For the past 20 years the wealthy and the millionaires have got away with daylight robbery. |
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Selling a few inches of pastel-coloured terry-towelling at fifty-times the make-up price is daylight robbery. |
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If guys are getting away with owing that amount of money, that is absolute daylight robbery. |
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Next to the airlines, the local authorities are the biggest robbers of all, and this exercise is another example of blatant daylight robbery. |
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Entire communities can be left saddled with debts taken on to fund this daylight robbery. |
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The contracts may be daylight robbery, but since the politicians who authorised them will be long gone by 2030, it won't be their problem. |
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What we are witnessing is daylight robbery and sheer greed by all parties involved. |
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This latest increase by the so-called custodians of the city is a disgrace and daylight robbery. |
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It's daylight robbery and should be resisted with vigour by all. |
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In 1851 the government repealed this disastrous form of daylight robbery. |
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A HOODED thug knocked a woman to the ground in a daylight robbery before making off with her handbag. |
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A 31-YEAR-OLD man has admitted the broad daylight robbery of a young girl's purse as she went to buy sweets. |
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It should not, however, lead to daylight robbery. |
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A DISABLED Anfield man who is named after a pirate accused the government of daylight robbery when his benefits were slashed by PS80 a week. |
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But my local scuffers have been called to a daylight robbery of old back boxes and manifolds. |
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Not only would this stamp out daylight robbery it would also help the employment position. |
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The jewel was stolen during a daring daylight robbery in 1998 from a secure glass case on exhibit at Castle Schonbrunn in Vienna, Austria, and later recovered from a home in Winnipeg. |
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But to lose to a retaken penalty in injury time was like daylight robbery. |
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