The network and the producers may have had their hearts in the right place, but they left their brains and moral compass at home! |
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Lacking a moral compass, they inflict their bitterness, suspicion, disappointment and rage on their current relationships. |
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Emotional responses can act as a moral compass in responding to the other and in guiding one's sense of the situation. |
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Jeff tries to act as a sort of moral compass to Johnny, but usually all he gets for his trouble is some harsh words. |
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One could certainly argue that, over time, the moral compass changes within the same society. |
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Even the doctor, whose moral compass has been hopelessly skewed, risks his privileged position and his life to save her. |
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In those cases they must use their own judgement, relying on their own personal moral compass and using their own discretion. |
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Society has lost its moral compass and sense of certainty about right and wrong. |
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The state has no innate moral compass to guide it and the people who should be its guide are all too fallible. |
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And of course, with regard to the Liberals, their lack of a moral compass is something that will come back to haunt them. |
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The code is an important step forward in providing a moral compass for the public service, but it cannot simply be a statement of principles. |
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All have an important role to play in influencing the moral compass of Canada's scientific, health, and health care systems. |
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He has recently retired from public life but remains an international moral compass. |
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Often we look to the church as a moral compass for direction. |
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He wants to do the right thing, but his resistance to prison trumps his moral compass, especially after he finds out Marvin's dirty little secrets. |
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Each serves his novel, to some degree, as a kind of moral compass, allergic to compromise and unseduced by celebrity. |
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Through his extraordinary actions and personality, he has become a moral compass that we can all look up to. |
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Might the characters of London Irish all turn out to be shallow, sex-obsessed reprobates with no moral compass to speak of? |
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But after marrying a rich, lonely heiress, his moral compass swerves in reassuringly complex ways. |
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Some Bounty Hunters adhere to the rugged Mandalorian code of honor while others answer only to their own moral compass. |
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He called on delegates to be guided in their deliberations by political leadership and the moral compass of future generations. |
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It is the destruction of our moral compass and, at a terrible cost, we accommodate. |
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Either he was born without the moral compass that engenders humility or he has one sick sense of humor. |
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It provides a clear moral compass on what must be done to create a fully inclusive society. |
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However, contrary to the Liberal leader and contrary to the Conservatives, the Canadian public has a strong moral compass. |
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Second, what does our moral compass tell us? |
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He steered by the guidance of his own peculiar moral compass, regardless of the rough waters through which it led him. |
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To every sane man in all climes and ages the great Creator has given a moral compass to enable him to avoid the wrong and follow the right. |
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Hart is one of those rare men... whose directness and sense of conscience have led others to regard him as the moral compass of the Senate. |
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They hustle and scheme without moral compass, trying to survive by making accommodations that are at best temporary, more often delusional. |
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The extermination of populations, the carpet bombing of cities and the killing of prisoners had shown what total war can do to the moral compass of individuals and the behaviour of states. |
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A moral compass is sorely lacking as the best interests of the children and spouses of those who unmindfully engage in multiple affairs are disregarded. |
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And these odds were often set by realpolitik, rather than a moral compass. |
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If only his moral compass were pointed in the right direction. |
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We will conduct business with our customers, suppliers and employees using a set of core ethical values and a strong moral compass that serves as the guiding foundation of our business principles. |
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Even more important, she also discovered that she had been born with a moral compass. It wasn't fear that filled the Post on the day after her death with obviously heartfelt encomiums from senior journalists. |
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You just need compassion and a moral compass. |
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Ms. Judy Sgro: To Les, you talked about the moral compass, and so on. |
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Where is the moral compass and common humanity that accepts this state of affairs? |
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Churches united in advocacy have made the WCC a moral compass in an international system that is sometimes confused and often short of viable answers. |
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In doing so, we make the moral compass of Nelson Mandela a little brighter and bigger so that we can see it all the more clearly as we strive in this great Hall to realize the workable dream of Nelson Mandela. |
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The thrust of Stigler's story is that the moral compass of German pilots and the Luftwaffe was superior to those of the US Army Air Forces. |
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The CEO of Barclays Plc has said that bankers need to regain their moral compass. |
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They say a society needs its exemplars because they serve as the moral compass in uncertain times. |
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He said we must ask ourselves where we are going, what direction our moral compass is pointing. |
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However, it's a long time since Kate's moral compass worked. |
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Ideas are our rudders. As the soul glides along the warm and swelling sea of feeling, it can only be turned to new points of the moral compass by them. |
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I think he did absolutely the right thing, because according to his own personal moral compass, interfering with someone else's marriage was a sin. |
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Seven fascinating profiles feature people in history who, despite the dangers, followed their moral compass rather than obey the rules imposed by the government in power. |
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It showed us once and for all that somewhere between that bright morning in May 1997 and the present day, Mr Blair mislaid not just his moral compass, but also his judgement. |
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Mourners arrived at Prague Castle to mourn the loss of the shy but iron-willed Havel, endowed with a playful sense of humor and a powerful moral compass. |
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