(The) cost has increased, and the quality of service decreased. |
for any bad reason. The car is there and the company is turning around. |
I thought it was a grocery ad coming up, I wish it had been a grocery ad, rather than waste all that newsprint. |
I'll respect him if he pulls his life together. |
In this particular case, since we're only talking about contributions, it might not be a matter of who is nonpartisan enough, but who is poor enough not to have made any contributions, |
It's a critical part of their strategy. |
It's been a wonderful trip. |
It's fine the way it is. I don't need the government taxing me on my winnings. |
Kids are just totally fascinated by it. It's always been something, for some reason, that kids are just very into. |
People I know in the administration have a very high regard for Nathan, |
Salem is lucky because we don't have any significant high rises. Low-rise buildings seem to fair better. We seem to have lots of single- and two-story buildings, which all fare well. Most of the structures in the city are framed with wood, which seem resistant in the event of an earthquake. Older, steel buildings tend to fall apart quicker. Wood is flexible. Salem would probably fare very well, other than the downtown area. |
The businesses have changed over the years — they are much more sophisticated now. |
There's a big underlying problem with judges being identified with political parties, ... This case is a good reflection of the loss of public confidence that can lead to. |
These are all make-weight arguments, because somebody is mad about something, |
To me, the more difficult question is just the daily erosion of public confidence when judges become too politicized, |