain categories of people from buying guns, including felons, illegal drug users and anyone who "has been adjudicated as a mental defective" or involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
She's treating a pregnant mom who may go into very early labor whose son, who is near in age to her daughter Sofia, keeps having seizures that cause him to laugh involuntarily.
In other words, a passenger with a cheap seat in coach who isn't a loyalty club member and checked in late will be the first one involuntarily bumped from an overbooked flight.
One recent controversy involved the unveiling of a monument in Budapest commemorating Hungary's role in World War II, which suggests the country entered the war involuntarily, as the result of German invasion.
I cackled so loudly and involuntarily that a number of the other bus passengers turned around to have a look at the small, cackling woman, and that made me laugh even more.
In June, the Department of the Navy updated its administrative separation policy to ensure a diagnosed mental health condition takes precedence over misconduct when a sailor or Marine is being involuntarily separated.
In listening to deadmau5's "Mercedes," I hear the sound of train brakes screeching, and I involuntarily visualize the metal-on-metal grind as my imagined steam locomotive comes to a stop.
Under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), people who have been involuntarily committed to a mental institution or found "not guilty" in court by reason of insanity cannot purchase firearms.
Most of us have little understanding of how the algorithms in charge of our internet experience work, and have no control over them other than the information we provide, many times involuntarily.
It denies guns only to people who have been involuntarily committed for inpatient treatment, a practice vastly more complicated and far less common than in 223, when the federal law was adopted.
It started innocently, checking the screen only when I received a notification, but soon enough I was involuntarily picking it up every time I broke eye contact with my laptop or book.
The incel movement — a politically radicalized form of misogyny in which "involuntarily celibate" men envision taking vengeance on the virile "Chads" and shallow "Stacys" they believe are contributing to their sexual poverty.
If medical officials decided tube-feeding was required to prevent death or serious self-harm, he said, "we would involuntarily enterally feed a detainee," using the military's preferred term for tube-feeding.
Berg initially launched a suit 10 years ago but has filed a new suit in the US disputing the Dutch government's claim that the works were not relinquished involuntarily or under duress.
Netflix also recently incorporated a new autoplay disable feature — which means no more browsing shows on the homepage only to be involuntarily launched into a preview that you did not ask for.
Warren must convince hundreds of millions of voters that she will give them vastly improved health care through Medicare without involuntarily stripping them of private insurance if they choose to have it.
For industrials, which already waited 61 days to get paid in 503, that has climbed to 94, while information technology companies are involuntarily funding their customers for 112 days, up from 76.
She documents her first experiences with hallucinations, her humiliating experiences being held involuntarily in psychiatric wards, and the devastating effect of having what she's convinced is the controversial late-stage Lyme disease.
This can of course be done involuntarily, as many people's initial response to being faced with a conversation about race is to stay quiet about their opinion or even ignore it altogether.
The above is the thought that ran through the minds of any and all potential Tinder matches as they viewed my profile, before then involuntarily screaming those words out loud in excitement.
Dunn was involuntarily admitted to the local hospital for a psychiatric evaluation following one such call, when police returned to his home because neighbors said he was in his yard with a gun.
"Many of these wage increases that people are noting haven't reached traditional frontline floor staff who are the most likely to still be earning low wages and involuntarily working part-time," adds Ortiz.
In 2013, artist Tiago Valente was struck with a bout of Facial Dystonia, a condition that causes the muscles in the face to spasm painfully and involuntarily pull into uncomfortable and jarring positions.
He was involuntarily admitted to the local hospital for a psychiatric evaluation following one such call, when police returned to his home because neighbors said he was in his yard with a gun.
That might not seem like a lot of liquid, but when it's involuntarily spilling out of you every time you have an impure thought, it can turn your daily commute into Splash Mountain.
Dinardo had been arrested on Monday at his home for owning a gun he was not allowed to possess because he had previously been involuntarily committed to a mental health facility, prosecutors said.
Thousands of pain patients report that their doctors have either cut them off entirely or involuntarily tapered them to doses that aren't sufficient—due to increasing scrutiny from medical boards, insurers, and police.
Now, whenever I find myself involuntarily pausing in front of game shop windows, regarding the latest and upcoming releases with tired eyes, I feel the urge to return to Monster Hunter's Hunting Hub.
Overall, the study shows the quality of airline service hit a record high last year due to carriers posting record low numbers for mishandled bags and for passengers being involuntarily bumped from flights.
Violent felons and domestic abusers who have been convicted or people who have been involuntarily committed for mental health issues, or those on terrorist watch lists, should be prevented from easily purchasing guns.
Normally the accused in a criminal case doesn't have to prove anything, but if they are arguing automatism, they need to show, on a balance of probabilities, that the offences were committed involuntarily.
These so-called New Standards men — who were otherwise ineligible for military service — were to be admitted into all branches of the armed forces, both voluntarily through enlistment and involuntarily through the draft.
One of their best-known experiments, conducted in Kenya in 1977, showed that vervets made distress sounds not just involuntarily, out of fear, but to convey a specific message about a given threat.
A study by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that people who were involuntarily committed were more than twice as likely to experience a fatal overdose as those who completed voluntary treatment.
One of the unit's prosecutors, Jacabed Rodriguez-Coss, filed a complaint in 2013 with the EEOC, accusing Carwile of making her involuntarily travel far more than her male colleagues, according to the Times.
The images of people searching for food in the garbage has become the new normal, and about three quarters of the population in the country has involuntarily lost nearly 28503 lbs of weight.
The Chill cartridge was so powerful that I found myself in that intensely stoned state where you involuntarily squint so fiercely that it feels like you're a boxer with two swollen shut eyes.
Under Maryland state law, anyone who has been voluntarily admitted for more than 30 consecutive days to a psychiatric facility, or involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility, are not eligible to possess firearms.
On the form for the federal background check, which anyone legally purchasing guns in the U.S. has to undertake, prospective gun buyers must disclose whether they've been involuntarily committed to a psychiatric institution.
In the District of Columbia, police have to confirm that a registration applicant "has not been voluntarily or involuntarily committed to any mental hospital or institution" in the five years immediately preceding the application.
HUCKABEE: Well, first of all, let's just remember that Social Security is not the government's money, it belongs to the people who had it taken out of their checks involuntarily their entire working lives.
Earlier this month, a judge ruled U.S. officials don't have to give them an opportunity to speak with their attorneys because they "are not being involuntarily detained by the government," according to court records.
According to the suit -- obtained by TMZ -- over the next few months, his personality changed, he dropped out of school in January 2017, and he ended being involuntarily committed ... presumably to a psychiatric facility.
"Overactive bladder" is a sort of catch-all term for when your bladder contracts involuntarily, making you think you need to pee when you don't—but the reasons for those contractions are poorly understood.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. airlines reduced the number of passengers involuntarily bumped from their seats on crowded planes to the lowest number on record in 2017, the U.S. Department of Transportation said on Thursday.
The economy is collapsing, and many citizens have endured devastating shortages of food and medicine; one study found that three-quarters of Venezuelans had involuntarily lost more than nineteen pounds in the past year.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump disputed Arnold Schwarzenegger's announcement about quitting as host of the reality show "The Celebrity Apprentice," saying on Saturday that Schwarzenegger was leaving involuntarily after drawing few viewers.
"I wanted the photographs to almost involuntarily pull you back to the experience of the landscape through which those fugitive black bodies were moving in the 19th century to escape slavery," Mr. Bey said.
Adding in those who want and are available to work, or who are involuntarily working part-time, the over-250 unemployment rate increases to 250 percent, or 258 million who can't find a job.
While "toxic" is an old and very common word that has expanded in usage, "incel" — short for "involuntarily celibate" — is an example of jargon used by a limited group that suddenly enters widespread usage.
Between 1909 and 1979, about 20,000 people were involuntarily sterilized in California — one of 33 states where compulsory sterilization in the name of eugenics and social well-being was legal in the 20th century.
Whether it's by aging into retirement, suffering a devastating injury, or simply being outperformed by a younger and faster player at your position, the inevitability of losing your spot involuntarily is understood by most.
Scott also urged amending state law so that anyone involuntarily hospitalized as dangerously mentally ill be stripped of all access to firearms, with a court hearing required before their gun rights could be restored.
"Once we determine that our customers can access our free Wi-Fi in a way that also doesn't involuntarily block unintended content, we will implement this in our stores," a Starbucks spokesperson said in 2016.
Dinardo had been arrested earlier in the week for owning a gun he was not allowed to posses under state law because he had previous been involuntarily committed in a mental health facility, prosecutors said.
ALBANY — As the start of a sweeping statewide push to involuntarily remove homeless people from frigid streets loomed on Monday, questions about the practicality and impact of the plan continued to dog its architect, Gov.
Right now eight teams of university students are out in the middle of the desert near Yuma, Arizona, using computers to try and make their electric Chevy Bolts make tight turns without involuntarily changing lanes.
Black American patriotism has always come with caveats, an uneasy negotiation between how our ancestors arrived on U.S. soil and how we've invested labor and military service, both voluntarily and involuntarily, since we got here.
"The full facts of the case remain unclear, but our current information indicates that Mr. Lee was involuntarily removed to the mainland without any due process under Hong Kong," the foreword to the report said.
"We are being punished for being in pain," said Amy Monahan-Curtis, 44, who has been living in agony since 1993 due to condition called cervical dystonia that causes her neck muscles to contract involuntarily.
"Once we determine our customers can access our free WiFi in a way that also doesn't involuntarily block unintended content, we will implement [filters] in our stores," says Maggie Jantzen, a spokesperson for the company.
The determination that someone should have a representative payee is very different from the determination that someone should be involuntarily hospitalized, a process that does include an evaluation of someone's risk to themselves and others.
Southwest denied seats to 2700,27 people voluntarily through June, compared with 10,364 in the first half of 2018, while it involuntarily denied boarding to 2,525, up from 1,7003 in the first six months of 2018.
Yet was there a sort of indefinite, half-attained, unimaginable sublimity about it that fairly froze you to it, till you involuntarily took an oath with yourself to find out what that marvellous painting meant.
"The Church is committed to examining its own white privilege and to acknowledge that many of its members have benefited from this privilege their entire lives — knowingly or unknowingly, voluntarily or involuntarily," the lawsuit states.
In 2013, Jacabed Rodriguez-Coss, a prosecutor who had herself won one of the department's highest awards, complained to human resources that Mr. Carwile expected her to involuntarily travel far more than her male counterparts.
As we reported, Jamie Spears does not have the power to involuntarily commit her, and a mental health facility that would hold someone against their will under such circumstances would be guilty of a crime.
According to UNICEF's Child Marriage Statistics, an estimated 47 percent of girls in India continue to be involuntarily married before the age of eighteen — leaving them little time to grow and develop their social footing.
DMH began footing the bill for sheriff supervision of mental health patients who were involuntarily committed to emergency rooms, including assigning sheriffs to wait with patients in ERs and provide transportation to hospitals with space.
The process usually takes around 90 seconds, and, if all the records are in the right place, would prevent a purchaser who was previously involuntarily committed or adjudicated as mentally incompetent from getting the gun.
In the second-quarter report, United posted a 2350 percent decline in the number of passengers involuntarily denied boarding in May and an 2747 percent drop in June, following the uproar over the dragged passenger.
In addition, between 2003 and 2012 the number of part-time workers in the United States almost doubled, from 4.6 million part time workers to 8.3 million, many of whom are involuntarily part-time workers.
The first responders "noted that the man was non-violent when they arrived at the residence, then transported him to a local hospital," according to ET. A 5150 hold means that the person is hospitalized involuntarily.
In order to sway Hideko into marrying him, Count Fujiwara installs Sook Hee as Hideko's handmaiden, the plan being to steal Hideko's large inheritance and have her committed involuntarily in a mental institution once he's done.
A study in Connecticut found that adding more mental health records to the background check system created a 53 percent drop in the likelihood of a person who had been involuntarily committed committing a violent crime.
Noor was also named as one of three defendants in a recent lawsuit in which a woman said that officers had forced their way into her house, grabbed her and involuntarily took her to a hospital.
Neal Dunn (Fla.) crafted legislation directing the Department of Transportation (DOT) to revise federal rules so that airlines cannot involuntarily remove a customer from their seat to make room for another passenger or an airline employee.
Dr. Elizabeth Curry, a pediatrician in Port St. Joe, Florida, said that last year, she took care of a baby whose eye wiggled back and forth involuntarily, which can be a sign of a brain tumor.
At the time, Wagner had assumed Bohn was playing to the gallery — and on Friday, Bohn said he had been — but from now on, whenever he sees a competitor react like that, he will involuntarily shudder.
Thanks to some Dolby Atmos magic, it expands the sound stage far wider than the laptop's actual speakers (all four of them); so much that I involuntarily twisted my neck, looking for speakers that weren't there.
The sharp rise in misogyny-inspired shootings also squares with the rise of the "Incels," short for "involuntarily celibate," an online subculture comprised of angry young men who deeply resent and blame women for their isolation.
Here's a company that proved to have minimal security in place, despite the fact it houses our most sensitive information — involuntarily for many of us, I'm afraid — and was hacked after two major, recent security incidents.
Alek Minassian, who drove his van into a crowded sidewalk in Toronto, killing 10, was a member of the "incel" (or "involuntarily celibate") community, an online misogynist hate group with roots in white supremacist male entitlement.
I would gladly vote for a Michael Bloomberg/Buttigieg ticket as well, though I often think about the fear that involuntarily grips me if I ever see a police car following me, an elderly white woman.
Airfare hacks: 5 ways to fly for less Yes, you can be 'involuntarily de-boarded' Overbooking is not illegal, and most airlines do it in anticipation of no-shows, according to the US Department of Transportation.
The doctor's refusal came amid a national public outcry over reports in The New York Times and elsewhere in the early 216s that poor women, most of them black, were being involuntarily sterilized in the South.
From the Massachusetts AG:As part of the settlement, Comcast will provide refunds to all Massachusetts consumers who paid early termination fees after downgrading their service or being involuntarily disconnected by Comcast between January 2015 and March 2016.
Daenerys said she wasn't going to burn cities or kill civilians, and technically she isn't, but there is something horrifying about watching her mow down an army made up mostly of involuntarily drafted farmers and assorted teenagers.
Budge says it's still unclear whether she is being kept somewhere involuntarily, and he adds that "her family is very convinced that she is" and it's "not out of the realm of possibility" that she was taken.
According to his arrest affidavit, he is not allowed to possess weapons because he was previously committed to a mental institution involuntarily, and he was arrested after the charges against him were re-filed, the paper reports.
The underemployment rate — defined by those involuntarily working jobs they're overqualified for or are part-time — is even higher as of this year: it hovered at 38 percent in 2016, according to Dongseo University professor Justin Fendos.
The number of workers involuntarily working part time hit a historic high of 9 million during the Great Recession, and while it has receded in an improving economy, the number remains well above pre-recession trend lines.
Frontier "failed to seek volunteers before bumping passengers involuntarily, failed to provide bumped passengers the required written notice describing their rights, and failed to provide proper compensation to passengers in a timely manner" the Transportation Department said.
"If you can legitimately threaten to take someone's property away from them involuntarily, then just having that power alone is tantamount to use of that power in my opinion, because you've got a unilateral negotiation," Beard said.
Several times, when someone in this building or on the giant television says something weighty about Cruz or America, a person from the crowd shouts "Amen," like he or she can't help it—like it's happening involuntarily.
The 12 domestic carriers that report data on the number of passengers who are involuntarily denied boarding posted a bumping rate of 2000 per 21.07,22016 passengers during the second quarter of 29, according to the Transportation Department.
Mayor Anthony Copeland said in a statement to news media that he would never advocate moving residents involuntarily "unless we faced an issue of public safety" and that waiting wasn't an option because of the environmental hazards.
The Department of Transportation requires airlines to give involuntarily bumped passengers "a written statement describing their rights and explaining how the carrier decides who gets on an oversold flight and who doesn't," according to its consumer guide.
Mr. Harran said Mr. DiNardo had been sent involuntarily to a mental hospital last summer, at the request of a family member, but said he did not know the details, or how long he was held there.
Instead, it would roll back the law that blocks people with severe mental illness from buying guns, and would automatically restore a person's gun rights the second he/she leaves a psychiatric hospital after being involuntarily committed.
The criminal was court-martialed by the U.S. Air Force and convicted of a felony involving domestic violence, had been involuntarily committed to a mental health institution and plotted to commit crimes involving firearms against military superiors.
I was still working on the New Hampshire angle in May when I got an email from Patrick's mother, Sandy, saying that Patrick had overdosed at least four times in one afternoon and had been involuntarily hospitalized.
The "incel," or involuntarily celibate, community began as an open-minded support group for men and women with dating troubles — one where people could make virtual friends, commiserate, or work to overcome shyness in the real world.
Over the last few days, Instagram users have noticed their Explore page — the algorithmically personalized "For You" tab based on your likes and preferences — has been involuntarily reset to include a lot of content they're not interested in.
Asked about the latest Chinese statement on Lee, the British Embassy in Beijing referred Reuters to comments last week by British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, who said Lee had probably been "involuntarily removed" to China from Hong Kong.
A  2016 report  by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health found that people who were involuntarily committed were more than twice as likely to die of an opioid-related overdose than those who chose to go into treatment.
Mayor Edward I. Koch instituted a similar policy in New York City in the mid-1980s, simultaneously empowering police officers to remove people from the streets on freezing nights and mental health workers to involuntarily hospitalize homeless people.
They earned this payoff, a Marvel film with towering emotional stakes — stakes that will have you holding your breath during the big action setpieces, involuntarily and knowingly guffawing at the jokes, dropping your jaw at the fun surprises.
The amount of compensation you're entitled to depends on the length of the delay and the price of the ticket, and if you were involuntarily bumped or not, but the maximum compensation is $1,350 for a domestic flight.
"While it is legal for airlines to [involuntarily] bump passengers from an oversold flight when there are not enough volunteers, it is the airline's responsibility to determine its own fair boarding priorities," the DOT said in a statement.
In a very ride-or-die moment, Tommen just virgin-suicides himself out of a window after finding out his wife, the High Sparrow, and a bunch of other important people had just involuntarily attended a wildfire barbecue.
He allegedly possessed a 20-gauge shotgun, but was not legally allowed to possess the firearm because he had a mental illness and had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution for inpatient care, according to court documents.
Passengers are not entitled to compensation if the airline involuntarily denies them boarding due to its use of a smaller aircraft (say, in the event of a mechanical problem) or if the traveler arrives late to the gate.
" The U.S. Department of Transportation states that each airline must "give all passengers who are bumped involuntarily a written statement describing their rights and explaining how the carrier decides who gets on an oversold flight and who doesn't.
Texas (1979), for example, the Supreme Court held that individuals with such severe mental illnesses that they present a threat to their own safety, or to the safety of others, may be involuntarily confined to a mental hospital.
Before the American populace—especially the portion asked to serve in this multi-generational war—is involuntarily committed to another 20 years, it's worth asking what a real, honest cost-benefit analysis of the war might look like.
That people have been coming to America from all over the world for years and years, voluntarily and involuntarily, and bringing wonderful things with them, and making this country richer — I didn't think that was open to debate.
The way one side of her face twitches—seemingly involuntarily—when she is given her death sentence is so alarmingly raw, it's nearly impossible to watch without any emotional response, no matter your personal feelings on the historical figure.
Every time I read about, or watch, one of these accidents, like a young Proust biting into a madeleine, I'm involuntarily transported back to that day in Connecticut—and a moment-by-moment replay goes off in my brain.
It's a brilliant, three-and-a-half-minute roast of dudes who describe themselves as "involuntarily celibate"—and, in large part, are also the kind of guys who go to Trump rallies wearing "Hillary for Prison" shirts or whatever.
The safety risks of tickling are fairly small, since no fluid is exchanged, and one cannot be permanently scarred or damaged from it—with the exception of, perhaps, getting involuntarily elbowed in the face by a ticklee responding reflexively.
It had fewer delayed flights and customer complaints than most of the 210 airlines ranked, and it had the third-fewest involuntarily denied boardings (bumped passengers to you or me): 0.12 per 10,000, versus an industry average of 0.76.
Outraged travelers took to social media not just to express their anger over passenger Dr. David Dao's removal from the flight but also over airlines' ability to legally oversell and involuntarily deny ticketed passengers a seat on their planes.
Yet, there is no tally of the number of programs or the number of people involuntarily placed in one, said David DeVoursney, chief for the Community Support Programs Branch at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).
President Donald Trump said Monday he believed that people with mental illness should be "involuntarily confined" in order to prevent mass shootings, despite research showing that people with mental illness are responsible for a tiny percentage of gun violence.
Alek Minassian, who is accused in the mass murder that struck the city on April 23, 2018, told police officers shortly after the attack that he had been radicalized online among other so-called "incels," meaning involuntarily celibate men.
"During the time between the election and the next Congress, perhaps as many as 20 percent of those voting in Congress will have lost their jobs, either voluntarily or involuntarily," said Representative Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina, a Republican.
An opening title card offers some context: Since 2013, patients in France who have been involuntarily committed to psychiatric hospitals must be "presented to a freedom and detention judge" within 12 days and then, if needed, every six months.
"Larry wrote a story when I was leaving office involuntarily in 1997 as freeholder director, and in one of the paragraphs, he wrote in the lead, 'What was a once promising political future is now over,'" Mr. Christie said.
So it was a stunner on Saturday for Grafton's 18,000 people when they were involuntarily vaulted into the center of notoriety, as the world learned that one of their own was the suspect in New Zealand's worst mass killing.
He appeared at a town-hall-style event that evening, broadcast on CNN, during which he criticized the National Rifle Association aggressively and urged state lawmakers to give police more power to commit the mentally ill to hospitals involuntarily.
"The full facts of the case remain unclear, but our current information indicates that Mr. Lee was involuntarily removed to the mainland without any due process under Hong Kong S.A.R. law," Mr. Hammond said, using an abbreviation for special administrative region.
I didn't even manage to pick the brush up before my brain said NOPE and my body involuntarily tilted to the side—like how a motorbike would fall over without a prop stand—and landed on the carpet with a thud.
The National Rifle Association, the country's most powerful gun-rights lobbying organization, says it supports legislation to ensure records of those judged mentally incompetent or "involuntarily committed to mental institutions" be made available for use in firearms transfer background checks.
A 6-year-old girl in Jacksonville with ADHD and a diagnosed mood disorder was involuntarily committed to a behavioral health center for two days, without any opportunity to see her mother, after allegedly throwing a fit at her school.
But he really gets going when it comes to the embrace of euthanasia by the late 19th/early 20th century eugenics movement, which viewed the practice as a way to, often involuntarily, prevent the proliferation of "feeble-minded" people in society.
While it's imperative to address the plight of the many Americans who work full-time and still live in poverty, much of our population, for various reasons, can't or don't work, either because they're children, elderly, disabled, or involuntarily unemployed.
A common bug in the ubiquitous digital distribution platform Steam potentially allowed hackers to steal user's accounts, get them to involuntarily buy items on the community market, get users to install malware, and perhaps even take control of their computers.
Sixty-eight percent — or 27 million — are exploited in the private economy by individuals or enterprises and forced to work involuntarily as traffickers employ debt bondage, document confiscation, physical abuse and other tactics to keep them hostage, the ILO reports.
Her actions, in the eyes of the law, could not be explained by involuntary intoxication During Carter's trial, a psychiatrist testified that Carter was on a new prescription for antidepressants that made her "involuntarily intoxicated" and kept her from forming intent.
What's perhaps most revealing about the incel discussion is that no one's talking about the "redistribution of sex" from men to women who can't find sexual partners—plenty of whom are living involuntarily celibate lives, for a wide variety of reasons.
Unlike proposals to change life tenure for justices, or to have some justices chosen by other justices or to involuntarily send justices to lower courts, a simple expansion of the Supreme Court would be on rock solid footing with the Constitution.
Last month, the T.S.A. announced a change in its policy of involuntarily reassigning senior staff members to other airports, a practice that many workers say had been used to punish workers who spoke out by sending them to undesirable locations.
But many of the cases were technicalities, such as a sergeant who had received a bonus for re-enlisting as a biomedical repair specialist, but was then involuntarily deployed as a supply specialist and was stuck repaying a $10,000 bonus.
For instance, Mr. Houser's two forced hospitalizations for mental illness — lasting from one week to almost a month — did not disqualify him from buying a gun under federal or Alabama law because no court had involuntarily committed him for treatment.
Along with our nation's 8 million unemployed workers, there are another 6 million workers who aren't classified as unemployed but say they want a job; and there are yet another 6 million workers who find themselves involuntarily working part-time.
I don't know, because every 40 seconds or so my brain switches off involuntarily while trying to follow a dialog with no direction or animus which addresses topics only in generalities about which neither participant has any sort of identifiable opinion.
Dunn's measure, the Secure Equity in Airline Transportation (SEAT) Act, would require the Department of Transportation (DOT) to revise federal rules so that airlines cannot involuntarily remove a customer from their seat to make room for another passenger or airline employee.
It was on the internet — on Facebook, to be exact — that Alek Minassian posted a pledge of allegiance to the "incel rebellion," which refers to the resentments of "involuntarily celibate" men who can't interest the women around them in sex.
But a big part of it is the lack of legal and social recognition: According to the German Society for Transidentity and Intersexuality, people who see their identity negated in daily life tend to either involuntarily adapt or retreat from society.
Until you've been faced with the need to have your child involuntarily committed — endured the agony that leads to that choice, the terrible panic and fear — you cannot make any assessment of what another felt he or she had to do.
In a study published Thursday in PLOS Computational Biology, a team including mechanical engineer Jing-Shan Zhao and several paleontologists used the outfitted ostrich — along with mathematical and robot models — to argue that when Caudipteryx ran, its mini-wings flapped involuntarily.
Minutes before his attack, he posted a message on Facebook lauding the mass murderer Elliot O. Rodger and warned of an "incel rebellion" — a reference to an online community of "involuntarily celibate" men who believe women unjustly deny them sex.
Transportation leaders in both chambers unveiled must-pass aviation bills this week that contain a slew of new consumer protections, including language that would prohibit airlines from involuntarily removing customers from a flight after they have already boarded the plane.
It requires a higher standard of proof than the usual commitment, and if the patient requests a trial, a 12-member jury has to agree that he is enough of a threat to justify being held involuntarily for so long.
Lopes' vision: a wearable EMS device that would look like a sleeve and be able to send electrical impulses in the right timing and in the right fashion to make a user's muscles move involuntarily to perform a physical task.
But it's basically impossible to do so when your friend or loved one is involuntarily experiencing such a sudden and extreme burst of anxiety for no apparent reason, along with physical symptoms such as blurred vision, sweating, heart palpitations, and light-headedness.
He also had no criminal history, and Ayub said a past call for a disturbance at Long's mother's home turned out to be related to an argument over money, for which officers did not think warranted involuntarily placing him on a psychiatric hold.
Like, yes, the ground is dewy and the plants are slowly blooming into life, but also it's still the gray abyss of winter, still everything sucks, still sometimes the wind can hit you so hard you start involuntarily crying out of one eye.
Overall in the industry, two trends have been emerging: (1) Compared with 15 years ago, the percentage of people being denied boarding has gone steadily down, but (2) the percentage of those people who have been denied involuntarily — that number is higher.
The only bookseller not to appear in the report was Lee Bo, a British passport holder, who Britain said had been "involuntarily removed" to China from Hong Kong in late December, constituting a "serious breach" of a bilateral treaty between the two countries.
He was prohibited from possessing a firearm because he was known to be suffering from mental illness and had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution for inpatient care, according to an affidavit supporting the charges provided by the district attorney's office.
Dinardo allegedly possessed a 20-gauge shotgun, according to a court documents, even though he was prohibited from possessing a firearm because he was known to be suffering from mental illness and had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution for inpatient care.
A number of Western governments, including Britain, voiced concern that some of the booksellers had been "involuntarily removed" by Chinese agents, undermining the city's "one country, two systems" formula of governance granting Hong Kong a high degree of autonomy under Chinese rule.
In an effort to ensure another dragging episode doesn't happen again, both the Senate and House FAA bill would ban airlines from involuntarily removing customers from a flight after they have already boarded the plane, aside from matters of safety or security.
Police also had frequent run-ins with Dinardo, who was arrested in February and charged with possession of a firearm, an alleged crime because Dinardo had a mental illness and had been involuntarily committed to a mental institution, according to court documents.
But the public and involuntarily public record of American efforts to track North Korea's progress shows a growing concern dating back a decade that the North was obtaining Russian-designed engines to power its missiles, and the fuel to pour into them.
In fact, the game takes a lot of pains to make sure it moves the character involuntarily as little as possible, even offering a "toggle barnacle lift" setting to avoid the motion sickness some people may feel being virtually hoisted in the air.
Diagnosing Orsino an early modern "incel" — the term some misogynistic men use online to describe themselves as involuntarily celibate — and handing him a firearm may not square with the text, but it gooses the play's sometimes-narcotizing verse by hitting its grimmer notes.
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Britain said on Friday a missing Hong Kong seller of gossipy books on China's leaders had likely been "involuntarily removed" to China from Hong Kong, constituting a "serious breach" of a longstanding bilateral treaty between the U.K. and China.
The opaque operation that saw 381 Saudi royal family members and other elites subpoenaed and involuntarily booked at the Ritz Carlton Riyadh in November inspired widespread speculation from officials, political commentators, international investors and Saudi citizens as to the motivations behind the arrests.
In the 1990s, when a few New Yorkers with multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis — mostly homeless men — refused to take antibiotics, they were held involuntarily in a locked ward of Bellevue Hospital and forced to take medicine until they were no longer contagious.
In California, Assembly Bill 1968 mandates a lifetime ban on the ownership of firearms for individuals if they were involuntarily admitted to a mental health facility more than once within a one-year period because they were deemed a danger to themselves or others.
Before the attack, Minassian posted a Facebook status message talking about the "Incel Rebellion" (incel stands for "involuntarily celibate"), a movement of men who are fixated on their inability to get women to sleep with them and are consequently furious with women as the cause.
So many older LGBT people, when they become ill or if they start to deteriorate mentally and aren't able to articulate things as well, end up involuntarily, just by the assumptions of the people who care for them, being relegated back into the closet.
In 2016, the number of passengers who were involuntarily denied boarding — meaning they did not choose to give up their seats on an oversold flight in exchange for compensation — fell by 15% for every 10,000 passengers based off of the same data from 2015.
What if, when he begins talking about how his wife doesn't understand him, she smiles involuntarily, because that's such a cliché, and what if he then gets angry and knocks over a lamp —  not purposely, of course, just in a wild gesture of generalized rage?
Documents obtained by the AP show that a high school resource officer and two school counselors recommended in 2016 that Cruz be committed under Florida's Baker Act, which allows people to be involuntarily committed for a mental health examination for a minimum of three days.
When the policy was rolled out, the Department of Homeland Security said immigrants would not be involuntarily returned to Mexico if they would more likely than not be persecuted on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.
Where there's room today for open marriage, polyamory and apps that can yield instant sexual gratification with zero emotional investment, we witness the rise of seduction's antithesis: violent "incel" culture, in which involuntarily celibate young men — fueled by the online manosphere — kill people. Why?
Federal law also can prevent people from purchasing or possessing a firearm due to a mental illness under two conditions: if he or she is involuntarily committed to a mental hospital, or if a court or government body declares him or her mentally incompetent.
Last week, many of those workers were given offers to work at real estate services company JLL, one of the outsourcing partners, which they must sign by Monday or they will be involuntarily terminated from their job at WeWork with no severance, the group said.
The governor also called for tougher background checks and waiting periods to buy firearms; requiring mentally ill people who have been involuntarily committed to temporarily surrender weapons; and the allocation of hundreds of millions of dollars toward improving security in schools and mental health services.
The measure would also create a statewide program to arm specially trained teachers - subject to school district approval - while assigning more police as school resource officers and allowing police to confiscate weapons from people who are involuntarily committed as a danger to themselves or others.
Gabrielle Giffords and killed 10 people in Tucson, Arizona, in 2011, knew he was violent and took away his shotgun, but couldn't do anything more unless he had committed a crime or unless they had decided to try to have him involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
In the new rules, United pledges to "limit use of law enforcement to safety and security issues only"; to not require customers to involuntarily give up their seats "unless safety or security is at risk"; and to raise compensation for passengers denied boarding from $1,350 to $10,000.
I'll involuntarily blurt passages from one of the 20173 songs on the album just to break the silence in my house, a kind of mental defect that I'm sure makes me sound strange to my neighbors and any postal service workers who happen to be passing by.
The idea that once Trump leaves the White House -- whether involuntarily in January 2021 or voluntarily-ish in January 2025 -- the impacts and reverberations of what he has done to the presidency (and to the way in which the presidency is covered) will disappear is a fallacy.
For atrocities that constitute genocide, in contrast, the U.S. government has more tools to punish perpetrators, because it can prosecute any suspected perpetrator of genocide "present" in the United States (even "involuntarily"), no matter who the victims or where the crime was committed, enhancing opportunities for accountability.
The Federal Aviation Administration reported Thursday that American denied seats to 224,2737 passengers voluntarily in the first six months of 22, up from 25,22020 in the same period last year, while involuntarily denying boarding to 2175,7373 passengers, up from 27 in the same period last year.
In the stories of angry Men's Rights Activists and incels — men who are "involuntarily celibate," and denied their "right" to sex — the women of the world are in control, teasing and taunting and withholding, even as men maintain incredible majorities in nearly every hall of power.
The Interpreter The recent mass killing in Toronto by a man who once called for an "Incel Rebellion" has drawn attention to an online community of men who lament being "involuntarily celibate" and dream of a social order granting them access to the women of their choice.
Under federal law, a person can be tallied in a database and barred from purchasing or possessing a firearm due to a mental illness under two conditions: if he is involuntarily committed to a mental hospital, or if a court or government body declares him mentally incompetent.
If a court involuntarily commits someone for treatment under the Baker Act because they are at risk of harming themselves or others, an individual would be required to surrender all firearms and not regain their right to purchase or possess a firearm until a court hearing.
Gabrielle Giffords and killed 10 people in Tucson, Arizona, in 2011, knew he was violent and took away his shotgun but couldn't do anything more unless he had committed a crime or unless they had decided to try to have him involuntarily committed to a mental institution.
A combination of the linear sound of minimal and the funk of quality tech house that never gets boring as it hypnotizes you into a state of trance until you look up and catch yourself in the mirror, involuntarily dancing as Marco's music bumps away in the background.
Let's get this out of the way first: Pennywise the Clown, played by Bill Skarsgård with a jaunty ferocity, is absolutely terrifying in the adaptation of Stephen King's It. At one point, my seat companion involuntarily emitted a shriek, and I flew a few inches out of my seat.
Even though I had voluntarily walked into the ER for help, "unsafe" meant that I was considered to be "involuntarily hospitalized," which also meant that I was locked down in the rural Louisianan hospital, on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain, until the doctor gave me permission to leave.
Facebook confirmed to VICE News that Minassian, 25, referenced "incels," a term used to describe men who are "involuntarily celibate" and blame their celibacy on women before he steered the white rented van onto the sidewalk in a diverse Toronto neighborhood and ran down pedestrians for nearly a mile.
It either happens voluntarily—usually by coaxing passengers on to later flights by offering a voucher for future travel—or involuntarily, as in the case of David Dao, who was literally dragged off a United Express flight last spring for refusing to comply with the airline's involuntary bumping requests.
Those include someone who has been convicted of a crime punishable by more than a year in prison, has a substance abuse addiction, has been involuntarily committed for a mental health issue, was dishonorably discharged from the military or convicted of domestic violence/subject of a restraining order.
You would think the CEO of United Continental, Oscar Munoz, would recognize the public perception of his industry and he would have had a better plan in place than an "algorithm" to resolve overbooking issues that resulted in a passenger being dragged off of a United flight involuntarily.
Along with the Fort Lauderdale gunman, a number of recent mass shooters clearly suffered from mental illnesses but had never been involuntarily committed, including the perpetrators of the attack that wounded former congresswoman Gabby Giffords, the Aurora movie theater shooting, and the Washington Navy Yard and Santa Barbara rampages.
David Ehrlich of Indiewire called it "a toxic rallying cry for self-pitying incels," invoking the term for involuntarily celibate young men that jumped from the saddest corners of the internet to popular parlance in 2014, when a self-described incel killed six people in Santa Barbara, Calif.
" 'In the old days we had mental institutions' Trump also honed in on mental health issues, calling for improvements in "early warning response systems" and reiterating his calls for increasing the ability of law enforcement to involuntarily commit individuals to "mental institutions," just like "in the old days.
Lastly and most relevant to the United incident, removing the federal backstop on compensation airlines are required to pay passengers who are involuntarily bumped would give them a much greater incentive to entice volunteers in situations of overbooking, rather than falling back on the arbitrary limit set by law.
In their letter, the senators highlight a May 2015 inspector general report that found sexual assault survivors who engage in trauma-related misconduct, such as taking unauthorized leave to flee their assailant, are at higher risk of being involuntarily discharged under less than honorable conditions than the general military population.
"Because only a small proportion of persons with this risky combination have ever been involuntarily hospitalized for a mental health problem, most will not be subject to existing mental health-related legal restrictions on firearms resulting from a history of involuntary commitment," Swanson and his colleagues wrote in the paper's abstract.
This is because people, when they find out one of us is actually from the place (and they see our eyes are clear, and we do not twitch involuntarily like a sleeping pack animal), tend to take us by the arm and wonder earnestly: Just what is the deal with Florida?
Taking off in this car really feels like actually "taking off," and if you don't involuntarily giggle from pure excitement the first time you experience its acceleration at its best, you're made of stronger stuff than I. With a price as tested north of $150,000, it's not the car for everyone.
"A resident could hire a broker to help them in their search, or the landlord can pay for broker's fees, but the landlord can't pass the broker fee on to the resident involuntarily," explained Matthew Murphy, executive director of the NYU Furman Center, which focuses on housing, neighborhoods and urban policy.
Mr. DiNardo has been described by prosecutors, his own lawyers and the police as mentally ill — last summer, he was sent involuntarily to a mental hospital — and another young man who socialized with him and two of the victims said Mr. DiNardo had talked about killing people and having people killed.
It looks at not only impulse buys but all the stuff in our lives that we spend money on, voluntarily or involuntarily: the big expenses like the mortgage on the house or homes and insurance, and the smaller, not-so-regular costs like maintenance, repairs and occasional remodeling of those homes.
And yet everything that happens to her — from her attempt to have a flirtatious friendship in plain sight to the crude insults she involuntarily fields from grocery clerks and radio DJs — has become something of a rite of passage for any woman in a semi-public profession in America 2016.
As soon as I heard the words "drum and bass" and "party" used in close conjunction I used to come out in hives, terrified of what must have been happening at these raves—and they were always referred to as "raves," a word alone which causes me to shiver involuntarily.
After weeks of negotiations, a 1,200-page bill to reauthorize the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) was unveiled early Saturday that would require the FAA to set minimum dimensions for passenger seats — including legroom and width — and prohibits airlines from involuntarily removing passengers from flights after they've cleared the boarding gate.
H.) and Brian Schatz (Hawaii) unveiled a bill that would prohibit airlines from kicking customers off a plane after they have already boarded — unless it's a matter of safety or security — and eliminate the federal cap on the amount of compensation that airlines must offer passengers who are involuntarily bumped from a flight.
Neither the facility nor the federal government is being asked to arrange or pay for the girl's medical procedure or transportation, and no such obstacle to her leaving the detention center was claimed when she was involuntarily taken to a Christian crisis pregnancy center to receive anti-abortion counseling over the past weeks.
"Given the FCC's announcement that 957 stations will be involuntarily changing channels and that 30 more will be voluntarily moving to a VHF channel in return for an auction payment, the TV industry and its viewers are about to see a level of technical disruption that may be unprecedented," the lawyers wrote.
The 8003-year-old, who hails from the Netherlands and would only share his first name, had already spent time on forums bashing deceptive pick-up artists and promiscuous women, but ultimately found a home in this lesser-known community populated by involuntarily celibate men obsessed with extreme measures of ostensible self-improvement.
Since then, cycles of intense arms racing have restarted whenever one side has felt acutely disadvantaged or spied a potential exit from what the political scientist Robert Jervis once described as the "overwhelming nature" of nuclear destruction, a circumstance that we've been involuntarily and resentfully hostage to for the past 70 years.
It is routine, and required under state law, for law enforcement to transport people who are involuntarily committed and who are determined by a physician "as posing an imminent risk of harm to him or herself by virtue of mental illness," according to a statement from the state Department of Mental Health.
United's terms, which are standard in the industry, stipulate that the airline must compensate passengers on domestic flights who were involuntarily denied boarding on an oversold flight at double the fare they paid, up to $675, if the alternative flight is scheduled to arrive less than two hours after the original flight.
While the 1993 Brady law prohibits gun ownership by individuals who have been involuntarily committed, found incompetent to stand trial or otherwise deemed by a court to be a danger to themselves or others, federal health care privacy rules prohibited doctors and other providers from sharing information without the consent of their patients.
This total doesn't include the roughly 1,000 cleaners and building maintenance staffers who were told their jobs will be outsourced and were given the opportunity to accept new jobs at real estate services company JLL, one of the outsourcing partners, or be involuntarily terminated from their job at WeWork with no severance.
By all accounts, unemployment insurance, a federal-state program designed to provide some measure of financial security to workers who lose their jobs involuntarily, did what it was supposed to do, softening the recession's impact on families hit by job loss and giving local economies a much-needed boost in consumer spending.
Under a rule published Wednesday in the Federal Register, the background check system run by the Federal Bureau of Investigation will receive the names of people who are forbidden to buy or own firearms because they have been involuntarily committed to a mental institution or found to pose a danger to themselves or others.
H.) and Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) unveiled a bill that would prohibit airlines from kicking customers off a plane after they have already boarded — unless it's a matter of safety or security — and eliminate the federal cap on the amount of compensation that airlines can offer passengers who are involuntarily bumped from a flight.
If, instead of going outside and enjoying the May sunshine, you were indoors hugging a cushion involuntarily crying at a declaration of love between two strangers whose wedding you'd helped to crowdfund but weren't actually invited to, you'll remember that there was, at least, one person who made the gross, sycophantic BBC broadcast worthwhile.
Gallagher agreed to represent Hunter pro bono, but it became clear that, given Hunter's history with drugs, an appeals panel was unlikely to believe the story that he had ingested cocaine involuntarily, and that appealing the decision would require closed-door hearings and the testimony of witnesses, increasing the likelihood of leaks to the press.
"There is a significant difference between when someone is seeking to terminate their own life — and they are not struggling and are willfully participating — and what happens when you involuntarily seek to terminate the life of someone who wants to live, and who will be struggling and trying not to breathe," Mr. Dunham said.
A professor at the University of Chicago believes he is on his way to creating a wearable for market that will manipulate your muscles with electrical impulses to cause you to move involuntarily so you can perform a physical task you otherwise didn't know how to do, like playing a musical instrument or operating machinery.
Juliette kills herself because she discovers the real truth about him — his Delos profile classifies him as a "paranoid subtype" with delusions — and he lets Emily go forward with her plan to involuntarily commit her mother even though he knows a big part of the issue is that Juliette senses what a horrible person he actually is.
Supporters describe massive public investment to overhaul energy and transport infrastructure; extensive state support for green industries, with the goal of turning America into a leading exporter of clean technologies; and large-scale efforts to help workers through training, job-placement schemes and perhaps a federal job guarantee (essentially, a promise of public work to anyone involuntarily unemployed).
Designed to be held in place by a woman's kegel muscles (also known as the pelvic floor), holding a kegel ball in place helps to exercise those muscles and strengthen them — which can be useful to help recover after you've given birth, to keep yourself from involuntarily peeing as you age and (yes) to make sex more enjoyable.
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS Video Footage of the incident is reminiscent of a similar video shared following the United Airlines dragging incident of April 2017, during which a passenger named David Dao was forcibly dragged from a flight after being involuntarily selected to be bumped in favor of crew members needing transport.
Attorney General Geoffrey Cox said in a statement Tuesday that while the legal assurances "reduced the risk that the U.K. could be indefinitely and involuntarily detained within the backstop" the legal risk "remains unchanged that the U.K. would have no internationally lawful means of exiting the Protocol's (backstop) arrangements, save by agreement," — that is, by mutual consent.
One of the men, British citizen Lee Bo, was "involuntarily removed" from the city and taken to China, according to the UK. He later denied he had been abducted, saying he went to China to help in the investigation into his colleague Gui Minhai, a Swedish citizen who disappeared from his home in Thailand in October 2015.
More than a million people have fled the country since 2015; the health care system is in such dire straits that malaria, once almost wiped out, is soaring; about three quarters of the population has involuntarily lost nearly 20 pounds of weight and people scrounging for food in garbage has become, according to the Brookings Institution, the new normal.
According to a 5123 study conducted by the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors, more than 5113,5103 mentally ill Americans who haven't been convicted of a crime — people who have been found not guilty by reason of insanity or who have been arrested but found incompetent to stand trial — are involuntarily confined to psychiatric hospitals.
While being interrogated by Detective Rob Thomas hours after the attack, Minassian revealed that he frequently posted on incel — or involuntarily celibate — forums online, where men who believe they're entitled to sex and affection from women express their misogynistic views, complain about sexual rejection and having to compete with so-called alpha males, and threaten violence against women.
The community of "involuntarily celibate" men on Reddit's r/incels subreddit has long been one of the internet's darkest underbellies: teeming with violent misogyny, it's a space where its members dramatically perform victimization at the hands of the women who've rejected them, members who view Santa Barbara shooter Elliot Rodger, a self-identified incel himself, as a hero.
" Lawyers for the government have argued that any appeals to Trump's August memorandum are premature, in part because the Department of Defense is still reviewing the President's order and has issued interim guidance that "reaffirms that for now, no current service member will be involuntarily separated, discharged or denied re-enlistment solely on the basis of a gender dysphoria diagnosis or transgender status.
Pretty much every book in the house is piled up in a stack like this one — row upon row of stacked-up books rising six to eight feet from the dark wood floors, these gangly towers of dog-eared tomes, some of them teetering so precariously that when you see one of the López children run past, you might involuntarily flinch.
I now consider that the legally binding provisions of the Joint Instrument and the content of the Unilateral Declaration reduce the risk that the United Kingdom could be indefinitely and involuntarily detained within the Protocol's provisions at least in so far as that situation had been brought about by the bad faith or want of best endeavours of the EU. 18.
Critics may argue a more fluid formation is needed, a subtle tweak in philosophy; they say that someone should lock Gary Cahill in a classroom for two days and not let him out until he stops involuntarily shouting "you wha?" when tiki-taka is mentioned; and that we need to build around two creative attacking talents anchored to a meat-and-potatoes box-to-box midfielder.
Involuntarily slowing down to a snail's pace in public produced a new and different world before me, a world which included, for the first time, meeting the eyes of all the people like me, people on crutches, holding canes and getting around in wheelchairs, moving slowly through a tsunami of 100-mile-per-hour humanity that didn't always notice or care if others were sick or lame.
There was a van attack that happened in Toronto a little while ago--a man drove through a crowd, he killed ten people, he was possibly motivated by misogyny, he made some Facebook comments about the incel movement--which stands for involuntarily celibate--so there are these links to men's rights activist groups, white supremacist groups, Toronto and a lot of active hate crimes that are happening up here.
Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsCook Political Report moves Susan Collins Senate race to 'toss up' The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy Trump crosses new line with Omar, Tlaib, Israel move MORE (R-Maine) have introduced a bill that would block Trump's transgender ban by prohibiting the Pentagon from involuntarily separating or denying the re-enlistment of transgender troops solely on the basis of gender identity.
I disagree with practically everything he believes, but at his core Mr. Pence is a traditional politician — not a head-spinning, norm-busting one who seems positively gleeful about ripping away at the core beliefs that I once thought most Americans held dear (the rule of law, democracy, etc.) So I would happily take him as our president were Donald Trump to step down, either voluntarily or involuntarily.

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