I have benefited from their willingness to fight scorn with scorn.
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Like other apostates, he was treated with respect, not scorn.
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Well, Teigen wasn't about to take Ingraham's scorn lying down.
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The 2016 election campaign has poured scorn on such ideas.
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Like other mooted revivals, this one attracts plenty of scorn.
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They are deserving of our respect and not our scorn.
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Buck's predicament aroused more shame and scorn than support. Her
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The scorn and scandal surrounding it, however, ended Lewis' career.
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That claim was immediately met with scorn from Obamacare supporters.
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Why did Mrs Clinton lay on the scorn so thickly?
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Somehow this doesn't feel like scorn; it feels like kindness.
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His vote against the refugee bill drew scorn from Republicans.
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Hedman and Earley were the main targets of lawmakers' scorn.
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The result was congressional anger, allied dismay, and Russian scorn.
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And the scorn does not fall solely on Mr. Trump.
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Trump also bonded with Putin over a scorn for journalists.
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Patron saint of dogs' fangs and scorn, of false death.
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And all opposed to their interpretations deserve ridicule and scorn.
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My antsiness and faineance draws the scorn of my counselors.
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Posts under the Twitter hashtag #Lochtegate were filled with scorn.
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They cannot marry and are subject to scorn and ridicule.
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Lopetegui was not the only one to attract public scorn.
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Romance novels come in for an extra helping of scorn.
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Why do you think you were singled out for scorn?
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Fifteen years later, the cabbies remember the ad with scorn.
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They may "scorn" or "disrespect" or even "dis" each other.
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I was really feeling, what I mentioned before, this scorn.
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It's easy for people to scorn influencers as digital sellouts.
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But the internet lit up with scorn for the parents.
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On Tuesday, a Russian government spokesman echoed Mr. Trump's scorn.
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The response earned more scorn from Warren and Joe Biden.
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The question is not born of scorn but genuine curiosity.
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|
The White House reacted with scorn to Judge Orrick's ruling.
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|
Several speakers at the PP Congress poured scorn on Podemos's populism.
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Reactions varied from bewilderment and fear, to scorn and loud laughter.
|
|
But right now, the only emotion Trump is eliciting is scorn.
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A big example is China, a familiar target of statistical scorn.
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|
Yet the latest innovation has been met with almost unanimous scorn.
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A year into his job, Mr Farron enjoys no such scorn.
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Naturally, Trump's mention of potential riots drew significant attention and scorn.
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Multiple Republican presidential candidates singled her out for scorn on Wednesday.
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The scorn was mainstream, and speaking out against it was too.
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Amash has been met with overwhelming scorn from his GOP colleagues.
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The statement has drawn scorn from Democrats and cheers from Republicans.
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Qiao gives him a short, hard stare, fully loaded with scorn.
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The conclusion was promptly met with scorn—he was only eighteen.
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And even Yelawolf and his coterie haven't entirely escaped that scorn.
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Others showed scorn, asking: "What about the victims?" and "What 'fans'?"
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The people in power scorn, snub, or completely disregard the others.
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|
There are apparently any number of ways to earn Hirshman's scorn.
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But "there's no need to have scorn for that," he said.
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My neighbors speak with scorn, positing these new faces as invaders.
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All along the way, they were met with scorn and derision.
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She has drawn scorn from several world leaders for her advocacy.
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His uncontrollable laughter makes him a figure of scorn and disgust.
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It's now easy to look back at these ideas with scorn.
|
|
What was it about my body that attracted such scorn and doubt?
|
|
What was previously mutual admiration among ordinary citizens soured into popular scorn.
|
|
They even created a special Twitter hashtag #StealTheBern to register their scorn.
|
|
He reserved particular scorn for Trump, who informed European powers on Jan.
|
|
Duterte has repeatedly poured scorn on critics, usually larding it with curses.
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|
He seems to welcome, rather than fear, the scorn of party leaders.
|
|
Less pampered athletes have poured scorn on the pusillanimous pitch-and-putters.
|
|
Yet Germans often veer between admiration and scorn of the United States.
|
|
Some of the changes have earned Trump the scorn of his base.
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|
The voice of this character had been full of scorn and condescension.
|
|
Worse still, politicians have heaped scorn and disdain on these wonderful Americans.
|
|
Williams has already drawn Trump's scorn, and she hasn't even testified yet.
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|
That stance drew scorn from GOP lawmakers, who accused her of stonewalling.
|
|
And Woods faced widespread public scorn after his philandering and reckless driving.
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|
" Few explorers escape Dippel's scorn in this chronicle of "self-serving deeds.
|
|
Sanctions experts expressed a mixture of bafflement and scorn at Tuesday's announcement.
|
|
And she doubled down on her scorn for homosexuality within the sport.
|
|
I.O., comes in for special scorn, standing for insular, uninspired, bureaucratic leadership.
|
|
Perhaps those concerns, too, should be met with something other than scorn.
|
|
Irish, Asians, Jews and Eastern Europeans in turn were subject to scorn.
|
|
Now it's drawing scorn for defending white nationalist protests in Charlottesville, Virginia.
|
|
The president also regularly heaps scorn on journalists covering his campaign rallies.
|
|
Words like "straight-shooting" and "absolutely" were known to invite her scorn.
|
|
But the sit-in that began earlier in Ryan's chamber earned his scorn.
|
|
Though largely symbolic, it alienated Israel's non-Jewish minorities and drew scorn abroad.
|
|
Some people scorn the fact that every choir is recognised, Mr Lazri acknowledges.
|
|
That Mr Trump appears to scorn this rules-based global order is worrying.
|
|
Obama's remarks Sunday afternoon drew scorn form Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee.
|
|
Evidence of presidential scorn for Islam is amply documented in the majority opinion.
|
|
He goes from charmer to pariah, from clown prince to object of scorn.
|
|
Metal, of course, offers plenty of material for those who would scorn it.
|
|
And they almost never targeted a specific company for public scorn and criticism.
|
|
There are sure to be many drone stunts awaiting our scorn in 2017.
|
|
As they answer questions, New Orleans's trio balances playful scorn with outward frostiness.
|
|
But other views, such as his support for complementary medicine, still attract scorn.
|
|
Most police officers, he reiterated, are "deserving of respect and not our scorn".
|
|
The hospital-bed threat only hinted at Mr. Purdy's scorn for the system.
|
|
Nielsen has earned Trump's scorn despite embracing one of his most divisive policies.
|
|
He used one of his poems — after Princess Haya fled — to scorn her.
|
|
But it was The Times that was the particular target for his scorn.
|
|
Meanwhile, Luckey's political activities had made him the object of tech-press scorn.
|
|
How does the cultural scorn accorded to porn performers have an economic impact?
|
|
Although the hypothesis was met with widespread scorn, experimental evidence gradually became conclusive.
|
|
And when she brought up Pocahontas, she did not just scorn Mr. Trump.
|
|
As a stereotypically "messy" person myself, I've received my own share of scorn.
|
|
Middle-aged readers often tend to scorn this sort of hothouse fictional narcissism.
|
|
Scorn immediately followed: Bagel Hole does not, in fact, toast its sacred treats.
|
|
They welcome scorn from the masses because it creates the opportunity for dialogue.
|
|
I noticed that teachers are an object of great scorn within the piece.
|
|
Hers is not the kind of boldface name, however, to attract universal scorn.
|
|
"The eternal companions of all clever women are mistrust and scorn," she says.
|
|
It's impossible to truly ignore public scorn at the level that Rowling received.
|
|
And often, the focus of her scorn and venom were other black people.
|
|
The sharp-sided coin has attracted some scorn on the social media website, Twitter.
|
|
" As a result, the lawsuit states, the students have suffered from "ridicule and scorn.
|
|
Francis, a sharp critic of capitalist excesses, turned his scorn instead on greedy businesspeople.
|
|
As for critics abroad, Duterte pours scorn on them in language larded with curses.
|
|
Mr Trump, by contrast, was known for heaping scorn on Washington's traditional political experts.
|
|
Mr Trump's scorn for facts makes his precise world view hard to pin down.
|
|
It is a theology for self-made men who scorn the idea of luck.
|
|
A little later Friday morning, the Republican nominee tweeted more scorn at the press.
|
|
The launch of Buhari's "Change Begins With Me" campaign was widely met with scorn.
|
|
But May, facing scorn for running a lacklustre campaign, was determined to hang on.
|
|
So why would these companies become an object of scorn in the American heartland?
|
|
If that wasn't enough to derail the Trump campaign, surely his scorn of Sen.
|
|
The protests have been met with praise and scorn, supportive statements and derisive rants.
|
|
He campaigned to improve their conditions—generating scorn and mistrust from his fellow officers.
|
|
Partisan scorn and ridicule has become our default response in social media and elsewhere.
|
|
Frits Bolkestein, a former Dutch European Commissioner, poured scorn on Macron's ideas on Thursday.
|
|
What determines whether someone feels sympathy or scorn for the victim of a crime?
|
|
But rarely has its political system been subjected to such widespread scorn and ridicule.
|
|
Lawmakers who work closely with the President have also been targeted for public scorn.
|
|
From the Sanders wing, the familiar tides of scorn and derision are flowing apace.
|
|
Throughout his catalogue, they're presented primarily as objects of sexual tomfoolery or bitter scorn.
|
|
Out in the wide world of surf, however, Ziff's speech was met with scorn.
|
|
He reserves special scorn for people who embarrass themselves in front of their peers.
|
|
Mr. Siddique knows some conservative Muslims in Ilford scorn his support for the police.
|
|
That's another story: Harm them, disrespect them, hold them up for scorn and humiliation.
|
|
Since then Ms Mugabe has been a pariah, left to her shopping and scorn.
|
|
MUNCHIES: Your Mermaid's Scorn Tidewater uses some unique ingredients, like ocean water and oysters.
|
|
The campaign, with its hashtag "helmets save lives," immediately drew scorn on social media.
|
|
Scorn for the Chinese Communist Party is extending to symbols of the Chinese state.
|
|
Depending on the moment, he has been the subject of empathy, enthusiasm or scorn.
|
|
And the sheer number of those works has also earned its share of scorn.
|
|
But it earned her scorn from many of the Republican-leaning voters she needed.
|
|
The deal drew scorn from conservative groups angered by the big increase in spending.
|
|
Empire's Edge is a young man's book — emotionally raw in its empathy and scorn.
|
|
In international relations, he consistently praises brutal strongmen while heaping scorn on democratic leaders.
|
|
On the right, there was newfound scorn, and worse, for Israeli expatriates in Germany.
|
|
"Sometimes I view members of the élite with an almost primal scorn," he writes.
|
|
When the Republicans had the Majority they never acted with such hatred and scorn!
|
|
The clock, in the process, has sometimes become an object of jokes and scorn.
|
|
If I spoke such words out loud, I was met with scorn and judgment.
|
|
And no amount of spin or scorn for the C.B.O. can alter that reality.
|
|
By then, Flynn had become a target of scorn for many inside the department.
|
|
Hours later — Thursday in North Korea — its Foreign Ministry reacted with scorn and animosity.
|
|
Goldberg repeatedly expresses scorn and outrage over my failure to comprehend my own topic.
|
|
Women are objects of scorn, violence, fascination, and sexual frustration, easily overpowered and easily disposable.
|
|
There are those in the world who scorn our vision of human dignity and freedom.
|
|
She had nothing but praise for Obama and scorn for Bernie Sanders's criticism of him.
|
|
They are visceral scorn, an unabashed hatred is apparent for all to see every day.
|
|
Viewers may come to temper their scorn with an empathy that Pius himself wouldn't understand.
|
|
"The president may scorn checks and balances," says the official, "but we still have them."
|
|
Drawing Obama's scorn Friday, Trump's insistence a "global elite" is working to rig the election.
|
|
Hell, the general manager created the team, maybe he should face some scorn and ridicule.
|
|
Scott denied that report, but it still drew scorn from Democrats, including the White House.
|
|
He's actively courted fans of President Trump's populist rhetoric and inspired scorn on the left.
|
|
It was filled with the kind of high-flown, sentimental stuff he would later scorn.
|
|
Duterte has poured scorn on critics of his uncompromising campaign, usually larding it with curses.
|
|
" They long for violence, destruction, the valorization only of perfect youth, and "scorn for woman.
|
|
Mattis is one of the few people working for Trump who hasn't earned his scorn,
|
|
"I incessantly have nothing other than scorn for humanity," he reportedly wrote in one draft.
|
|
The book's flintier writers, all on the older end of the spectrum, scorn such piffle.
|
|
Gibbon, for all his scorn of Islam, recognized the scholarly value of the Bibliothèque Orientale.
|
|
The host aired his original comments critical of Trump, standing by them despite the scorn.
|
|
Valeant has drawn scorn for its drug pricing strategy, which critics liken to price-gouging.
|
|
The scorn heaped on Melania for her footwear focused on its self-indulgent, flashy impracticality.
|
|
The move will invite scorn, but he was right to do it, writes Megan McArdle.
|
|
She never married and was essentially buried in life by the scorn of her village.
|
|
A recent paid speech by Mr. Obama to a Wall Street firm drew pointed scorn.
|
|
She became an icon of hope for refugees and an object of scorn for populists.
|
|
Petitions protesting the cull, organized in the United States and Europe, were met with scorn.
|
|
Andrew M. Cuomo, swooped in, with scorn for city officials' promises of assistance to tenants.
|
|
His later support for American government policies, including the invasion of Iraq, also brought scorn.
|
|
The latest contretemps came when Mr. Trump heaped scorn on Mayor Sadiq Khan of London.
|
|
The Obama Administration and its diplomatic efforts in the Middle East inspired even greater scorn.
|
|
In both the U.S. and Europe, Facebook became a particular object of scorn on privacy grounds.
|
|
Removing one's clothes doesn't preclude one from seriousness of purpose, nor is it worthy of scorn.
|
|
Wilders' rhetoric brings scorn from the Dutch establishment, but is an incontrovertible truth to Ronald Sørensen.
|
|
Arcade Fire has just poured scorn on Kylie and Kendall following their egregious T-shirt débâcle.
|
|
Leading figures in the European Parliament, which must ratify any deal, were withering in their scorn.
|
|
But that does not justify the scorn the display generated, particularly in the anticipation of it.
|
|
He grew up in California — and no state receives as much scorn in Idaho than California.
|
|
The practice has earned so much scorn that it was probably already on its way out.
|
|
When she publicly told her story last year, she received some support — but also considerable scorn.
|
|
" He insisted that the overwhelming majority of police officers deserve "our respect and not our scorn.
|
|
But compare the response Kaepernick has received to the scorn and professional exile that Ali endured.
|
|
Something that won't be met with the scorn of a person newly enlightened by higher education.
|
|
She answers elders with impunity, looks at the British with scorn and doesn't care for tradition.
|
|
Colonel Roosevelt held up to scorn the professional pacifists who require other men to defend them.
|
|
That is, if Europe starts to mean a bit more to those who currently scorn it.
|
|
Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert also received scorn from the president at a rally on Monday.
|
|
The scorn for the leader of the movement was only matched by contempt for his followers.
|
|
Despite being many, American social conservatives face scorn from popular media and invective from the left.
|
|
That notion targeted fat bodies for scorn and exclusion simply because of how much they weigh.
|
|
However, the book would have been stronger had Ms Mayer expanded the scope of her scorn.
|
|
To fill in for Francesa, you must hate and scorn the losers—another checkmark for Christie.
|
|
They scorn big government—the state is in the bottom third for tax revenue per person.
|
|
Yet she brings a complexity that her former role lacked, with layers of sweetness and scorn.
|
|
Many young easterners simply developed an "Ossi" identity after encountering ignorance or scorn in the west.
|
|
Her scorn for people who don't understand that life is too short to ride the bus.
|
|
The Sanders supporters' scorn was enough to prompt some of the speakers to gently scold them.
|
|
Adding to the confusion, other judges who drew scorn for their decisions have not been dismissed.
|
|
The AP reported that Jiankui's announcement was met with scorn from some in the scientific community.
|
|
It has subjected Washington to international scorn and given credence to the propaganda of extremist groups.
|
|
Mr. Clinton has been known to lash out at opponents when they heap scorn on Mrs.
|
|
We don't do this for the money we don't deserve, or for the scorn we do.
|
|
The Clinton campaign made several strategic decisions that have drawn heaps of scorn from the press.
|
|
Interesting that we describe scorn as "bitter," as though we can taste it, like a poison.
|
|
While the band recorded Scorn in three days, they spent two weeks working closely with Otero.
|
|
One of Mr. Macron's trademarks was scorn for predecessors who yielded to pressure from the streets.
|
|
Despite his recent Pulitzer nomination, Prum still stings from the perceived scorn of his academic peers.
|
|
He's initially met with hostility and scorn, but we can guess how that will turn out.
|
|
But conservatives scorn him for aligning his party with organized labor and starting the administrative state.
|
|
Why does the Israeli rabbinate treat liberal American forms of Judaism (Reform, Conservative) with such scorn?
|
|
"Still the place to be," she said, with her normal mix of self-congratulation and scorn.
|
|
It was a position that earned him scorn across the narrow political spectrum of mainstream politics.
|
|
She's becoming a convenient target for scorn by the various people undone by the Ponzi scheme.
|
|
He must guide them through a season of scorn and skepticism, with no promise of redemption.
|
|
She saw the expression on Beau Diddely's face change from scorn to fear and she laughed.
|
|
Pence deserves thanks, not scorn, for raising awareness about ObamaCare's devastating impact on the truly vulnerable.
|
|
Both scandals drew bipartisan scorn and are expected to stretch several more months, if not longer.
|
|
I have spent a lot of time over the years heaping scorn and ridicule upon Republicans.
|
|
She asked him about the F.B.I. investigation reported by The Times with a tone of scorn.
|
|
The number of goals he has scored despite all of that warrants respect, rather than scorn.
|
|
I called for a ban after San Bernardino and was met with great scorn and anger.
|
|
Devin Nunes of California, authored the draft report, is already being met with scorn from Democrats.
|
|
It is written for the Davos inhabitants whom you scorn on the inside of the book.
|
|
Randazza sees himself as the heir to that tradition, and all of the scorn that comes along with it — the kind of scorn one gets while defending Alex Jones' tall tales about the Sandy Hook shootings in a lawsuit filed by the grieving parents of murdered children.
|
|
Let's be frank: he would take a tsunami of personal abuse and media scorn in the process.
|
|
Spicer's comparison of Assad and Hitler — to Hitler's advantage — was foolish and received the scorn it deserved.
|
|
Melania, 46, has been an object of scorn among many Hillary Clinton supporters for quite some time.
|
|
On Sunday night the Bannon appointment drew scorn from the office of Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid.
|
|
Saudi Arabia may be facing the world's scorn over the murder last month of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
|
|
Trump took to Twitter on Saturday afternoon to heap scorn on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep.
|
|
Trump's claim was widely recognized as false and drew scorn from many Muslims offended by the statement.
|
|
But historically, that intelligence has been defined in the narrowest of ways, with a scorn for emotion.
|
|
That drew scorn from backers of a U.K. exit, or Brexit, who accused the president of meddling.
|
|
Although being the primary target of the Kardashian family's scorn is terrifying, being arrested also isn't great.
|
|
The AP reported that authorities had found Ame was a unique target of scorn in her family.
|
|
Donald Trump may scorn liberal norms, but America's checks and balances are strong, and will outlast him.
|
|
There have been some big ones, some utterances so absurd that they invite laughter rather than scorn.
|
|
As candidates have increasingly turned to popular music in recent elections, they have sometimes felt artists' scorn.
|
|
The listener wonders if the speaker is directing her scorn toward a former lover or to God.
|
|
In Tokyo those close to Shinzo Abe, the prime minister, spoke of Mr Moon with undisguised scorn.
|
|
But in office, Mr Trudeau has invited populist scorn, only partly because of his dynastic leg-up.
|
|
Not only did Democrats oppose Reagan&aposs policies, they heaped scorn on his blunt anti-Communist rhetoric.
|
|
He also drew scorn when he tweeted an image earlier this week comparing Syrian refugees to Skittles.
|
|
Meanwhile otherwise loyal MPs mock the prime minister's "renegotiation" of Britain's EU membership with Trump-esque scorn.
|
|
She didn't use them as vessels of sympathy or scorn; she simply — and complexly — drew from life.
|
|
When you watch it, you realize the politically correct thing to do is show scorn and ridicule.
|
|
We listen to an aural cascade of F-bombs from the Empire State queen of scorn, Sen.
|
|
His words are simple, his praise or scorn is unambiguous, and he shows little delicacy or politeness.
|
|
His attempts to befriend Pakistan in hopes of support for peace talks earned him scorn at home.
|
|
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders heaped scorn on Bannon and the book at her briefing on Thursday.
|
|
I can already feel scorn from the Baby Boomers reading this, but hold the millennial critiques, please.
|
|
The "Normicon Party" favors respect for civility, stable institutions, and ethical codes that generate scorn when flouted.
|
|
The crowd jeered and heaped scorn on these women because they had kept company with German soldiers.
|
|
Medical experts have poured scorn on suggestions that Epstein was murdered based on the broken hyoid bone.
|
|
Rubio, meanwhile, has faced withering scorn for his performance in the GOP's eight presidential debate last Saturday.
|
|
I don't recall which of my appeals drew Todbaum's curliest scorn, only that it got pretty curly.
|
|
Therefore, our latest object of scorn is the hipster-ready augmented reality concept device called the MonoLens.
|
|
You are, even here in this very progressive city, a target for ridicule and scorn and violence.
|
|
Party websites and newspapers heaped scorn on him, and party officials said he would face further punishment.
|
|
"She didn't live her life and die in this trade for our scorn and disrespect," Liz says.
|
|
Trump harbors particular scorn for America's friends and neighbors, whom he views as cheaters and free-riders.
|
|
Russia escaped the scorn Trump poured out on North Korea, Iran, Venezuela, "international criminal networks" and terrorists.
|
|
A widely circulated draft of the proposed legislation has attracted both compliments and scorn from the president.
|
|
Judging by the crowds on Sunday, scorn for the government on the mainland has reached new heights.
|
|
Yet there are few states where the federal government is viewed with more resentment, suspicion and scorn.
|
|
Martini tells it like it is, doling out levelheaded instruction while condemning Trump enablers with fiery scorn.
|
|
In that sense, he said in interviews, it's a victory because he drew the scorn of liberals.
|
|
The public gave Superman a pass, but had a lot of scorn for Lois, considering her unfaithful.
|
|
The letter was met with almost universal scorn from the northerners, who distrust both Targaryens and Lannisters.
|
|
"No, shush," he silenced the crowd at several points when audience members audibly protested, feigning exhausted scorn.
|
|
Apple's absolutist position on encryption earned it bipartisan scorn at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in December.
|
|
But they understood what was being said from the intonation, the facial expression, the scorn, the venom.
|
|
"Stray too far and you run the risk of inviting scorn from his biggest defenders," he said.
|
|
Bobbi has a similar scorn for money, but she can afford her attitude: her family is rich.
|
|
Warren initially drew scorn from some on the left with a safe statement calling for new elections.
|
|
When Caroline risks heartbreak and scorn to tell Kalinda how she feels, most readers will understand why.
|
|
Worst is the lack of freedom to move around in the world without scrutiny, pity or scorn.
|
|
Such scorn is as nothing, however, compared with the wrath that has greeted the casting of Johansson.
|
|
Recently, his work on the Apple Watch drew acclaim among smartwatch fans (and scorn from some traditionalists).
|
|
He gained recognition — and the scorn of the dictatorship — for his work representing the family of Gen.
|
|
Pakistan has only two Nobel Prize winners, and both have faced scorn from the country's conservative elements.
|
|
Much like Charlie Brown and the football, Republicans acted to accommodate and got more scorn in return.
|
|
The Republican provisions applying to pass-throughs have been singled out for some of the greatest scorn.
|
|
Palestinian President Mohammed Abbas has heaped scorn on the conference and urged Arab governments not to attend.
|
|
The barrier isn't a religious liberty law, like the one passed to widespread scorn in Indiana last March.
|
|
The new comments from King could invite a new round from scorn from liberals and immigrant groups. Rep.
|
|
He drew scorn from Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who put Macron's comments down to his relative youth.
|
|
Mr Macron's strong approval of the EU provoked scorn and gurning from the leader of the National Front.
|
|
IN A speech to London's Constitutional Club in 1931, Winston Churchill poured scorn on the idea of India.
|
|
But when a local business group began lobbying to avoid tariffs involved with departing the E.U., scorn ensued.
|
|
Also, my default mood in life is "undifferentiated scorn" with just a pinch of unending, bone-deep sadness.
|
|
Modern scientists continue to pour scorn on the idea, attributing sightings to carbon-monoxide poisoning and sleep paralysis.
|
|
The hardest-line Iranian factions will pour scorn on colleagues willing to give diplomacy a try yet again.
|
|
We're there to cheer our kids on, have fun, and socialize with each other, not scorn one another.
|
|
He seemed to regard his underlings as idle assets and they repaid him with their scorn (see article).
|
|
In his tour of the greenhouse, Lippman paused at one point to express good-natured scorn for heirlooms.
|
|
As the photos circulated across a bitterly cynical internet, outrage, scorn, and ridicule flew in the governor's direction.
|
|
Like Logan, he was simply calling for a conversation—and like Tilin, he was met with puritanical scorn.
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As you go forward, you will sometimes have to take difficult decisions, decisions that others might scorn at.
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When Donald Trump throws protesters or journalists out of his rallies, he gets (well deserved) scorn for it.
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Pulling out of the global climate change agreement resulted in international scorn for the President and his administration.
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Prayer and scripture will help us to look past our differences and shortcomings, tempering our scorn and ridicule.
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While that proposal received widespread scorn, we wanted to see if this type of strategy could actually work.
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Why should I be a team player for you when you've shown me nothing but scorn and derision.
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But by supporting Kavanaugh, Bredesen drew the scorn of liberal Democrats, who accused him of capitulating to Republicans.
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The striking players and replacement players were both met with scorn, and the strike ended in Week 7.
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In the recent past, such comments would have been met with swift bipartisan scorn, repudiation and possibly censure.
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They blame themselves, but their scorn for banks and bailouts runs as wide and hot as the desert.
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They say that people were quick to heap scorn on the Kentucky teenager without knowing all the facts.
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After establishing that poetry is a magnet for scorn, Mr. Lerner does not do what you might expect.
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Imagine the scorn Scalia would have heaped on Kennedy for both his reconsidered abortion and affirmative action positions.
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You may be looked down upon, you may suffer some social scorn, but you're a grown-ass man!
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Tiny wrinkles curling at the corners, and something not far from scorn lurking there and beside her lips.
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The scorn toward journalists here reflected genuine concern from some attendees that mainstream news outlets willfully misunderstand conservatives.
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The stance brought scorn from many countries but found a receptive audience with Russia, Saudi Arabia and Australia.
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Supporters held rallies demanding justice, yet she said the publicity also elicited a flood of threats and scorn.
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"I incessantly have nothing other than scorn for humanity," he wrote in an online message to another gamer.
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But it is one that attracts, too, unavoidable scorn for its inability to retain that focus, that intensity.
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Tail-wagging, face-licking, jump-in-your-lap friendliness is what dog lovers adore and cat people scorn.
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Taking such a step requires courage, and I find it disturbing when Disney's efforts are met with scorn.
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The White House's proposal unveiled last year was met with scorn from Democratic lawmakers and apathy from Republicans.
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But once he started to kill beloved characters, he transformed from an object of scorn rather than pity.
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Mr. Trump's remark drew cross-party scorn in France, and a sharp rebuke from the French Foreign Ministry.
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They are now patients in need of our help and understanding, rather than criminals deserving scorn and incarceration.
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Though they disapproved of Westboro, they approached her with curiosity and humor instead of scorn, lowering her defensiveness.
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But it occurs to me that we should probably save some of our scorn for the hashtag, too.
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We're dealing with cowards that deserve our scorn, not World War II vets who defeated the Third Reich.
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Trump's refusal to condemn Russia has largely prompted consternation, scorn and disbelief from politicians, pundits and the press.
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So the question is, did they learn anything from the scorn viewers piled upon the Season 6 cliffhanger?
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"We'll continue to be the butt of national and international scorn," said Representative Darren G. Jackson, a Democrat.
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The media, again, heaped open scorn on Trump — how dare he praise a murderous dictator and American adversary?
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He heaped scorn on San Juan's mayor for appealing for help to what she assumed was his humanity.
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Like their Nazi precursors, the Communist rulers of East Germany scorn the subjectivism and decadence of modernist art.
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Republicans were widely blamed for the historic disruption, and Cruz's colleagues heaped scorn on him as a result.
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His public criticism of the Senate GOP bill has already earned him scorn from his own party, too.
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While Democrats did talk about addressing climate change in their primaries, Republicans had nothing but scorn for it.
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I don't condone his opinions or beliefs or justify them whatsoever, he just wasn't all hatred and scorn.
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BuzzFeed's release of the memo breaks with typical media policy and has earned the publication both scorn and praise.
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Limbaugh has reserved particular scorn for Latinos, consistently using his platform to conflate Latinos with illegal immigration and crime.
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" Conway's past criticism has drawn the scorn of Trump, who has called him a "loser" and a "whack job.
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Interestingly, the American president's scorn for migrants and globalism has not dampened the global appeal of migrating to America.
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Trump heaped scorn on Mueller, calling him "totally conflicted" in part because he had wanted to head the FBI.
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With a general election due in October, many legislators are scared to back a measure that provokes samba scorn.
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Company officials scorn the idea of listing only on the Tadawul, which would be swamped by an Aramco IPO.
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In private, Chinese and American officials have rarely sounded so similar in their scorn and anger for North Korea.
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I feared the haters and the wrath of Bernie Sanders' supporters, let alone the scorn of some Republican friends.
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They scorn fuzzy thinking and beliefs that have no basis in fact; they attack problems with a ruthless logic.
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They seem to view single men with pity and scorn rather than alarm—"people will laugh," says Mr Qiang.
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She backtracked days later, prompting opposition parties to pour scorn on her claim to offer "strong and stable leadership".
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Similarly, the misandry meme is an example of the strategic choice to scorn and ironize rather than to educate.
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Therefore I reserve special scorn for so-called podfasters: the tweakers who listen at 1.5X, 2X, even 3X speed.
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According to the Associated Press, authorities previously found that Ame was a unique target of scorn in her family.
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It is a world of its own, built around codes of tribal identity, grievance and scorn for The Other.
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But claims of influence peddling caused waves in Chile, casting legal scrutiny upon Compagnon and bringing scorn upon Bachelet.
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The post, which has been taken down, drew widespread scorn, prompting Eng to issue a public apology on Facebook.
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McKee's murder brought the group national scorn and attention, but it had already been asserting itself in other ways.
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Bitcoin skeptics pour scorn on it, but privately must be kicking themselves for not buying some many years ago.
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The jihadists accuse the Salafis of failing to act on their convictions; the Salafis scorn the jihadists as extremists.
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Jordan earned the scorn of the fans last month when he responded to cries of discontent by proclaiming apathy.
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Still, that laziness is also steeped in misogynistic scorn (hi again, Karl Lagerfeld of Chanel, I haven't forgotten you).
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The plan met with immediate scorn from the American Federation of Teachers, which represents 40,000 educators in Puerto Rico.
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The passage prompted praise from those who got a vote on their amendment and scorn from those who didn't.
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Democrats were not particularly forthcoming while crafting the Affordable Care Act, drawing scorn from the public and politicians alike.
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Chaffetz directed most of his scorn to McCarthy, saying her agency did not do more to stop the catastrophe.
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As for the scorn that reviewers and critics had heaped onto his subsequent films, that was due to jealousy.
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That's because he is a deeply patriotic and nationalistic Korean, and he resents the patronizing scorn of bullying Westerners.
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He displayed scorn for a society that he said does not appreciate the sacrifice of those in the military.
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But one of his strategies is showing love and scorn in equal measure to all sides of the argument.
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He routinely heaps accolades on the high-profile personalities that style-world insiders, at least privately, tend to scorn.
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But it left Silicon Valley without a flawed hero figure to lavish praise and heap envy and scorn upon.
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The photo elicited both praise and scorn, which Mr. Iqbal ignored, continuing to tweet in defense of the groups.
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And while Congress did not appear poised to intervene quickly, the scorn facing the multibillion dollar industry was clear.
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The video saturated social media and was featured by news outlets, drawing predictable measures of outrage, scorn and ridicule.
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France had drawn scorn from Mr. Trump after officials announced plans to impose a 3 percent tax starting Jan.
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France drew special scorn from Mr. Trump after officials announced plans to impose a 3 percent tax starting Jan.
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If anyone formed an all-white committee to make decisions on racial justice, the party would rightly scorn it.
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Indeed, though Trump has shown himself to be ready, eager and willing to ignore or publicly scorn Jeff Sessions.
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His scorn was all the more withering because he, too, was starting to question the truth of Marxist dialectics.
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Wells Fargo earned bipartisan scorn from lawmakers, some of whom called for Wells Fargo's former leaders to be jailed.
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Democrats scorn Trump's lies while Republicans rely on the fact that he's a liar to safeguard their ideological orthodoxy.
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From Hungary to France, from Poland to Britain, nationalists pour scorn on the European Union and seek its unraveling.
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And they underscored a deep frustration in Congress about the president's supposed scorn for a coequal branch of government.
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But some sympathisers took to social media to pour scorn on immigration restrictions they said would serve Islamic State's cause.
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Unlike Chavez, who liked to bash the U.S. "Empire," the target of Lopez Obrador&aposs scorn has been domestic elites.
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And I've got this guy standing over there talking about New York values with scorn, distaste, with hatred, with hatred.
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Perhaps more than any other reporter, Trump has singled out the cable network's White House correspondent for scorn and ridicule.
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" He joined Amazon from Apple, and reportedly drew the scorn of then-CEO Steve Jobs for joining a "boring retailer.
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All too often India's courts have issued rulings that are either so harsh or so petty as to invite scorn.
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You're a dandy when they looked at me with scorn and gave me a hand gesture and called me wop.
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This freakish consistency invited the scorn of China's many "data doubters", who have long argued that it fudges its figures.
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So these women faced scorn and ridicule for running ... If you look at cartoons from that period, they were mocked.
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Russian elites long viewed China with racially tinged scorn, says Alexander Gabuev of the Carnegie Moscow Centre, a think-tank.
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Clinton's support for lower barriers to outsourcing through the Trans-Pacific Partnership has met with scorn from Sanders and Trump.
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The consensus response to these moves from all too much of the professional and amateur punditry is incredulity and scorn.
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In doing so, he earned public praise and the scorn of countless defense attorneys whose clients endured Myers's courtroom theatrics.
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N on Monday invoked scorn from the professional network's loyal users and shocked traders who expressed surprise on other sites.
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The very same people who are so messianic about carbon pricing today were unanimous in their scorn for the process.
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His divisive and inflammatory rhetoric on everything from immigration to women drew fierce scorn from fellow Republicans and Democrats alike.
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As the nation's first black First Lady, Michelle was the object of equal parts adulation and scorn for eight years.
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His campaign threw scorn on the Philippines' cautious traditional politicians or trapos, a play on the Tagalog for "old rags".
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But Trump's scorn for democratic norms has become so prominent a feature of his presidency that it can't be avoided.
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The council has begged for funding to continue (to some scorn from parts of the country that voted to Remain).
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The Jackson camp strategy has been to pour scorn on these people by saying they are out to get money.
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It's unforgivable that now, hundreds of years after foundation of this nation, immigrants are still treated with scorn and disrespect.
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Conservatives who did not dare support Trump in public, for fear of ridicule and scorn, made judgements just as quickly.
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And the conservative lawmaker heaped plenty of scorn on one of Dodd-Frank's biggest pieces: the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
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Unobstructed views from its surrounding balcony are spectacular (look down on the puny Wythe hotel and teeming mortals in scorn).
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The apparent hacking by the Russians has triggered the type of national scorn that McCain knows well how to mobilize.
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John McCain as "just another senator from Arizona" and heaped scorn on the "lords of technology" who rule Silicon Valley.
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They might sound like harmless fun, but nights catering to an under-18 crowd are the subject of widespread scorn.
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While his discussion of their thinking is often informative, his scorn for them and their legacy grows by the page.
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And maybe he thinks that most journalists, with their relentless hostility to his personality and policies, richly deserve public scorn.
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"Human flesh searches" are all about punishing people whom the cyberspace masses decide are deserving of public attention and scorn.
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Judging by the crowds on Sunday, Hong Kongers' scorn for the government on the mainland may have reached new heights.
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Serving as a hub for the obsessives means weathering the occasional scorn of veterans as well as educating the neophytes.
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"The memorial changed everything for the Vietnam veterans," who'd faced bitter scorn when they returned to the U.S., Scruggs said.
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Once America's favorite troubled teen, treated with scorn and sexism, our greatest export reveals she's in a better place now.
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She keeps returning to the lives of mixed-race people: the scrutiny they face, the fascination, congratulation, suspicion and scorn.
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The genuine, honest, and full-hearted life his character lives in rural Michigan isn't treated with scorn; instead, it's aspirational.
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They should feel they can ask questions without fear of scorn, explore their own ideas and draw their own conclusions.
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As American allies reacted cautiously to the proposal, adversaries heaped scorn on the United States for its support for Israel.
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Trump's inability to get his own house in order deserves scorn, says George Washington University media studies professor Steven Livingston.
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Ford will carry through with Mexico plans GM has routinely drawn Trump's scorn even as Ford has gotten his praise.
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It also brought some scorn from fans, even after his production improved over the final few games of the season.
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Wilt earned copious scorn throughout his career for being so dominant (and so much bigger than most of his opposition).
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I would love to claim that "Knight of Cups" holds that attitude up to scorn, but it just ain't so.
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In 2017, former Commissioner Scott Gottlieb postponed the deadline to 2022, prompting scorn from public health groups and some lawmakers.
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His light skin has made him the subject of scorn at times from both white and Indigenous Australians, he said.
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There have always been plenty of environmentalists and liberals who scorn Gore and other climate leaders for their supposed hypocrisy.
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But amid all the public's scorn for the Brazilian political elite there were flashes of a different kind of mood.
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Public opinion on the game seems to have shifted from rabid enthusiasm/bemused tolerance to rabid enthusiasm/crankiness and general scorn.
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Packages were also reported to have been mailed to CNN, billionaire George Soros, and other frequent, public targets of Trump's scorn.
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President Correa visited in July to inaugurate two of the new parkways, casting scorn on questions about the plan's economic rationale.
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"There's so much scorn, and so much ridicule, that it creates a tremendous block," reflects Brown of negative attitudes toward homeopathy.
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The old steel-framed bridge in Shubuta, a small town of about 19803, has been the target of scorn for generations.
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Set to somber music, the ad features clips of the presumptive Republican nominee that have drawn scorn over the past year.
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They're used to using these words to mock others and to set themselves apart from the people they hate and scorn.
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Ingraham drew widespread scorn the previous day for tweeting an article that said Hogg had been rejected from several California universities.
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She doesn't deserve your scorn, or your abuse, and neither does anyone else who finds solace or inspiration in this music.
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Over the weekend, Kardashian's costume choices provoked strong reactions — from praise to scorn — for dressing up as iconic women of color.
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The Fed raised its benchmark interest rate four times in 2018, earning him Trump's scorn, even as the market remained patient.
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But then what could be more ridiculous than the cross, that appallingly public symbol of scorn and hopelessness and utter failure?
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The attacks on Mueller drew scorn from the president's most frequent GOP critics, like Arizona Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake.
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But he reserved even greater scorn for the fundraising and political network around the billionaire industrialist Koch brothers, Charles and David.
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Some conservative evangelicals malign God by suggesting that Christians should scorn adoring same-sex couples yet vote for a sexual predator.
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The moment drew widespread scorn on social media and spawned the hashtag #UnwantedIvanka, where she was photoshopped into various historic scenes.
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Those acts have prompted vigils and rallies in cities around the world, as well as scorn and retaliation from world leaders.
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And frequently with the appropriate level of ridicule and scorn when the performative aspects of exhaustion get too over the top.
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The leaders of Mercosur and allied governments can call on Mr. Maduro to take basic steps to avoid further international scorn.
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Like many viral hits, "White Iverson" succeeded in part because it was divisive, inspiring awe and annoyance, bewilderment and mild scorn.
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Now that he appears to be in the process of doing so, Trump loyalists are pouring scorn down on his head.
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"A single bag does not provide the criminal evidence needed," Segovia said, prompting widespread scorn in Brazilian press and social media.
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But in the weeks since, the 21960-year-old has also faced rebuke and scorn, mainly from his fellow black activists.
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And Mr. Hoyt also earned the scorn of vampires who said he had abused his power and capitalized on their subculture.
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Asked about the name on Wednesday, Mr. Trump did not reject it even as he acknowledged that it would draw scorn.
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He has consistently expressed scorn for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq waged by Mr. Obama and President George W. Bush.
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Some of the heaviest scorn, however, has been saved for those who return to China and question the country's harsh approach.
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Some of the heaviest scorn, however, has been saved for those who return to China and question the country's harsh approach.
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And it has collapsed as Italy's economy is stagnating and the politics that produced privatization are the object of populist scorn.
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Though my mother and I had the out-and-out battles, Skip was the default object of my scorn and derision.
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BOONE, IOWA — People connected to the Democratic establishment still tend to view the Bernie Sanders campaign with bemusement, incomprehension, or scorn.
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The Trump administration has repeatedly drawn scorn from Palestinian officials, including Ashrawi, over its actions related to the Israeli Palestinian conflict.
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Investigations ____ Once America's favorite troubled teen, treated with scorn and sexism, our greatest export reveals she's in a better place now.
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Even Sharon's former husband (Ed Begley Jr.) and his much-younger fiancée (Mircea Monroe) are treated with more kindness than scorn.
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When conservatives show up in contemporary plays, they are usually laughable blowhards, whining billionaires or troglodyte parents whose children scorn them.
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America's European friends and allies, and their media, are falling over each other in pouring scorn on Washington for literally anything.
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But Mr. Zucker has attracted an outsize portion of the president's scorn, in part because of their past connection at NBC.
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There is little latitude here for appealing to our common humanity and great latitude to heap scorn on the other party.
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Yet this is countered by an element of scorn directed at herself, as a writer, for presuming anything about her vocation.
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And whatever his reputation in town lore, the scorn showed Henry by the mostly white Castle Rock carries unmistakable racial overtones.
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Reports of potential comebacks by other media figures, such as former CBS anchor Charlie Rose, have largely been met with scorn.
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On the podcast, he laid particular scorn on the new Rottweiler-Poodle hybrid, known as a Rottle or a Rottie-Poo.
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Many in the opposition scorn talks, after three attempts since 2014 that Mr Maduro used merely to buy time and sow division.
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There's another reason that lawmakers are taking a swing at Google over its work with Huawei though, and that's out of scorn.
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Gillibrand said that the "retaliation and scorn" that has followed the accusations is why people do not go public with similar stories.
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Beijing-born residents often treat the outsiders with scorn, blaming them for much of the city's crime and its pockets of squalor.
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" After she concluded her remarks, the president was full of praise for his daughter — and his signature scorn for the media. "Wow.
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Ask any chef who makes it what goes into its mysterious sauce and you will probably be met with suspicion and scorn.
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Collar unbuttoned, sleeves rolled to his elbows, the energetic 76-year-old was untroubled by the scorn that Brazilians heap upon him.
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The Trump campaign should be particularly wary, Keating added, of the national Chamber's scorn trickling down to local business groups and leaders.
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And Gen Zs, with their obsession over Instagram and rejection of hourly work, are primed for the utmost scorn by their elders.
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The cashier looks at us half laughing, half filled with scorn, and probably screaming, typical Americans, in her head as she watches.
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His insistance that universal priniciples apply to Palestinians, too, has earned this Jewish philanthropist the scorn of Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister.
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How can you gain power when even the mere hint of sexual desire, ruthless ambition, and independence will likely garner you scorn?
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While CPAC has grown into a hotbed of Trumpian support, Romney has distanced himself from the president, garnering Trump's mockery and scorn.
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The flip side of Trump's vindictiveness is his desire for adulation and acceptance, especially by elite figures who scorn him as vulgar.
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If she could deal with Rush Limbaugh's scorn at 11, maybe she could handle being out in front of another divisive issue.
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That approach earned Sunstein considerable scorn from some progressives, who thought the process wound up junking or delaying invaluable life-saving regulations.
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So when Krasner ran on reversing decades of mass incarceration, his campaign drew scorn, and then fear, from the criminal justice establishment.
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He has attacked the media for "piling on" the bank, saying it was "ridiculous" for them to be the subject of scorn.
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But Fanning gives her an elegance and a cool center that's separate from the icy scorn of the film's other career models.
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The fact that this outlandish statement was being made by a botanist, rather than one of their own, only increased their scorn.
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Although Merkel downplayed the Ivanka's prominence, many critics seized on it as an example of the Trump administration's scorn for democratic norms.
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But most of all, what has felt unpleasant and deeply personal is the utter scorn with which this topic has been treated.
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One shouldn't need the threat of public exposure and scorn to treat women well; but if that's what it's gonna take, fine.
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But the business and banking community heaped scorn on that study as well, arguing it was oversimplistic and relied on outdated data.
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Thursday's announcement also drew scorn from conservative American Catholics, some of who have grown increasingly critical of Francis's leadership of the church.
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The Holocaust was so wholly, systematically, profoundly evil that even the suggestion that something is Nazi-like is easily met with scorn.
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Mr. Trump was arguing for mental health services, but the remark drew scorn from veterans' groups that work to reduce the stigma.
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Her proposals, including calling for a wealth tax on individuals making more than $50 million, has earned her scorn from corporate executives.
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He still hasn't appointed a deputy, and provoked rare on-the-record scorn from Republicans over his handling of the debt ceiling.
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And Buffett reserves particular scorn for managers who put too much emphasis on consistent yearly growth in earnings per share, Cunningham said.
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The Green River runs very close to Bundy Country where wildlife rangers are perceived with the scorn reserved for an invading army.
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Proximity makes this Mayberry throwback irresistible to New Yorkers who scorn the suburbs but cannot commit to a full-throttle rural lifestyle.
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Unable to bear the scorn of Ms. Coulter and Rush Limbaugh and his cheerleaders at "Fox & Friends," Mr. Trump promptly reversed course.
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The pair are attended to by a four-strong supporting cast who seem to exist mostly as objects of desire or scorn.
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A Tennessee man who became a subject of national scorn after stockpiling more than 17,000 bottles of hand sanitizer donated the supplies.
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The British media sees the Turner Prize as an annual chance to assess, or pour scorn over, the state of contemporary art.
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Greenside piles scorn upon himself, reflecting it through the eyes of his part-time countrymen while simultaneously pointing a finger at them.
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But aside from quotes questionably attributed to him, Jordan hasn't really faced the kind of public scorn Oprah has for migrating mainstream.
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In the United States, events like the Miss U.S.A. contest are largely seen as an anachronism, fodder for feminist scorn or amusement.
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Cruz has accused Obama of placing politics over policy, and is likely to wear the president's scorn as a badge of honor.
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She beamed as students described how they had blossomed at the school, which offers a refuge from bullying, scorn and self-doubt.
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The score, too, came in for scorn from the Parisian critics, who pooh-poohed its evocation of Tchaikovsky as sentimental and uninspired.
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The Obama Administration was especially assiduous in its pursuit of whistle-blowers, and President Trump has also singled them out for scorn.
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He was humiliated by the scorn heaped on him in Parliament on Tuesday, where he was nervous and out of his depth.
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"You are the France of submission," Ms. Le Pen said with scorn; Mr. Macron was merely a heartless banker, in her view.
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He has drawn inevitable scorn from the activist left for his promise to unite the country and try to work with Republicans.
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Environmental groups heaped scorn on Trump's order, arguing it was dangerous and went against the broader global trend toward cleaner energy technologies.
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He had a mechanic's scorn for needless parts, and he spent many years thinking about the simplest way to view the images.
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Weight Watchers is attracting the scorn of social media users for offering teenagers free memberships as part of a new corporate strategy.
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Kevin McCarthy delivered the final speech for the Republicans casting the impeachment process as yet more scorn from Democrats on Trump supporters.
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The eighth episode of this season of "The Crown" shows the royal family observing all this publicity around the Windsors with scorn.
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But Sandler also poured scorn on the idea that the kind of exchange represented in the emails is commonplace on political campaigns.
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Revenge porn, by its nature, assumes that the wider public will always shame and scorn someone who poses nude for a photo.
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That has drawn scorn from Trump's critics, who cast her as a faux-human rights liberal and an enabler for her father.
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Williamson was wearing Nikes at the time, prompting Puma to send out a snarky tweet that immediately earned scorn from others online.
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Over the course of roughly 15 minutes, Trump poured scorn on several groups of people — including Democrats, the media, and undocumented immigrants.
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He began his remarks talking about his opposition to the invasion of Iraq, and then turned his scorn on the withdrawal from Iraq.
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Support soldiers, or fobbits in modern parlance, get the scorn of everyone for working safer (albeit critical) operations like logistics and medical support.
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Volunteers and researchers separately rated the dreams for certain positive and negative emotions, like amusement, gratitude, and love, and scorn, disgust, and hate.
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More broadly, Juicero stood as a symbol of Silicon Valley excess and a culture of frothy investment, attracting scorn from across the internet.
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But as USA Today points out, the plan was met with a wave of scorn from travelers, who enjoyed the silence during flights.
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From these descriptions, an alien observer would be bemused to learn that these harmless phenomena drive some people to scorn, or even anger.
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RELATED: Now on the sidelines, Ted Cruz targets his scorn on Trump's enablers "There is no decree clause to the Constitution," he said.
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Emmanuel Macron has poured scorn on Donald Trump after he announced his decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement.
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Among the most frequent targets of Mr. Orban's scorn has been George Soros, the American billionaire and philanthropist who was born in Hungary.
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And Libya has drawn scorn for its policy of either returning rescued people to dangerous conditions or detaining them in massive holding centers.
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It might help to recall that from its inception, "Cats" has been a divisive show, the kind that pretty much braves your scorn.
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Ms Kassabova's book drips with scorn for the spivs, goons and far-off politicians whose greed and carelessness wreak such mischief and misery.
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Megaupload went on to become a hub of pirated entertainment materials, which made Dotcom the target of Hollywood scorn and U.S. government investigations.
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Italy, where an earlier version of the new governing coalition seemed to scorn the euro zone's spending rules, will not have reassured them.
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The strategy allows Johnson -- and other Republicans -- to effectively concede the presidential race without having to invite Trump's scorn with an un-endorsement.
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Grassley, no stranger to controversy during 35 years in the Senate, has become the target of Democrats' scorn in this Supreme Court drama.
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As for the cavalier users out there: if you're still using your Galaxy Note 7, in spite of everything, you deserve public scorn.
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Yet too often critics default to anger and scorn when people use such words, rather than seeing an opportunity for debate and education.
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Mass incarceration was an ineffective way to fight crime and drug use It's now easy to look back at these ideas with scorn.
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After years of neglect and scorn, this strip of urban infrastructure, long the sole domain of the meter maid, has gotten incredibly crowded.
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Today, the narrative around the opioid epidemic is more likely to treat drug users as patients who need help, not scorn or punishment.
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I wish I could rank it higher, but even he poured scorn on his own effort by inserting that laughter at the end.
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The soaring costs of prescription drugs could also come up, in wake of the public scorn this summer over the EpiPen price hikes.
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They don't hesitate to pour scorn on the Trump administration, but they keep looking up to Washington to get Germany off their backs.
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Their scorn has two main assertions: The theory of "technological unemployment," conceived by John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s, has been proven wrong.
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Having had her own political aspirations torpedoed, Leathers is an expert of the conservative scorn that sexual progressives endure in the public eye.
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Suggestions for those in management included pleasantries and promotions for Goofuses and scorn and complaints for Gallants as a means fomenting bad morale.
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Drug-makers, in particular, came in for scorn as part of an agenda that also calls for Teddy Roosevelt-style anti-trust efforts.
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There are some options, the most likely being a life of memorabilia sales, autograph signings, and navigating public curiosity -- and public scorn. 3.
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I think it's because I come from the north and we have a lot of bias and a lot of scorn for Florida.
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Even if this strikes you as a parochial or cowardly attitude, you cannot persuade people to scorn their treasures by calling them nostalgic.
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After nearly two decades of undeserved scorn, the Star Wars prequels are finally getting the credit they deserve as undeniably dank meme material.
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Among other broadsides, the person heaped scorn on officials who described, in terms of economic performance, a "red-letter start" to the year.
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Yet when she attended a meeting called recently by district officials to discuss the problems, the villagers were met with scorn, she said.
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Frankly, the torrent of scorn for conservative closed-mindedness confirmed my view that we on the left can be pretty closed-minded ourselves.
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But she has also attracted scorn from less obvious people, who interpret her insistence on Enlightenment values as a betrayal of her origins.
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Still, he left unsaid how he had named a cabinet without any Afro-Brazilians or women, making him a target of much scorn.
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Kirchner has directed scorn at Claudio Bonadio, a judge who is guiding the investigation into alleged kickbacks to her family's real estate business.
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He welcomed the scorn for the brand's Evoque SUV, which has gone on to be a top-seller, despite its initially polarizing styling.
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His hope was that his frankenbreaklunch could hold a drink's scorn at bay, and in that moment a future brunch staple was created.
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None of that scorn deterred Shkreli, who later smirked while refusing to testify about Daraprim's price during an appearance before a congressional committee.
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It's normal to feel exasperated with your screaming infant and scornful of a political opponent, but scorn toward your baby would be bizarre.
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And what does Mbappé deliver, while blatherers scorn the new, plural Europe he incarnates, but renewed faith in the political power of beauty?
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When he did finally visit Puerto Rico after a delay, he drew scorn for throwing rolls of paper towels to residents in need.
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Late-night hosts heaped scorn on President Trump on Tuesday for what they called his slowness in addressing the fallout from Hurricane Maria.
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The video was viewed hundreds of millions of times, eliciting shock, scorn and questions about whether there was too much vitriol in society.
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Yet Tillerson's hearing was messy, as his waffling answers on his approach to dealing with Russia drew scorn from Democrats and Republicans alike.
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The film charts the evolution of Elle Marja's decision to shun her Sami lineage, a choice that earns her scorn from both sides.
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Democrats, meanwhile, heaped scorn on the senator for making gestures toward standing up to the president but not doing so when it counts.
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But there was a prickly scorn from some that deserves a response because it reflects an ideology that underlies so many failed policies.
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But instead of outright scorn, Trump was greeted by certain fascination when he strode into the Congress Center to begin meetings on Thursday.
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Still, he offered nothing but scorn for the few remaining Never Trump Republicans, whom he accused of being self-righteous and politically shortsighted.
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Ms. Hackitt, a former chairwoman of the Health and Safety Executive, a government agency, expressed particular scorn for certain elements of government oversight.
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Pence's opposition to LGBT equality has long drawn the scorn of gay rights activists and made him a champion of the Religious Right.
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In the United States, defeat brought hot-take recrimination on Twitter and examination on ESPN, but nothing like the scorn of national outrage.
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And as important, this applies not just to this president but also to future presidents who might likewise be tempted to scorn Congress.
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To wit: As we've seen, a wink face intensifies whatever feeling—positive or negative—the sarcasm conveys, making praise gushier and scorn pricklier.
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It's a perfect storm of scorn, featuring rich millennials, bad investments, and marketing schemes gone haywire in a kind of international tourist comeuppance.
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The new way of interacting with computers was met with scorn, but that was less about the concept than the possibilities and execution.
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At the beginning of this decade he poured scorn on the idea that Netflix could be a competitor, comparing it to the "Albanian army".
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Blacks saw the nation's black president treated with such scorn and disrespect that many were inwardly relieved to see him end his term -- alive.
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In trying to explain the facts, the nerds must also explain their religion, and Oracle attorneys have nothing but scorn and skepticism for them.
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It provided our nation a glimpse of what we could be, and what we can still be even today, despite Trump's scorn and ire.
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They argue they were unfairly punished "to salvage Syracuse University's reputation" and have faced "ridicule and scorn" in the aftermath of the videos surfacing.
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What's more troubling—and perhaps more dangerous–is the idea that the president should be immune to public scorn simply because he's the president.
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For the past 30 years the Democratic establishment has pursued my agenda, but has gone the extra mile to scorn white, working-class Christians.
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"This family did nothing to earn the flight crew's scorn, other than trying to understand how they can best secure their baby," Rehab said.
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It should therefore be a source of reassurance, not scorn, that China's national GDP number is not simply the sum of its provincial numbers.
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Han nationalists scorn such "Chinese" traditions as tightfitting qipao dresses or high-collared jackets precisely because they are derived from Manchu, Qing-era fashions.
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There was nationwide scorn when he dropped the team's most potent threat, 26-year-old winger Lorenzo Insigne, for Monday's crucial game in Milan.
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It has become fashionable to scorn such models because they rely on unrealistic assumptions—in particular, that people are rational and purely self-interested.
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Carrey wasn't shy about expressing his scorn for Trump and admitted that his displeasure for the president heavily affected his decision to draw cartoons.
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He was bound for Cleveland, home of the perennial losers and looked down upon by the rest of us with both empathy and scorn.
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The decision drew immediate scorn from critics, who argued it was meaningless to be committed to a treaty without working to hit its targets.
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If James was going to have to talk about angels and harps, even a decent fee would not be worth the scorn from colleagues.
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Griffin has now drawn scorn from Republicans and Democrats alike for posing in a photo with a bloody, decapitated fake head resembling President Trump.
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The president is a dangerous clown who deserves all the scorn that can possibly be heaped upon him while kids die in American cages.
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London's rent prices are the stuff of much Internet incredulity, with the most outrageous examples of tiny rooms and large rents provoking much scorn.
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The latest Mean Tweets, which subjects famous musicians to social media scorn, came to light just in time for the 58th Annual Grammy Awards.
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The tech community is currently pouring scorn on the news that Australian entrepreneur Craig Wright has revealed himself to be Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
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But if they couldn't help but express their scorn, I learned up front who thought the mere touch of a feminine color inhibited competence.
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The noncontroversial bill was approved in a 417-3 vote that drew scorn from Democrats, who suggested the House had better things to do.
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But whereas you are firmly behind Rocky Balboa in the Rocky franchise, neither of these women earns our sympathy or outright scorn in Catfight.
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The dominant grape, merlot, has been an object of scorn in popular culture ever since a movie, "Sideways," so pointedly disparaged it in 2004.
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The plant has instead become the target of scorn for some here who view it as another example of corporate opportunism and government gullibility.
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But she and Obama agreed on almost everything, while Sanders disagrees with Clinton on some issues and still exudes scorn for the Clinton campaign.
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Just recently, I heard a journalist explaining that women don't usually report harassment and rape because they are met with disbelief, scorn and punishment.
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But in Denmark, which has never signaled any intention of selling the Arctic island, population 56,000, the notion was met with scorn and ridicule.
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Any candidates who persisted in the old ways would gain little if any advantage, and might pay a price by arousing scorn and criticism.
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"And we also know that they have nothing but scorn for international law, but we have this," Soliz said, holding up the UN charter.
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Among up-and-coming Republicans, Trump was still an object of derision and scorn: vulgar, ignorant, embarrassing, and destined to lose to Hillary Clinton.
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They later backed off the claim and earned scorn from the judge, who said the incorrect allegations were "notorious" and had damaged Butina's reputation.
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"As a mother, I feel anger, scorn, and a profound pain for the cowardly events in the mountains between Sonora and Chihuahua," she tweeted.
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By the end of the week, though, the matter seemed to be blowing over, with Russians of all sorts heaping scorn on Mr. Zolotov.
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From Washington to Maine, New Jersey to North Carolina, Trumpist ugliness was met and vanquished, sometimes by the very targets of right-wing scorn.
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Trade experts have heaped scorn on that claim, noting that the United States already produces more than two-thirds of the steel it uses.
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His approach is not based on any philosophy of governance, but on scorn for or fear of anyone who would hold him to account.
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These days, it's not unusual to hear Indians describe Modi as "our Trump," which is said in antipodal ways, either with pride or scorn.
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Mr. Cuomo has declined to return those donations, saying he wants to use the money to fight the president's agenda, earning Ms. Nixon's scorn.
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Just as France was not reborn after 1998, it will take more than a good World Cup to erase decades of stigma and scorn.
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Doctors and other staff members met the opiate overdose victims with impatience, condescension, ignorance, annoyance, scorn and judgment, and no offer of inpatient treatment.
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It is the object of scorn, mockery and disdain — but more of the kind reserved for bad opéra bouffe than for a genuine threat.
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That strategy has potentially insulated the company from regulations and public scorn, but it also could leave Apple with dumber products than its rivals.
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Kate Millet's arguments glowed in the flames of our campfire, and her scorn seemed mirrored on the surface of the most promising trout pools.
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These books sold well, but neither Flynn nor her publishers anticipated the omnipresent best seller — or object of scorn — that "Gone Girl" would become.
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J.C. A narcissist gets all the scorn he deserves in this perky, plinking, handclapping putdown, as initial attraction gives way to cool-headed assessment.
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That would have broken with decades of policy, and the proposal drew scorn as a transparent bid for votes from Wentworth's sizable Jewish community.
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European diplomats said they worry that Mr. Trump's scorn for the deal runs so deep that he would find other reasons to pull out.
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Executives there torpedoed a new Rockettes show in 2014 and then mounted expensive "spectaculars" in 2015 and 20173 that drew scorn from many critics.
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Perhaps ironically given the uniform scorn heaped on trade deals at both conventions, international trade added 0.23 percent to growth in the second quarter.
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Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, who has gained both acclaim and scorn as one of the primary public faces of Trump's impeachment.
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But much of the scorn he has attracted — and that has, unfairly, slowly eroded his status — had its roots somewhere else: in his roots.
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Marianna Szczygielska, 31, is a Polish doctoral candidate in gender studies — a field of inquiry that has drawn scorn from government-friendly news outlets.
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It was just the latest in a growing list of Trump attacks on Senate Republicans that have also drawn scorn from Hill GOP insiders.
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Athens 2004, at $16.7 billion, is widely seen as an example for inefficiency and Sochi 2014's $50 billion budget drew scorn for exuberance.
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"As a mother I feel angry, scorn and a profound pain for the cowardly events in the mountains between Sonora and Chihuahua," she tweeted.
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When the precariat attacks, it does so from a position of perceived moral superiority, so its attacks are filled with ridicule, mockery and scorn.
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Trump's scorn for NAFTA was crucial to his support among disaffected Democrats in industrial states that lost thousands of jobs under the 1994 pact.
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A George W. Bush-era rewrite that drew environmentalists' scorn never went into wide effect, and ultimately was tossed out by a federal judge.
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It's now easy to look back on that movement with scorn; I think mass incarceration is morally abhorrent, and the country should reverse it.
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He has tried to make a nuanced argument, but it has drawn scorn on the campaign trail among Republicans who portray him as woefully weak.
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First, there came the praise and the scorn, the controversy, the conspiracy, the critics, and the endless guessing as to who the author could be.
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Artistic collaborations are often met with skepticism or even outright scorn, Cancer, just look at the overwhelmingly negative reception of Basquiat and Warhol's shared paintings.
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He drew scorn from Trump, who picked him for the job on Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's endorsement, for raising interest rates four times last year.
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Human rights groups poured scorn on the military's investigation, branding it a "whitewash" and calling for U.N. and independent investigators to be allowed into Myanmar.
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That a band would purposely scorn Jesus and his mother seemed as treacherous and offensive as anything I could imagine as a 222-year-old.
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The echoes in present-day politics are loud, down to the scorn for elites and the re-emergence of the isolationist battle-cry, "America First".
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She expressly blamed "the people who let him buy the guns in the first place," but also heaped scorn on legislators for not doing enough.
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I remember how terrible I felt, both that day and the next, when my clumsy attempt to seek forgiveness was met with laughter and scorn.
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Curved TVs have also earned more scorn than praise — most recently on this very website, courtesy of a withering review of one of Samsung's exemplars.
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Barnaby Joyce, the deputy prime minister and leader of the National Party, poured scorn on the Tesla battery plan, saying it wouldn't make much difference.
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Taddeo uses a clever device to construct one particular world of womanly scorn: Lina's chapters are set during her visits to a women's discussion group.
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Later in the show, Bee saved some scorn for Republicans who said they were offended by Trump's remarks about women because they have female relatives.
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Now, it's being thrust into the spotlight ahead of Tumblr's decision to remove "adult content," a controversial change met with scorn from its impassioned community.
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While it was ultimately the batteries that gave Samsung its big boom headache this fall, USB-C cables have also been the subject of scorn.
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His own eventual captivity is precipitated by a moment of scorn from the white world, and a split-second decision to stand up for himself.
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Vice President Joe Biden returned to the campaign trail for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton Tuesday with nothing but scorn for her Republican rival Donald Trump.
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The FBI is already investigating the dismissal of those charges, per an ABC7 report, after the prosecutors' decision drew scorn from Chicago police and politicians.
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So, I watched Rihanna and Diddy's faces instead, as their expressions went from confusion to disbelief to scorn in her case and pity in his.
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Shkreli reveled in the widespread scorn he received on the heels of the price increase, and delighted lashing out at his many critics on Twitter.
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A widely recognized figure, elegantly dressed with a mane of neatly coiffed black hair, Rosmah Mansor had long drawn popular scorn for her lavish lifestyle.
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Does that adjective "certain" suggest that these are confident women, randomly selected women, or the kinds of assertive women that uptight, unenlightened men would scorn?
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In 2017, unlike in 1947, there is at least a palliative: punishment -- ejection from the stadium and public scorn across the media and the internet.
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So too, though, are the voices of women who have decided not to have children, and who, in writing about this decision, court cultural scorn.
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They asked Twain for autographs, for advice, for aid in publishing their own work; they begged for money; they offered approbation and they offered scorn.
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" Matt Breunig was among those heaping sarcasm or scorn on Tyson's thoughts: "if only there was a name for a sudden and abrupt lurch forward.
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The former president appeared angry as he poured scorn on his wife's opponent, portraying the Sanders campaign as dishonest and his healthcare proposals as unrealistic.
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Internet scorn is one thing, but PEOPLE confirms that the Los Angeles City Attorney's office is reviewing the case after the alleged victim came forward.
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Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump's pardon of former Sheriff Joe Arpaio has been widely denounced as another instance of the President's scorn for the judiciary.
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Swathes of the parliamentary party, particularly those who supported, or might have supported, the Iraq war that Mr Corbyn implacably opposed, were held in scorn.
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The secrecy of their discussions, and the refusal to date by GOP leader to publicly release details of their bill, has drawn scorn from Democrats.
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I walk around the city in a slow-cooker of scorn and misanthropy, deriding and criticizing what I see as stupid or, at best, deluded.
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Perhaps Americans long for leaders who have a little Trump unconventionality, but possess enough dignity and humility to avoid scorn by a majority of voters.
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But he has also left room for scorn for hedge funds and the like, saying they ere getting away with "murder" via the tax code.
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He starts with a chapter on the New Atheists, who have poured scorn on the more obvious logical difficulties and historical implausibilities of dogmatic religion.
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Mr. Trump's remarks on Friday came after Mr. Obama, in a brief exchange with reporters at the White House, again expressed scorn for the subject.
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There are the aliens, a squabbling group who scorn humans but don't seem to be making much progress in their mission to dominate the planet.
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Even last year, when Sean Parker floated his $50 same-day Screening Room streaming venture at Cinemacon, it was mostly met with ridicule and scorn.
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It's unfortunate that the author resorts to the stereotype of a ditzy, boy-crazy woman, and allows Dorcus' actions to be an object of scorn.
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"We scorn corsets and we're horrified by layers of petticoats, but actually, we haven't evolved all that much," says the exhibition's research assistant, Susanna Cordner.
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That said, it's created an interesting social anomaly, a discourse where excess is no longer the focus of scorn, and instead moderation is the fault.
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It earned him scorn in certain corners, but he could take those shots because he knew it would produce affection for him among other Republicans.
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As clear as you are about your need to escape your parents, I advise you to do so not in a spirit of scorn alone.
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Throughout Mr. Najib's tenure, a bejeweled Ms. Rosmah stood by his side, and her fondness for luxury accouterments earned the scorn of the Malaysian public.
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The veteran radio host André "King" Arthur, poured scorn on Azzedine Soufiane, one of the mosque shooting victims, who had heroically lunged at Mr. Bissonnette.
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Mayor Marcelo Crivella, an evangelical pastor whose support for the annual event has been far from ebullient, is likely to be the subject of scorn.
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But it has an even bleaker form of dictatorship under President Xi Jinping and has taken to viewing America with distrust and scorn (see article).
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In season 5's "Free Churro," BoJack delivers an episode-long eulogy to his cruel mother, full of scorn, painful memories, and meditations on mortality.
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It is an industry that has drawn its fair share of scorn for using Hollywood actors to hawk its loans on late-night television advertisements.
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In conjunction with the rest of the album, it's jarring — though as always, Eminem's character heaps as much of that scorn and loathing upon himself.
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That plan has drawn scorn from critics who fear it will water down the field, and praise from countries that rarely get to take part.
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An obelisk at the university, erected by the North Korean authorities and dedicated to Mr. Kim's grandfather and father, has drawn scorn from outside observers.
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Kondo's philosophies on tidying don't scorn keeping stuff, but an important tenet is that you rid yourself of any stuff that doesn't bring you happiness.
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But it nonetheless forced Republicans to go on the record on the issue, which has attracted widespread scorn from environmentalists, Democrats and even some Republicans.
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Farage has spent nearly two decades railing against the E.U., and his speech went viral, thanks to the unbridled scorn he showed toward his listeners.
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When British rule was established in the subcontinent in 1858, the dancers faced scorn from less socially liberal colonizing powers, but the tradition held on.
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Scorn Between Doom, Dark Souls III, Devil Daggers, and Thumper, it seems like some of 2016's greatest offerings were about relentless trips to Hell.
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Mr. Harabin, the former justice minister, for instance, has condemned NATO, relishes bashing Brussels and has made gay men and lesbians frequent targets of scorn.
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Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Thieves tend to be remembered fondly, grandly, or at least without the usual sort of scorn that characterizes criminality.
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" But even with the words fixed, the initial reaction from officials was scorn, she says, as they dismissed palliative care as an "activity for charities.
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This lack of trust is not only directed at Democrats; the conservative base tends to scorn all professional politicians, including those in the Republican establishment.
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Associated Press reporter Jonathan Lemire and Reuters White House correspondent Jeff Mason were both praised by journalists for asking tough questions, but Trump's answers drew scorn.
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You might not think you need the math you're forced to learn in school, but it will save you the eternal shame of eternal Internet scorn.
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I'm treated with a mixture of puzzlement, deference and scorn because I'm American, my money and my plane ticket back to the U.S. overriding my blackness.
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But if you treat them differently, more worthy of scorn or heightened scrutiny, you come to embody the adversarial role the president has slotted you into.
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And as ever, part of the appeal is figuring out what people are really thinking before the panelists show up to pour scorn on their actions.
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The decision was met with scorn by some Democrats running for president, including former vice president Joe Biden, and a sharp dissent from the liberal justices.
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Casey Neistat just released a lengthy, unedited interview with Logan Paul, the controversial YouTuber whose video from the Japanese "suicide forest" in January earned worldwide scorn.
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Yes, a few of these around the house will save you from the scorn of your entire family who are convinced you still eat microwaved dinners.
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Russia has poured scorn on Ukraine's allegations while some organizations and commentators criticized Kiev for the kind of trickery which Ukraine routinely accuses Russia of using.
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This deep distrust of elites helped pave the way for Trump — and primary runner-up Ted Cruz, another candidate eager to heap scorn on party leaders.
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It is true that many observers would heap less scorn on an Iraq War veteran who believed an Iraqi-descended judge might be biased against him.
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LEXINGTON once asked America's most successful centrist to explain the strength of the two-party system, in a country that views those same parties with scorn.
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Still, the Sultan has held his throne for nearly 2360 years, and successfully distanced himself from the global scorn that forced Jefri to flee the country.
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Yet most argue that avoiding Trump's scorn was the closest thing the campaign had to a masterstroke -- nearly every candidate who attacked Trump, of course, crashed.
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"This was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period, both in person and around the globe," he said, an assertion that quickly drew scorn.
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Favreau's words parody those of a pair of CNN commentators, who have drawn scorn for their declarations that Trump "became president" with one action or another.
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CBP has said these checkpoints will remain open during Harvey and its aftermath, a move that attracted scorn from the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas.
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In the febrile America of the Vietnam-war years, however, it more often meant obloquy, humiliation, scorn, the hand of a federal agent on his collar.
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Democrats were quick to heap scorn on a new GOP plan to change how the government regulates Wall Street, calling it a giveaway to big banks.
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It was not Yang Qingning's millions of social media followers or her political beliefs that made the young woman the scorn of Chinese state media recently.
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The Handmaid's Tale also reserves plenty of scorn for those outside the regime who failed to stop Gilead's rise, or who forged alliances for political gain.
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They may discover that they'll have to be more directly political, and help candidates who explicitly back science get elected instead of candidates who scorn it.
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Trump Jr., like his father, tweets relatively often, drawing a mixture of praise from President Donald Trump's supporters and scorn from his detractors on social media.
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Humayun Khan, died in Iraq in 2004, was a flashpoint during the 2016 election and earned then-candidate Trump scorn from many Republicans and Democrats alike.
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Yet, despite those costs — and the price of attracting national scorn — the GOP lawmakers who rammed HB2 into law last March can't seem to quit it.
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The lawyers note: Locs are often the target of scorn and derision based on long-held stereotypes that natural Black hair is dirty, unprofessional, or unkempt.
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In the Netflix show " Altered Carbon ," A.I. beings scorn humans as "a lesser form of life," yet use their superpowers to play poker in a bar.
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Def Leppard may be this year's equivalent, a hugely popular act that sharpened hard rock with pop formulaics, in the process earning the scorn of critics.
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And, of course, Anita Hill, who endured such scorn and shame, who cracked open the basement door and let the first beams of light shine through.
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Sanders supporters were mixed in their views of Warren — some attendees at his two rallies praised her while others heaped scorn on their home-state senator.
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This is particularly true in Canada and in countries in the European Union, both staunch allies that have been treated with unexpected scorn by the president.
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Instead of willfully ignoring the other side, we must learn to engage in opposing perspectives to listen and understand rather than to respond or scorn at.
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The GOP nominee has shown an unusual amount of support for Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is usually a topic of scorn among Republicans in Washington.
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But many fans didn't love his appearance on the popular TV drama, "Game of Thrones," prompting him to temporarily delete his Twitter account amid the scorn.
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He attracted both adulation and scorn for his overt Christian faith and for a habit known as "Tebowing," when he bowed in prayer after a success.
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But when I asked a buddy of mine who attended his funeral if they had finally talked openly about who he was, he reacted with scorn.
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It's a reckless decision that subsequently subjects Terry's wife Glory (Julianne Nicholson) and their two kids to suspicion and scorn in their tight-knit Oklahoma community.
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Democrats, who broadly shared Trump's scorn for NAFTA, were eager to revise the deal to enhance labor standard enforcement and scrap protections for high-cost pharmaceuticals.
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A former drug exec who drew widespread scorn for hiking the price of a lifesaving medicine is facing more criminal charges, according to a new report.
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The proposed punishment, made public on Monday, comes after Russia received serious penalties, and widespread scorn, for flagrantly circumventing rules designed to ensure fairness in sports.
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For now, Google is able to make the same changes while generating a lot less public scorn, which is probably just fine with the company's leadership.
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If anyone is offended by a remark or opinion, ad hominem public attacks, public shunning and scorn is the response, instead of a well-argued rebuttal.
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They are from the ranks of citified "summer people," and Linda observes their halting gestures to inhabit the north with a blend of fascination and scorn.
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The most promising and brutal looking vacation to the twisted netherworld is Scorn, a grotesque Serbian horror game with no shortage of authentically Giger-y dread.
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Likewise, it's possible that his lackluster effort and post-match comments are signs of serious off-court issues—in which case, he deserves empathy, not scorn.
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I think enacting my "shame" and seeing it be met not with scorn but with a few bucks and even a look of understanding was beautiful.
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What is it about Syrians that they draw such special scorn from high-ranking Republicans — first a host of governors in 2015 and now the president?
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While that may sound radical — and has drawn its fair share of scorn from conservatives — it should be familiar to anyone that knows how our military works.
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This dynamic has earned the scorn of Trump-haters on the right and left, who have taken to blaming the news media for enabling Mr. Trump's rise.
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Importantly, being tolerant does not mean acquiescing to those who view tolerance with hatred and scorn, and seek to destabilize the region by fomenting sectarianism and fanaticism.
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In contrast, the Belfie stick—a selfie stick for taking pictures of your butt— has not received the same the level of scorn from the online commentariat.
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Yet at a time when politicians pour scorn on "citizens of nowhere", the dreamy enclave that Joyce dubbed "Europiccola"—a miniature Europe—still casts a melancholy spell.
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For months, Mr Trump had poured scorn on the conclusion of America's intelligence agencies that Russia had launched a hacking operation aimed at subverting the presidential election.
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He poured scorn on evidence that the Kremlin was behind the hacking of Democratic bigwigs' e-mails during the election campaign, preferring to denigrate America's intelligence agencies.
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I found myself immediately enamored with the look and design of the P29s, which scorn plastic in favor of solid metal, fine leather, and cushy memory foam.
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Good to know that more than 30 years ago, the most privileged women in America considered The Handmaid's Tale so unbelievable as to be worthy of scorn.
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Still, at a time when journalism is the subject of scorn and calumnies, the film points out that the profession can demand righteousness, bravery and even heroism.
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" Saving his most vitriolic scorn for Popeyes' black spokeswoman "Annie," he ripped how "every time she do a commercial, there's got to be some coonery and shit!
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Before anyone assumes that this is just a rant against and about Windows, I'll happily include Apple's iOS and some varieties of Google's Android in my scorn.
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Spiedi (the couple name for Pratt and Montag) may have been the subject of reality TV scorn, but they did end up making it down the aisle.
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" The reaction brought scorn from pundits such as HBO's Bill Maher, who said he wanted "to dropkick these kids into a place where there is actual pain.
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BEIJING — It was not Yang Qingning's millions of social media followers or her political beliefs that made the young woman the scorn of Chinese state media recently.
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But, those hopes and dreams are being cheated away from them by people who mock them, scorn them and focus on all the wrong things -- like Russia.
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Footage of the shocking incident has been shared online, with people praising the professionalism of the staff member while pouring scorn on the actions of the men.
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And that, ultimately, is why Trump's horrifying words can't be dissociated from his deeds: They're united by his deep scorn for the normal functioning of American democracy.
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The former co-host of CNN's "Crossfire," Mr. Carville is known for his relationship with the Clintons — a point that earned him playful scorn throughout the evening.
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Moreover, Castro, who will retain considerable political clout as head of the party, delivered a long parting speech in which he poured scorn on the Trump administration.
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DUBAI, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Iran's supreme leader poured scorn on French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday for trying to promote talks between the United States and Iran.
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Within weeks of the deal, Valeant went from investor idol to pariah as its business model of buying older drugs and raising the prices attracted international scorn.
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Utley remains an object of scorn in Citi Field for the takeout slide that led to a broken leg for shortstop Ruben Tejada in last year'a playoffs.
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The George W. Bush administration's widely panned handling of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 drew nationwide scorn and helped fuel Democrats' takeover of the House a year later.
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Trump has been unusually warm to Putin, a strongman met with scorn by prominent American leaders in both parties, and senior Russian leaders have appeared similarly complimentary.
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Authorities had a suspect in custody on Friday for the spate of recent parcel bombs sent to prominent Democrats, CNN and other frequent targets of Trump's scorn.
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Unions are already sounding warnings about Mr. Fillon's plans to reduce the state's role in the economy, and the National Front has heaped scorn on his proposals.
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Clinton's second White House bid revealed a family that viewed Wall Street's elite as friends and collaborators even as the public viewed them with suspicion and scorn.
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That changed when Mr. Malek infused Elliot's scorn with a warmth and vulnerability that suggested the emotional fragility that is, in effect, the foundation of the show.
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In the realm of humans who exist as big, powerful, collagen-filled targets of your scorn, your famous-for-being-famous hot takes, they are without peer.
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Last November, Montreal faced global scorn for dumping 4.9 billion liters of crap into the St. Lawrence River (originally it was going to spill 8 billion liters).
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When he's securely removed from the objects of his scorn, he's tough as nails; when he's in their presence, he quivers like a bowl of Jell-O.
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Niskanen received a five-minute major for cross-checking and a game misconduct and likely will be the subject of scorn by the Pittsburgh faithful on Wednesday.
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Comey, however, is regarded with scorn by many Democrats over his handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton's email server from when she was secretary of state.
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The show has been met with scorn from some corners, especially from some who were fooled like Ms. Palin, but others have taken the pranking in stride.
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Mr. Nunes, 44, has made an unlikely transition from a leadership loyalist who once heaped scorn on Republican hard-liners to one of the hard-liners' idols.
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In his writing, including newspaper and magazine editorials that increased his notoriety, he chastised both the right and the left, inviting scorn for his embrace of contradiction.
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But otherwise this is a style that's become unfashionable, something comedy nerds sneered at; "laugh track" is shorthand for not merely unfunny but also worthy of scorn.
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The ESPN baseball analyst Jessica Mendoza has also been the target of social-media scorn, despite high praise from many of her colleagues and from former players.
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Xi Jinping's China has taken to viewing America with distrust and scorn; Donald Trump's America has pursued a policy of confrontation, notably over trade and intellectual property.
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The company, which is facing $30 billion in liabilities from recent wildfires started by its equipment, has drawn intense scorn from both its customers and state officials.
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De Blasio's open scorn for Bloomberg — and his desire to scratch that itch, even six years into his mayoralty — has proven a constant in his City Hall.
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Moore has consistently made matters of church and state central to his political message, which has earned him both scorn in Washington and a national fan base.
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The Rocket Man: North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un Few leaders have drawn more of Trump's attention -- and scorn -- than Kim Jong Un of North Korea.
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And by actually taking the stand, with reporters documenting his answers, he opened himself up to waves of criticism and outright scorn from peers and listeners alike.
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But by ratio, the hope is overwhelmed by his scorn for religion, prescription drugs, advertising, pop music and shiny objects that distract us from love and mortality.
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But I believe he would have reserved almost as much scorn for the Senate, for abdicating its historic duty to provide a counterweight to the White House.
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Over the years, other wax debuts at Madame Tussauds have been subjected to the scorn of devotees, including likenesses of Justin Bieber, Ryan Gosling and Taylor Swift.
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The song projects not scorn but rather an amusing defense of clubgoers, dance music, and a species of shallowness that may also be a species of fun.
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Images of the sit-in, with political leaders sitting cross-legged on the carpet while munching on pizza and donuts, invited amusement and even a bit of scorn.
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But for now, as popular scorn at Juncker's predecessor taking a plum job advising Goldman Sachs on Brexit shows , the first worry is simply to burnish their image.
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Riot police lined up outside a police station there that had become the object of scorn when protests turned ugly, getting red paint and trash thrown at it.
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Those of us who are hipster types (though we hate to admit it) tend to see this kind of hybridization as worthy of mockery, if not outright scorn.
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For serial killers like Edmund Kemper and Richard Speck, women were objects of scorn and fascination, receptacles for their pent-up rage and humiliation, and ultimately, absolutely disposable.
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Apple's squid emoji, which was integrated in 2016, is on the receiving end of scorn from the scientific community following a tweet from the Monterey Bay Aquarium team.
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Western leaders are reluctant to argue back, because of America's heft and occasionally—as in his scorn for their paltry defence spending—because Mr Trump has a point.
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That's right, the not-so-hidden message behind the media's scorn and ridicule for Trump has been that they all think they're a lot smarter than he is.
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Rarely seen laughing spontaneously, Mr Trump's emotional range runs from bleak ("American carnage"), to scorn ("so stupid"), and a salesman's boosterism ("Folks are going to be very happy").
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His cross-eyed antics often drew scorn from critics but he was for a time a box-office hit who commanded one of the biggest salaries in Hollywood.
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The ex-Directioner and current Gigi Hadid-dater posted a link to his mom's best friend's GoFundMe and was met with more or less immediate scorn and derision.
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In 1973, when Richard Nixon infamously waged a "Saturday Night Massacre" of key Justice Department officials, he was met with broad, bipartisan scorn from across the media ecosystem.
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While Jefferson brilliantly argued that a free press is a vital guarantor of all other freedoms, Trump like Putin treats the free press with scorn, derision and contempt.
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This is what might be called the Davos dilemma: countries may scorn Donald Trump, but they are not quite ready to dismiss the President of the United States.
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Kohan, who is not on Twitter, received some scorn on the social network after a photograph of the Season 5 writers' room, showing mostly white faces, was posted.
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" Mr. Arnault added that LVMH had been the object of scorn for 20 years by the extreme left and that "we are accustomed to this type of criticism.
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The president's comments — "there's classified and then there's classified" — suggested some classified information is more sensitive than other classified information, uniting in scorn critics across the political spectrum.
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García Padilla also reserved some scorn for investors in Puerto Rican debt that have lobbied hard against any legislation that would allow the island to restructure its debts.
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Burgess switched to rugby union to play for England in the 2015 World Cup, and he drew plenty of scorn after the team's poor showing at the tournament.
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"I just wanted to congratulate you because I am hearing of the unbelievable job on the drug problem," Trump said, not mentioning the thousands killed and international scorn.
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In the Oscar nominated 2015 Turkish film, "Mustang," five young orphans earn the scorn of their guardians when they're caught playing with their male classmates on the beach.
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BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Diego Maradona greeted a new film about his life with scorn on Monday, telling people not to see it when it is released next month.
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These last songs, which the middle-aged Haas produced while grappling with the burdens of his past, feel explicitly designed to confound, to upset, even to invite scorn.
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The move was expectedly met with scorn from San Diegans and mostly indifference from Angelinos, who already have a shitty football team to root for in the Rams.
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" Trump treated top aides with scorn, the book says, telling Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross that he was past his prime and calling Attorney General Jeff Sessions "mentally retarded.
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Like Al Qaeda before them, the new jihadists have heaped scorn on the Saudi royal family and put toppling the monarchy near the top of their wish list.
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How long will it take before the pro-Trump black provocateurs realize that funhouse mirrors can't hide them from the scorn of people who judge their true reflection?
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The brash, social media-loving Brooklyn native, who has denied the allegations, was arrested in December 2015, months after garnering widespread scorn for raising the price of Daraprim.
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But in the month since the church was identified as the epicenter of infections in the country, it has become the target of scorn, vilification and open hatred.
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Still, Republicans have already been struggling to keep their footing in densely populated suburbs where Mr. Trump is unpopular and the N.R.A. is an object of widespread scorn.
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Or maybe it was this: In our present moment of marginalization and deportation, scorn and dismissal, to self-identify as Hispanic or Arab-American is a political act.
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They treat their offices and their responsibilities to the voters cavalierly and deserve the scorn of ordinary people, and the hope that they get the comeuppance they deserve.
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That is, our popular culture enforces an absurd standard of youth and good looks, on women in particular, and yet heaps scorn on women who get "work" done.
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They heaped scorn on Zhao Ziyang, the Communist Party leader purged for being soft on the demonstrators, and blamed the upheaval on subversives backed by the United States.
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Ms. Carvalho's relatives opted to bury her in a cemetery several miles from her hometown after local residents reacted with outrage and scorn to details of her death.
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Maybe it's just as well that Euclid died in the third century B.C. If he hadn't, the social media scorn of the 21st century might have killed him.
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Tearful interviews and remorse followed that day in Cape Town as both Smith and Australia set about repairing their respective images amid a backdrop of scorn and distrust.
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After months of delays and rumors about how Australia would make a democratic decision about the contentious issue, the process itself has become a subject of widespread scorn.
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" But the president singled out for scorn the idea that "I wanted sharp spikes at the top" of border fencing, so that "it goes piercing through their skin.
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The proposed fee, which would be paid by oil companies and phased in over five years, was quickly met with scorn by lawmakers in the Republican-controlled Congress.
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The Clean Power Plan, designed to cut greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, is a central part of Obama's climate agenda but the source of scorn among Republicans.
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No art, for a filmmaker as for a novelist, is finer or harder than that of keeping a straight face as you hold the world up to scorn.
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IRAN Dismayed European allies sought sought to salvage the international nuclear pact with Iran after Trump pulled the U.S. out of the landmark accord, prompting scorn from Tehran.
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Instead of standing up for the values of a free society, Mr. Trump, with his oft-vented scorn for democracy's building blocks, has strengthened the hands of dictators.
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When Mr. Rojas returned to the Bronx apartment where his mother lived, he began to express scorn for a government he felt blocked his progress, Mr. Guerrero said.
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The Zuckerberg who was the stuff of presidents in the summer of 2017 was no different than the Zuckerberg of scorn and blame in the spring of 2018.
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In an interview with Refinery29 as part of her cyberbullying campaign, Lewinsky spoke about the impact of having national scorn heaped on her at such a young age.
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The company has faced congressional scrutiny and public scorn as new details have emerged in recent months that there were concerns with certain features on the 737 Max.
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That can only happen if we begin to teach that scorn, division, and want of forbearance will not nourish a single hungry child or rebuild a decrepit highway.
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Woodford, a fund manager who was a favourite of retail investors after he performed well during the financial crisis, is now facing widespread scorn in the United Kingdom.
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In almost identical fashion, Trump and Churchill are attacked by elements in their respective parties which distrust and scorn their approaches, on grounds of opportunism, suffused with ego.
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Yet rehab facilities in the US often treat medications with skepticism or even scorn, while embracing approaches with little if any peer-reviewed scientific evidence, like the bench.
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The movie's outward gaze is radical, no question, yet it refuses to scorn the comforts—of ingrained habits, and of home—that are honored by the conservative imagination.
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WASHINGTON, DC — If Marcel Duchamp was still alive, he probably would laugh over the public scorn heaped on Maurizio Cattelan's duct-taped banana at Art Basel Miami Beach.
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"Sideshows set the stage for modern conceptions of disability — identifying people with disabilities as objects of scorn and pity, as inherently 'other' from mainstream society," she told me.
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The Captain America toy earned the most scorn, which makes sense given that Hemsworth and his co-star Chris Evans have had an occasionally tense on-screen relationship.
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He piles up the evidence, reserving most of his scorn for the liberal meritocratic class that he believes has allowed Democrats to be depicted as out of touch.
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The withdrawal last week drew scorn from both parties, who contend the U.S. is abandoning its Kurdish allies, undermining the fight against ISIS and spurring a humanitarian catastrophe.
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While Mr. Trump often speaks in harshly derogatory terms about his political adversaries, Ms. Warren appears to inspire distinctive scorn among his likeliest Democratic challengers for re-election.
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As governor, Pence faced national scorn and was forced to backpedal after he signed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, allowing businesses to deny services based on religious belief.
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When he wasn't heaping scorn on various groups, Trump was busy inadvertently undermining his case that there's an emergency at the southern border warranting a national emergency declaration.
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President Trump emboldened America's most vicious racists and bigots yesterday when he said, yet again, that "both sides" deserve scorn for what happened in Charlottesville, Virginia over the weekend.
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The scorn poured by the Daily Mail and other tabloids on the three judges accused of holding up the triggering of Brexit's Article 50 is a useful British parallel.
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Nazarbayev, who wields sweeping powers in the oil-rich nation, poured scorn on private sector executives who, he suggested, were enjoying lavish lifestyles while keeping funds in foreign accounts.
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Other winners included the Oscar-winning Chilean film "A Fantastic Woman," a feature about a transgender singer who faces discrimination and scorn after the sudden death of her boyfriend.
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This won't be the last time that people like us will have to overcome the scorn of the Bob Marshalls of the world, but it's more than a start.
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She hopes to one day meet an idol of hers, Anita Hill, who faced public scorn for publicly saying she was harassed by then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas.
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Even less predictably, the particular rudeness—combining scorn, resentment and a dash of fear—offers insights into how Chinese people cope with life in today's ruthless and unequal society.
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This week, he poured scorn on the flurry of well-respected economic bodies and economists that have warned in recent weeks about the dangers of a so-called Brexit.
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Android purists might scorn this change, but I think for novices this might be a better user interaction than having three icons on screen whose function isn't immediately obvious.
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"Such an act may be a violation of the blasphemy section of the Criminal Code which concerns public mockery or scorn with reference to a religion," a prosecutor said.
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And so during last Saturday's debate, while Christie and Bush heaped scorn on the first-term Florida senator, Cruz refused the ABC News moderators' invitation to attack Trump's temperament.
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She also reiterates her ill-advised scorn for former Lazard banker Antonio Weiss, who withdrew from a Senate-confirmed job in President Barack Obama's administration after Warren opposed him.
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You scorn tradition, hate the idea of working a steady 9-5 job, and shudder at the thought of living in a two-story house with your 2.5 children.
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And it takes comfort from the fact that, when it comes to Mr Trump's scorn for American alliances in Asia, it is in a different position from South Korea.
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There is no contempt greater than the scorn you'll earn if you leave your new love to fend for themselves in a room full of people they don't know.
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Critics scorn electables as opportunists who switch allegiance depending on which way the electoral winds are blowing, and accuse them of selling their loyalty to maintain access to resources.
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To many, though, Clinton remains an inscrutable figure -- a trailblazing feminist icon in some corners, she has long been a target of scorn and suspicion from her political opponents.
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My initial reaction upon first seeing them many months ago was to pour scorn on Apple's designers for crafting a pair of expensive and easy-to-lose cigarette butts.
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The NSS is much less radical than Mr Trump's campaign speeches, with their talk of starting trade wars, scorn for NATO's obsolescence and praise for the merits of torture.
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Mr Johnson's legacy includes launching many of the programmes that Texan politicians today scorn, including the war on poverty and federally funded health care for the poor and elderly.
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They level scorn at government claims to have killed hundreds of JeM terrorists, when the presumed target, an empty madrasa, may (intentionally or otherwise) not even have been hit.
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But three decades later, the missile program pursued to defend Iran's security has created new insecurity, earning the scorn of its neighbors and the international community, not just Washington.
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For all his scorn and righteous indignation, he's probably experiencing a measure of relief and even gratitude that the weight of the crown has been at least temporarily lifted.
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The most high-profile figure driving this shit storm is Donald Trump, who earned particular scorn in the sports world after a comment earlier this month about Muslim athletes.
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The GOP leader made it clear he's unhappy that Trump singled out a federal judge for scorn and criticism after ruling against his executive order on immigration and refugees.
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And speaking of jobs, the ones that pay well without making you put in 80 hours a week began to seem almost mythical, or else the object of scorn.
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But Cusk saves her fiercest scorn for the English middle class, and that animus has caused trouble for her, not only with critics who consider her an unreconstructed élitist.
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The company, along with Turing Pharmaceuticals, drew widespread public scorn after word spread about its practice of buying the rights to decades-old drugs and then quickly raising prices.
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Along with the numbers, Wayne LaPierre, chief executive of the association, and the Republican senators Marco Rubio, of Florida, and Ted Cruz, of Texas, are singled out for scorn.
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The president was quick to blame the Federal Reserve for Wednesday's stock plunge, heaping scorn on his frequent economic scapegoat as central banks around the world cut their rates.
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His involvement with the group has earned him the scorn of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which has sent negative flyers to voters ahead of the primary election.
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But as legal and regulatory woes mounted and news of the management changes got out, the press turned on the company, suddenly heaping scorn on the former media darling.
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The math in that paper received something of a pummeling from the peer-review process and in turn a healthy dose of scorn from the climate change denier community.
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Mr. Trump has dismissed suggestions of Russian involvement, but he drew scorn this summer when he invited Russian hackers to track down missing emails from the private server Mrs.
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Navarro, once an esteemed energy economist, has drawn scorn from across the political and economic spectrum for his views on trade and his very public support for economic nationalism.
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In counting the heroes and zeroes of the pandemic, our deepest scorn should be for those governors, mayors and other officials who have been slow to take state action.
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Over at the Justice Department, Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired Andrew G. McCabe, the former F.B.I. deputy director and a frequent target of President Trump's scorn, late Friday night.
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It comes perhaps as little surprise that some Champagne producers scorn any comparisons between French and English sparkling wines, saying that Champagne is in a league of its own.
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Whistleblowers and hackers often earn scorn from governments and media outlets, but a new exhibition on these rogues of the information age hopes to restore balance to the debate.
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It has led to an enviable career, an unenviable amount of scorn, and accusations of being, well, a sycophant who clings to one of the world's most famous athletes.
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This is done without ridicule or scorn, but rather with a frank acknowledgment that, while extreme inequalities are present in contemporary society, privilege is not, in itself, a crime.
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Some have been in the United States long enough that when Trump vilifies a recent tide of Hispanic immigrants, they're not closely identifying with the objects of his scorn.
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Mr. Lee — known as Jay Y. Lee in the West — is a third-generation tycoon whose qualifications as a top manager are regarded with skepticism, if not downright scorn.
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There are stories of close aides, even cabinet members, who have gone to great lengths to constrain a man whose childlike impulses and lack of intelligence they openly scorn.
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There is scarcely any oxygen left to discuss the more contentious aspects of Amazon, like its scorn for taxes or its plans to capture much of local government purchasing.
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This provision resembles those in laws passed in Arizona and Alabama in recent years, both of which inspired national scorn and were partially struck down when challenged in court.
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But the proposal has drawn scorn from veterans and military experts who argue that the policy could undermine unit cohesion and set a dangerous precedent for other Western armies.
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When the boyfriend of the author who provoked my scorn left a message defending her on my answering machine, I didn't regret my words — the book was truly vile.
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My confidence faltered at this; I had said the wrong thing, and now I felt myself under attack, or anyway drawn more decisively within the compass of his scorn.
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Andrew's interview drew scorn in the British media which said his explanations were unsatisfactory while lawyers for Epstein's victims said that the prince showed little sympathy for those abused.
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He and his family wore a number of elaborate outfits during a 2018 official trip to India, sparking widespread scorn from critics who said he went over the top.
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It's time to tackle America's overvalued currency — something that was suggested in the 2016 populist revolt, when voters showed their scorn for politicians who fail to recognize economic reality.
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After Kobe Bryant and Tiger Woods both faced public scorn for highly publicized scandals, Nike was one of the few sponsors that did not cut ties with either athlete.
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As senators grind through potentially scores of amendments in coming days — in a process called a "vote-a-rama" — they will have more than McCain's scorn to worry about.
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Instead I received scorn from at least one of their (least-intelligent) members, and the world at large failed to see my purpose of putting a serious value behind music.
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For all his professed love for "tough guys," Trump has displayed his scorn for military leadership (including claiming he knows more about ISIS) despite having no national security experience himself.
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But others worry whether the industry - still tainted by the bank failures of 2008-09, 'fat cat' bonuses and a magnet for public scorn - can secure the backing it needs.
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Some of it is laced with nostalgia for Soviet times, when to scorn and to slander was admired as strength and to love and to empathize was branded as weakness.
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The insurer, whose near-collapse in 2008 and federal bailout made it the subject of scorn during the financial crisis, commemorated its first century of business in Washington this week.
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Jessica's worn fur in the past, but it's unclear if she still does or why the activists are so hellbent on making her the focus of their scorn and ridicule.
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At other times, senior defence folk chafe at Mr Trump's distinctly un-Reaganish scorn for American exceptionalism and apparent belief that he has little or nothing to learn from predecessors.
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The team leader must also weather Pakistani fans, who at the drop of a catch or fall of a wicket can shower love or dump torrential scorn with equal gusto.
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It offers big laughs—often for catharsis and comic relief—and leans heavily on the horror genre (using genre tropes like jump scares and bloody attacks to accentuate its scorn).
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The incident drew scorn on Twitter and other social media, especially when Munoz used the euphemism "re-accomodate " in a public statement to describe the customers booted from the flight.
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The second path means condemnation by the elites, and in so-doing the liberal media's scorn – a sure sign that we are reinvigorating a healthy challenge to the status quo.
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For all that, Berlin kept pouring scorn on ECB's attempts to salvage the euro area amid falling governments (France, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece) and soaring unemployment, poverty and destitution.
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That decision — necessary, Trump argued, because the deal would put the U.S. at an economic disadvantage — was met with scorn internationally, including from some of the United States' key allies.
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"Rick and Morty is anime " is a recurring Twitter troll that's met with 50 shades of ironic derision, unironic scorn, and wistfulness for an actual Rick and Morty anime episode.
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The lawsuits rolled at Fox, and so did the heads, and the network has been held up for scorn, condemnation, and an abject example of how not to treat women.
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Related: Ed Sheeran temporarily quits Twitter after 'Game of Thrones' scorn Sheeran is currently scheduled continue his international tour at the Taipei Nangang Exhibition Hall in Taiwan on October 22.
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Every religion should be subject to public debate, even scorn, but it is as important to ensure the religious freedom of those who seek to exercise it within the law.
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One person calls books "physical books," as if they were an inconvenient subset, and another refers to libraries as "passive repositories"—a phrase that wrinkles its nose in perceptible scorn.
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