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"foolishly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows a lack of good sense or judgement
"foolishly" Synonyms
stupidly unwisely idiotically absurdly inanely barmily fatuously obtusely senselessly ineptly crazily like a fool insanely ludicrously unreasonably preposterously ridiculously fantastically laughably credulously imprudently incautiously indiscreetly injudiciously mistakenly ill-advisedly without forethought without thinking short-sightedly without due consideration thoughtlessly mindlessly carelessly irrationally without thought absent-mindedly recklessly rashly headlong hastily hurriedly precipitately heedlessly impulsively hotfoot impetuously precipitously cursorily unthinkingly wildly passionately irresponsibly speedily wastefully extravagantly lavishly prodigally immoderately improvidently profligately thriftlessly richly expensively palatially large fatly grandly luxuriously plushly high sumptuously outrageously brutally awfully badly offensively shamefully deplorably appallingly dreadfully shockingly direly egregiously intolerably heinously lamentably grossly atrociously iniquitously unbearably woefully dumbly dully unintelligently sillily witlessly brainlessly daftly dippily simply goofily moronically dimly pottily surprisingly unusually oddly strangely unexpectedly weirdly peculiarly uncommonly remarkably curiously extraordinarily bizarrely abnormally exceptionally incredibly strikingly uniquely atypically astonishingly frivolously inconsequentially trivially inconsiderably unimportantly incidentally insignificantly minorly minutely negligibly triflingly paltrily pettily littly worthlessly More

454 Sentences With "foolishly"

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

I've heard you myself -- and foolishly, I believed you.
Towards staff he was also kind, though not foolishly so.
He doesn't judge or patronize, even when they act foolishly.
Or a raccoon, foolishly wearing all the diamonds he stole?
Under the EPRDF, group rights were foolishly written into the constitution.
Mars retrograde's reentry into Capricorn asks you to stop spending foolishly.
Was "All Star" actually a prescient harbinger that we foolishly ignored?
Still, I resist the obvious pressure to pile on, perhaps foolishly.
He had foolishly moved into the Mansion even before getting elected.
Others understood the diplomatic minefield he had perhaps foolishly wandered into.
We foolishly thought that was it, and can you really blame us?
But could he make a gentleman who challenged him dance foolishly even
She's also (foolishly) handed over Aidan's files in exchange for her gun.
That anger is foolishly misplaced; Bresch and Mylan are not to blame.
The decision to stand behind Moore is a foolishly short-term one.
History is filled with discarded regimes that have foolishly tested America's resolve.
"We foolishly brought Trinidad into the game," he says after the match.
And I, a sex-positive sex toy–store owner, foolishly tolerated it.
The guys get to be epically romantic or foolishly proud or hopelessly lovelorn.
I foolishly thought I was done with my lifelong battle with the scale.
"The Lord helps them what helps themselves," he tells those foolishly generous Puritans.
In 2013, Justine Sacco foolishly tweeted a tasteless joke about Africa and AIDS.
The Obama administration foolishly reversed Richard Nixon's strategy of dividing Moscow and Beijing.
President Trump inherited a problem that previous U.S. presidents foolishly chose to ignore.
Mostly, he shows up trying to save people and just dies foolishly instead.
Call me foolishly optimistic, but I think that would be a promising development.
Watch them writhe in the glare of the fame they sought so foolishly.
Or if Jordan hadn't foolishly ignored Israel's warnings to stay out of it.
Frémont then acted foolishly, as he would again and again throughout his life.
"Many investors were foolishly building (an) investment thesis based on complete stupidity," Chowdhry wrote.
In the meantime, I still believe — perhaps foolishly — that sustained attention might create change.
Foolishly, I had ventured out beyond cell phone coverage, alone with a single snowmobile.
"We foolishly brought Trinidad into the game with the own goal," the coach said.
MbZ, probably foolishly, has taken a hardline on Qatar and avoided coming to Washington.
The Vision Fund has "made entrepreneurs dream big, sometimes foolishly, sometimes not," Das said.
Less than a month later, he was caught when he foolishly tried to shoplift.
John Blaylock happily accepts this offer, foolishly believing it to be of good faith.
In the meantime, I still believe — perhaps foolishly — that sustained attention might create change.
"Foolishly and ignorantly, we never thought that it would be a problem," she added.
Ironically, and very foolishly, the United States has the opposite problem with elevator assets.
"Maybe I'm foolishly confident, but we have a ton of power," Karvelis told me.
Nonetheless, Joffrey was hungry for power and had a propensity to act rather foolishly.
But Greek sporting rules foolishly make it hard for non-citizens to represent the country.
In my 32 years, I've failed—spectacularly, foolishly—at fortifying any semblance of true romance.
Foolishly expecting it to go towards production, Sire gave them a sizeable budget of $750,000.
Today's tax system foolishly penalizes companies that bring foreign profits back to the United States.
Sylvester Stallone's daughters dropped the mic after they were -- perhaps foolishly -- compared to the Kardashians.
Did they foolishly imagine that Fannie and Freddie could never actually get in financial trouble?
And marijuana will foolishly remain an entirely prohibited Schedule I narcotic under all other circumstances.
"A few weeks ago I foolishly allowed Germany's Der Spiegel into my life," he wrote.
Little Grover doesn't "hate" Hannah, as she's foolishly assumed in the frustrating weeks pre-latching.
The pols are grossly incompetent, spend the money foolishly or corruptly, & only take from USA.
However, I foolishly put my trust in a ten-dollar lamp from a flea market.
"I foolishly cling to the idea that they might start boarding again," Ms. Pitula said.
Prior to learning about half socks, I foolishly dealt with sock drops on the daily.
Rome didn't have to fail; it failed because Romans foolishly believed Rome would last forever.
If you thought the drama was over when the season (and reunion!) concludes, you're foolishly mistaken.
By making such a bombastic claim, Trump foolishly put himself and his administration in serious jeopardy.
He, unlike his foolishly good-hearted mother, gets the fundamental and ugly truths of the world.
If she behaves foolishly as she begins to grapple with her future, cut her some slack.
Here was a young wife convinced, foolishly, that her love could redeem a brooding, powerful man.
Yet Donald Trump and the Chinese authorities have foolishly introduced dangerous new uncertainties into the equation.
I learned to stop foolishly trying to predict the future and focus on understanding the past instead.
Shady foolishly declined, and was thus sent off to meet his demise in a fatal car crash.
We foolishly fight for Border Security for other countries - but not for our beloved U.S.A. Not good!
Trump fired back by calling Khan a "stone cold loser" who was being "foolishly 'nasty'" to him.
The activist was scheduled to visit that day, but he had foolishly announced his plans on Facebook.
The Obama administration foolishly thought that it could force healthy Americans into subsidizing those who are sickly.
All I knew is that I now foolishly wanted a whale tale on my dad's Delta 88.
Hoping the watch will free him and his mother from their impoverishment, he foolishly visits a clockmaker.
Jester, you have done it again, constantly raising the bar for the circus and doing it foolishly.
Foolishly, I stepped off but, fortunately, I landed in bushes and had only bruises from the fall.
"When I tell a story, it's usually about a time I behaved foolishly or repellently," says Leviton.
"I have behaved foolishly and I am truly sorry," Scottish Finance Secretary Derek Mackay said in a statement.
"It was foolishly drafted and not well thought out," said Ron Kaufman, a longtime RNC member from Massachusetts.
Qatar foolishly imagines that un-Islamic practices can be shut away in gated communities like embassies, he says.
Will starts off stutteringly, then takes flight: Why take offense, that this dull brainDoth foolishly wish to entertain?
All of the money that President Obama so foolishly gave them went into terrorism and into their 'pockets.
I assumed, foolishly, that five pairs of underwear would be enough for a potty-trained 4-year-old.
It remains to be seen if the Democrats would so foolishly snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
The Kansas tax cut policy also foolishly didn't eliminate many deductions and loopholes like Governor Brownback initially promised.
On the other hand, the United States also is acting foolishly by refusing to accept bargain-priced steel.
After having foolishly spent $28500 trillion in the Middle East, it is time to start rebuilding our country!
Rahul Gandhi, chief of India's main opposition Congress party, said Adityanath was acting "foolishly" in going after journalists.
He knows she has dragons and foolishly thinks he will be able to control them with his dragon horn.
I foolishly walked in and I thought, 'Are these actor dogs or are these real up for adoption dogs?
There was no restroom inside, so we foolishly relieved ourselves on the backside of the building behind some bushes.
I have to be up really early for a haircut tomorrow that I foolishly scheduled for 8:30 a.m.
The bottom retainer no longer fits, thanks to a wisdom tooth I foolishly chose to leave in my head.
Instead, I decided to pick up a new hobby, one that I foolishly thought would not involve the internet.
I foolishly walked in and I thought, 'Are these actor dogs or are these real up-for-adoption dogs?
Go back to pre-NAFTA, before so many of our companies and jobs were so foolishly sent to Mexico.
Show our adversaries the bloody nose they're going to get if they foolishly try to attack our Republic again.
A few years ago we foolishly agreed to attend a Michael Riedel lecture about his forthcoming body of work.
And perhaps the OGs of all-consuming passion were Romeo and Juliet, who were more foolishly emo than necessary.
Either the Mets do not believe him, or they are foolishly prioritizing this lost 2018 season over the future.
The White House foolishly rejected an international effort to stop the spread of extremism and violence on the internet.
I'm not "good" one day so that I can be "bad" another, which I once foolishly celebrated as balance.
The Biden campaign foolishly ignored that fact and thrust him officially into the race way too early last year.
That would be foolishly controversial and counterproductive, considering the criminal case that authorities are already building in New York.
The American leader added that "military solutions are now fully in place, locked and loaded" should it act foolishly.
They are out there, often foolishly believing that Washington will actually notice their spirit-destroying plight and help them.
However, anyone questioning the legitimacy of a female incarnation of the Doctor is foolishly uninformed of the series' canon.
It's no excuse, but this happened eleven years ago – I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along.
I had a near-panic attack one Friday night before a river-tubing excursion I'd foolishly offered to drive to.
It's no excuse, but this happened eleven years ago — I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along.
Hopefully by Friday for the digital release of Rogue One for those of us who foolishly missed it in theaters.
"Foolishly, I thought making a scene for her might help her realize how desperate I was," Scholl said in court.
I am quarreling with the writer who (to my mind) most brilliantly and foolishly dramatizes the challenges of personal bravery.
For anyone, anywhere in the world should have access to this knowledge, which Cambridge so foolishly withheld for so long.
It's no excuse, but this happened eleven years ago – I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along.
I thought—maybe foolishly, maybe vaingloriously—that God had given me my days for some other purpose than that anyway.
Maybe this look is a warning to anyone who foolishly still believes they can come after her or Beyoncé.
I foolishly went in thinking it would be someone that we had known for a while, someone we cared about.
The audience was whiter even than the crowd at my high school, but perhaps foolishly, I found it less intimidating.
"Even though it's the oldest club, it's not blindly and foolishly wedded to a certain way of being," he said.
I'd foolishly got involved in drafting the annual report, which wasn't something you could just wing, given the legal framework.
Shortstop Didi Gregorius cost Sabathia a certain out by foolishly trying to peg Joey Rickard going from second to third.
It finally was captured when it foolishly became engrossed in trying to pull the tail feathers from a celluloid parrot.
"I want to make sure I'm not foolishly spending in one direction at the expense of another," Ms. Levinson said.
It's no excuse, but this happened 11 years ago -- I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along.
Having foolishly picked a rose, he is made captive by the Beast (Dan Stevens), the monster formerly known as prince.
Last year, I almost lost the Malibu covering Tropical Depression Imelda in Chambers County, foolishly driving too far into floodwaters.
" He tweeted: "All of the money that President Obama so foolishly gave them went into terrorism and into their 'pockets.
He offers no reasonable explanation for this paradox beyond the retrospective admission that he foolishly chose the wrong partisan path.
He's alienated our allies, foolishly cozied up to adversaries and talked tough while carrying no sticks in dealing with enemies.
Marx, foolishly, believed that history had a discernible direction: The progression toward a classless utopia was inalterable and self-evident.
Revive and expand the Migration Impacts Fund, a foolishly mothballed programme that channelled government resources to places experiencing fast population change.
The late rajah lived briefly in Pakistan, and foolishly took its nationality before retiring to London, where he died in 1973.
An editorial from Virginia newspaper Richmond Times-Dispatch called for Northam to step aside: We all act foolishly in our youth.
I hadn't decided on a medical specialty yet, and I had foolishly pre-empted being drafted by enlisting in the Army.
Bob Corker (R-TN), who foolishly decided to feud with President Trump on Twitter, saw the same writing on the wall.
America may have elected a fool for President, but that doesn't give him carte blanche to rule the federal government, foolishly.
But then he got lucky, and thanks to foolishly persistent questions about the topic, Trump turned the issue into a win.
Earlier this year, President Donald Trump tweeted that the United States had "foolishly" given Pakistan more than $33 billion in aid.
Foolishly, I stuck with Dr. Mario and all the Dr. Bowsers would absolutely destroy me no matter how well I played.
Bruce Rauner; and 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, who's now foolishly trying to recruit somebody to run as an independent against Trump.
Wrong, thanks to Gilly's offhand question about what "annulment" means in a scene at the Citadel that Sam Tarly foolishly overlooked.
Maybe they could ban the ability to tag someone out, I foolishly thought -- add a little social distance to the game.
Should The Atlantic foolishly succumb to pressure to rescind your job offer, you'll still be widely read, presumably at National Review.
I briefly wondered what value she was adding, because I foolishly prioritized the interests of America above the adventures of Ivanka.
Our congressional leaders must recognize that we cannot continue foolishly playing party politics in such a dangerous part of the world.
That life, however, ended when he was only 58 after he foolishly relied on Cuba's health system to treat his cancer.
Foolishly spending most of the last few weeks with my family, I missed the early days of the Pokémon Go craze.
In the great and terrible wilderness of history, countless millions have died badly, died foolishly, died without funerals or eulogies or gravestones.
Most of these murders were not announced ahead of time, which foolishly gave us hope tonight's murder would be a big deal.
She got to watch her brothers foolishly underestimate her, and kept what sounded like a very tacky portrait out of her home.
This, mind you, is the same political party that fetishized balanced budgets and browbeat Democrats about being the foolishly, fatally profligate ones.
But I would feel like a fool if I spent these grenades foolishly and found myself without them at a key moment.
To "keep kayfabe" is to insist — heroically or foolishly, angelically or devilishly — that what is happening in professional wrestling is actually real.
I stayed hopeful too, despite not being able to quickly move up the Rolling Stone masthead, as I had foolishly expected to.
I had — foolishly — asked for tea to accompany my meal and had been denied, so was excited to finally get a cup.
At least not yet, but I'd like to think, perhaps foolishly, that most of my adventures and trauma are in the rearview mirror.
But this week is IRL Week at Gizmodo, and I foolishly suggested that I try to find my way somewhere new without technology.
" He "has been foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States, by far the most important ally of the United Kingdom.
That was thanks to Hillary Clinton, who foolishly decided to talk about Putin instead of continuing to hit Trump on his immigration promises.
These white supremacists foolishly believe that, once the global race war they so clearly want kicks off, the sides will be easily identifiable.
Mao Zedong, who foolishly derided America as a "paper tiger", might have applied similar words to the southern adversary his country faces today.
A 14-year-old in Australia recently found this out the hard way when he foolishly made a bet with his cricket teammates.
We met once in 210 and I was too embarrassed and too foolishly "cool" to tell you what you meant to my childhood.
In a series of tweets, Trump also argued that the island's politicians spend money "foolishly and corruptly" and "take" from the United States.
It's a pain that comes from the realization that you failed to protect someone you swore you would—perhaps foolishly thought you could.
NBC commentator and former U.S. skier Bode Miller has apologised after foolishly suggesting an Olympian's marriage impacted her performance at the Winter Olympics.
The Democratic majority, with Judiciary Chairman Jerold Nadler in the lead, has gone angling for headlines and air-time, foolishly elevating Mueller's appearance.
Fernandes on Sunday said he "foolishly" made the May 6 video, which he described as "fairly neutral and factual," to "appease" Najib's government.
At home the policy foolishly ignores the fact that cruelty can enrage and radicalize victims and bystanders and inspire them to fight back.
In killing that standard, the Trump administration told the nation to build foolishly — that they needn't prepare for the increasing risk of flood.
Lincoln , after foolishly toying with recolonization schemes, had settled on black suffrage, at least for black soldiers who had fought in the war.
Before the Marvel Cinematic Universe became bigger than Jesus, studios foolishly made a daredevil of Ben Affleck and a punisher outta Thomas Jane.
As we wrote last year, Facebook foolishly took the distinction between white nationalism and white supremacy seriously even while most white supremacists don't.
Mike Myers Mike Myers has a small role in that new Queen biopic as the music exec who foolishly passed on the band.
Letter of Recommendation A little over a decade ago, I moved to Montreal expecting, perhaps foolishly, that I would become fluent in French.
But more to the point, I want an electric motorcycle, perhaps foolishly, and the electric motorcycle I want is a Harley-Davidson LiveWire.
Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama foolishly acquiesced, in exchange demanding changes in Mexico's justice system and providing funds for the changes.
If both foolishly continue to actively seek primacy in the Indo Pacific region, few consequential compromises will be advanced by Washington or Beijing.
"I was left holding the bag, ethically, because I had foolishly appeared to have accepted a lot of favors from him," she said.
" Trump accused Khan of being incompetent and "foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting president of the United States," before dubbing him a "stone cold loser.
What we foolishly did was come back home and have a few weeks off, then go into the studio in Glasgow and begin recording.
I bought a PlayStation Camera along with my PS4, (foolishly) expecting it to be an integral part of the next-generation console gaming experience.
Mrs May has foolishly spent the past two years repeating the bluff, aimed at Brussels, that "no deal is better than a bad deal".
If there is one thing that all central bankers foolishly agree on it's that a 2 percent inflation goal is now mandatory for growth.
And as far as the Salido fight is concerned, it was a foolishly ambitious matchup at such an early stage in his pro career.
In the United Kingdom, a foolishly devised referendum on whether to remain in the European Union has split the nation and its political parties.
If we foolishly cancel these contracts, Russia and China would be the enormous beneficiaries - and very happy to acquire all of this newfound business.
Game 2023: Our resolve and strategic defense is insurmountable, and North Korea is deterred from foolishly attacking the U.S. or our allies. 4-0.
But the Democrats risk weakening their power if they foolishly prioritize impeachment, investigations and revenge over legislative priorities that could help the American public.
While the other half have foolishly lent credence to his plight because he's somehow become the last of a "dying breed" of gangster rapper.
Stressors faced by LGBQ teens, such as stigma and isolation, "may make drugs foolishly appear attractive as a coping mechanism," Ayers said by email.
"We are foolishly chasing the myth of jobs," said Shailesh Haribhakti, a Mumbai accountant and financier who is on the boards of 16 companies.
Mr. Trump mischarachterized the Iran nuclear deal, alleging that Mr. Obama "so foolishly gave" gave money to the Islamic republic's leaders to fund terrorism.
If we foolishly cancel these contracts, Russia and China would be the enormous beneficiaries — and very happy to acquire all of this newfound business.
Alaska belonged to Russia until 1867, when America bought it—foolishly, as many in Washington, DC, sneered at the time—for a mere $7.2m.
Japanese companies, through years of experience, probably understand this and have deleveraged as a result; U.S. corporates, perhaps foolishly, have done the exact opposite.
Bruno doubled Stolarsky out of the next few games, but not before Stolarsky miscalculated, doubling back foolishly, to a penalty of four thousand dollars.
This country has survived over two hundred years with numerous presidents who have not endeared themselves, and who have acted foolishly or even incompetently.
CNBC's Jim Cramer thinks that the market has reacted foolishly at times, which means that investors can benefit if they know where to look.
This is a powerful and persuasive movement that is gaining momentum every day, which is probably why Democrats are so foolishly belittling the payouts.
Indeed, Trump capitalized on the crime uptick to sow panic about the state of the nation, and progressives foolishly ceded the issue to him.
"It's no excuse, but this happened 11 years ago -- I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along," he said in a statement.
But Iranian ultra-hardliners are ready to charge somewhat-hardliners with foolishly trusting America back in 2015, and to demand the resumption of nuclear work.
I tiptoed through turn one the first few times out, but I foolishly trusted myself a bit more on the start of that third lap.
In a tweet sent Monday, President Trump said water that can be used for fires in California is "foolishly" being diverted into the Pacific Ocean.
The Battle of Austerlitz sees Napoleon watching from a distance as the Tsar foolishly demands the general to have his troops charge at the French.
If they could undertake something so foolishly self-defining as seersucker day, they can obviously do something as simple as being "civil" for a day.
But he seemed somewhat conflicted about his role — an exiled government critic or someone who willingly, and perhaps foolishly, steps back into the dragon's maw.
Mr. Trump has also hired a pollster to gauge his prospects in New York, causing consternation among Republicans who worry that he is spending foolishly.
Prime Minister David Cameron, who foolishly called the referendum largely as a ploy to deal with political problems in his party, announced he will resign.
The final seven minutes of the episode show Mike's final moments on the series as he's foolishly killed by Walt for no reason at all.
Chris Christie, amid his failed run for the Republican presidential nomination, foolishly vetoed A.V.R. for New Jersey voters, citing the nonexistent threat of voter fraud.
Yet even many Western-educated Chinese professionals who travel and can see the global internet say the protesters foolishly value individuals' rights over economic prosperity.
Another angle: Many Western-educated Chinese professionals who travel and can see the global internet say the protesters foolishly value individuals' rights over economic prosperity.
In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield -- including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi.
Together, they deepen the feelings that swirl around a woman who with a sharp tongue and a vast imagination invents her world amusingly, foolishly, enduringly.
In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield — including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi.
Certainly there are people who foolishly delude themselves into believing they are invincible or choose not to think about the consequences of not having coverage.
" And while he admitted "it's no excuse" he added, "this happened 11 years ago — I was younger, less mature, and acted foolishly in playing along.
In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield — including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi.
Some Remainers foolishly assume that grim economic forecasts are clinching arguments, as though no one ever knowingly voted for a policy that would make them poorer.
The president's tweets about the territory spending the money it has received "foolishly or corruptly" have not encouraged his allies in Congress to expedite this process.
Original Ecto-1 2016 Ecto-1 The first crew of Ghostbusters rode around in an old-timey ambulance that Ray foolishly purchased for too much money.
Even though the developer has me prepared for how MarkdownPad will look by hiding nothing on the landing page, I'd foolishly expected things to be different.
It's a special car, not least of all because it's Basem's dream vehicle and he's foolishly deigned to let me have a go at the wheel.
He tries to protect the creatures from extinction and predators, but foolishly, he decides to take them on a trip from England to New York City.
"Samuel Jackson is upset that I foolishly forgot to mention the brilliant Ryan Coogler and MB Jordan he is right I owe them everything," Stallone wrote.
The trio play post-grads who are trying to making ends meet after switching cites and "foolishly deciding to pursue their dreams," as the description reads.
If Britons foolishly yank their country out of the EU and send firms and talent packing, London will become more affordable for all the wrong reasons.
The administration foolishly abandoned the primary effort to confront China in a multinational way when it dropped out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement.
"By foolishly agreeing to meet with Obama's nominee, Republicans are playing with fire, and they can't blame the conservative grassroots when they get burned," he added.
Richard Ledgett, the former N.S.A. deputy director, told me that the private sector had become foolishly optimistic about the potential of identifying hackers and hacking back.
" Trump blasted Sadiq Khan for being "foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States, by far the most important ally of the United Kingdom.
They failed to plan or to politically organize, foolishly placing their faith in hope, change, and Facebook instead of doing the difficult work of real politics.
"In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield," Trump said during his Tuesday night address.
"If we foolishly cancel these contracts, Russia and China would be the enormous beneficiaries — and very happy to acquire all of this newfound business," he said.
So when I saw that Greta Gerwig had written and directed it, I kept my expectations foolishly low for my first viewing in Toronto last fall.
He looked the part of a dashing, foolishly impulsive young prince who knows how twisted Turandot is but still finds himself hooked by her menacing allure.
Given the stakes, what's important is that elected representatives of the British people have been restored to a process from which they had been foolishly excluded.
Governor Jerry Brown must allow the Free Flow of the vast amounts of water coming from the North and foolishly being diverted into the Pacific Ocean.
Then I went to switch to another application, foolishly assuming my Netflix video would continue to play on the larger monitor, rather than just mirroring the iPad.
I was given the choice between a traditional strip wax kit or the "ouch-free" version and, foolishly, I offered to be the guinea pig for both.
Assuming the Lakers don't foolishly agree to any long-term contracts for the rest of this summer, they will loom over the league as its predominant destination.
It's a bit like Jaime's play at the end of "The Spoils of War" when he foolishly charged Daenerys — we can end the whole thing right here.
Democrats foolishly believed that college-educated Republicans would vote for a progressive Democrat over a Republican because of their disdain for President Trump and his many mishaps.
Foolishly, I quit my job before the fall, when No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood managed to make for a satisfying Oscar season.
BPVi's IPO had been fully, and foolishly, underwritten by UniCredit, Italy's largest bank: had not the fund stepped in, UniCredit itself might have run short of capital.
A spouse who imperils a very good marriage by having an affair with a work colleague is behaving foolishly (which I define as ignoring an obvious risk).
I wasn't in a good mindset due to cocaine abuse, and foolishly held up a bag containing wraps of gear and pills in full view of everyone.
To my grandfather's eye it had been foolishly or fancifully engineered to defy harsh laws of gravity and dynamics, a cathedral built to stand upon its steeple.
Episode 2, "Rising," features one of the best TV monologues in years, with Sam ripping into a blah lover who has (foolishly) accused her of being mean.
The Glass Skin Serum has been getting a lot of hype lately, which I once foolishly believed is because it's the flagship product of Peach & Lily's line.
It was also one that provided the ultimate opportunity to eliminate Soleimani as he foolishly left his home country and made himself more physically and legally vulnerable.
" Trump said, "In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield — including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi.
They foolishly believed that the market was fair and of course by the end of the story realize that it's been captured and compromised on many levels.
At the very best, it's an attempt by a delusional man trying to foolishly prove something that has been extensively proven for the sake of his own ego.
When she first mentioned this to me, I comically (and perhaps foolishly) mistook them for the "self-help" variety and thought she also doubled as a life-coach.
Mr Trump is noisily scornful of that way of fighting, accusing Mr Obama of foolishly announcing in advance that he was planning an assault on Mosul, for instance.
He accused Japan and other American allies of "brilliantly" manipulating trade and currency flows to grow rich, while enjoying military security foolishly provided by America at no charge.
Knee jerk critics like Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and DNC Chairman Tom Perez are foolishly making the issue very much about them and their party as well.
Soon I had so many I gave up and let Jakob educate me about what the fish on my line had eaten before they foolishly took my bait.
"Governor Jerry Brown must allow the Free Flow of the vast amounts of water coming from the North and foolishly being diverted into the Pacific Ocean," Trump tweeted.
Yukon Blonde has released a soaring synth-pop song called "Crazy" that is the perfect jam for dancing and falling foolishly into the depths of an emotional disaster.
Nobody was foolishly sent off, or cruelly injured; there is no appetite for a thorough overhaul of the way England plays or thinks or plans for the future.
Pakistani officials also insist that Mr. Trump has his figures wrong, taking aim at his claim that the United States had "foolishly" given it $33 billion since 2002.
Free-market monetarists underestimated the complexity of inflationary behaviour, the tendency of financial institutions to lend foolishly and the value of additional government spending when unemployment is high.
As subsequent generations of intellectuals caught in violent irrational wars or under repressive governments have also learned, learning not to think foolishly is the first step toward sanity.
Over and over, optimistically and stubbornly, commendably but maybe also a bit foolishly, utopia just seems to take a long and circuitous route to the same, inevitable destination.
" In a statement posted to his official Facebook page on Monday, Morrissey responded to "foolishly" agreeing to an interview with the publication, to which he "assumed a common understanding.
While the Academy Awards are (foolishly) cutting four categories from its broadcast later this month, Sony is (smartly) cutting the cost of the PlayStation Classic down to just $39.99.
The pols are grossly incompetent, spend the money foolishly or corruptly, & only take from USA.... ....The best thing that ever happened to Puerto Rico is President Donald J. Trump.
Lauren Dawn was covering the nor'easter Wednesday for FOX 29 in Philly, and foolishly attempted a little man-on-the-street reporting from the middle of a snowball fight.
Because of the erratic energy Uranus can bring, it's especially important that you don't behave foolishly with your cash — or any of your resources, like your time or energy.
No longer a shiny new rock star in the story of technology, the Internet is now fading into the background as we all (perhaps foolishly) take it for granted.
And wouldn't  you know it, they end up firing at each other through the convenient store because they foolishly think that the people inside are shooting at them.
President Pump-and-DumpMeanwhile, as Trump pumps his trade deal and Wall Street foolishly gets their hopes up, the rest of US-Chinese diplomatic relations are in meltdown mode.
Interestingly, and foolishly, so did the Republicans who, in contesting the suit, argued that they "stand to be most directly harmed by a change" in the ballot order rules.
One day my partner played tentatively and I foolishly compensated by playing too aggressively, cutting off balls I should have left for him or trying for winners and missing.
I was a Bernie voter, not because I foolishly believed he could accomplish all of what he laid out, but because he gave me hope things could get better.
"Our many companies and jobs that have been foolishly allowed to move South of the Border, will be brought back into the United States through taxation (Tariffs)," Trump wrote.
Currently, she foolishly doesn't seem too concerned about what will happen if the Night King and his undead army best Jon and Dany and come marching into King's Landing.
But that fear of missing out has led us to foolishly embrace the false trappings of innovation over truly innovative ideas that may be simpler and ultimately more effective.
The last czar, Nicholas II, is alternately seen as a weak master who either foolishly allowed the autocracy to founder or who failed to ride with a democratizing tide.
I munched on hummus and pita chips, because I had foolishly skipped dinner to nurse the giant bruise forming on my ass after a day spent falling on it.
"If we foolishly cancel these contracts, Russia and China would be the enormous beneficiaries – and very happy to acquire all of this newfound business," the president said in a statement.
I found myself, often, foolishly praying for the country's mercy, as if I could push my back up against a door that was already being broken down from the outside.
And yet the Labour Party has failed to make the election breakthrough that it had hoped for—and that it had foolishly trailed in the past few weeks (see article).
In foolishly making a public announcement that the bureau is reviewing newly discovered emails related to Hillary Clinton's personal server, he has inserted himself yet again into the presidential campaign.
The original Battlefront went without a Star Wars tale, because "very few people actually play the single-player on these types of games," EA courageously foolishly said at the time.
The parasite also gives the rodent increased levels of testosterone in males, or progesterone in females, emboldening the rodent so that it lowers its guard and acts foolishly around cats.
" He followed up Monday, "Governor Jerry Brown must allow the Free Flow of the vast amounts of water coming from the North and foolishly being diverted into the Pacific Ocean.
This was a kindness to both those who were old and wanted to get home and those of us transparently fighting age who foolishly made plans for the next bar.
Cockiness caused him to stumble more than necessary — among other things, by being foolishly late to appointments, excessively protective of dubious supporters and overly confident that he had national status.
Then I changed my password, sent an angry text to the phone number on the food order, and went about my life, foolishly thinking that this was an isolated incident.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit," he wrote.
Like the new copyright directive making its way through European Parliament, India's regulators foolishly believe that tech giants and little guys alike can just automate their way out of the problem.
That willingness to drop preconditions has shocked many observers, who are today reacting to the news by saying the president has foolishly granted a meeting without extracting anything meaningful in return.
That model, which could be activated via a smartphone app, was able to park forward and backward, and stop for pedestrians, including when I bravely (foolishly?) jumped in front of it.
For the president, who foolishly tweeted that Robart was a "so-called judge," this will be an important lesson on the original intent of the Framers and how the system works.
"Typically people who have skills and passion, yet who are desperate for a job, don't ask too many questions, and are foolishly willing to start work without any written employment agreement."
Foolishly, I thought my swim with manta rays in Antigua would be different, since our group was told that they were out in the ocean and not in an enclosed pool.
We have largely failed to modernize since the Reagan era, having foolishly taken what USAF General Garrett Harencak correctly noted was a procurement holiday after the end of the Cold War.
" Then on Monday he tweeted, "Governor Jerry Brown must allow the Free Flow of the vast amounts of water coming from the North and foolishly being diverted into the Pacific Ocean.
He permanently broke with his mentor Conkling, who had foolishly resigned from the Senate in protest of civil service policies under Garfield, and pushed the legislation to enact civil service reform.
Dizzy with DayQuil, unable to focus on work, I logged into Prolific and played my first round, foolishly confident that my lengthy word list would loft me into the winners' circle.
When he went bankrupt in 1856 after foolishly guaranteeing a business partner's spiraling debts, he moved out of his mansion into rented lodgings and gave up title to his beloved museum.
She looks confident and regal, but not particularly happy, as she takes her seat, while Cersei smirks slightly, foolishly secure in her position now that she has the power she's always craved.
The moon is in diligent Virgo today, Leo, lighting up the financial sector of your chart and this evening, it's very important that you don't spend foolishly, or worse, out of guilt.
Now, when a party suffers a painful defeat like this, especially one where so many foolishly believed the polls couldn't possibly be this wrong, it is easy to want to blame others.
His critics would foolishly have the U.S. cede this leverage, as it has done in the past, but the true route to free trade is through the reciprocal reduction of those barriers.
"We will expand our missile capabilities despite Western pressure ... to let Israel know that if it acts foolishly, Tel Aviv and Haifa will brought down in ruins and totally destroyed," he said.
Throw in the Affordable Care Act, which literally and foolishly leaned on younger and healthier Americans to foot the bill for covering older and sicker people, and you see a pattern here.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid…They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan…!" he fulminated, in his first tweet of 503.
You're smart about money, Capricorn, and it's not like you to spend foolishly, but part of what makes Capricorns especially adept business people is your willingness and savviness to invest in cutting ideas.
Some attack him for foolishly driving up already high valuations; defenders say he is merely committed to gaining ownership stakes in this generation's defining companies, even if it means paying a higher price.
It is foolishly short-sighted for that community to interpret the religious exemption in the President's Executive Order in a way that makes it illusory, and to bitterly resist congressional efforts to clarify.
The misguided proposed changes leave MATS legally vulnerable and foolishly make it harder to strengthen mercury pollution reduction standards in the future to better protect children's and women's health, and Great Lakes fisheries.
"Lear" is a play about family, about the flesh and the mind melding together in decay, about understanding what it means to love and to foolishly refuse to admit one's need for love.
Alone, we humans aren't so bad—short of a tragedy like a foolishly flicked cigarette triggering a forest fire, the individual effects of a single person on the environment will usually be minimal.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 22013 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit," Trump tweeted on January 1.
"There was no restroom inside, so we foolishly relieved ourselves on the backside of the building behind some bushes," Bentz said in a statement issued via the University of Georgia, where he attends college.
In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield, including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi, who we captured, who we had, who we released.
I understand that trolls exist on all social media sites, but I foolishly assumed that everyone would choose to see my scars as a sign of strength and perseverance, not as shameful and disgusting.
The actor, whose illustrious career is not nearly as impressive as his ability to convince Blake Lively to marry him, has foolishly reignited a war I'm convinced he will never be able to win.
On the day reports swirled Eva and Ryan Gosling were expecting their second child, she was out running errands in L.A. and -- kinda foolishly -- trying to cover her baby bump with a tote bag.
Grab a foolishly strong, freezing Call a Cab from Wet Willie's while wearing only your bikini or Speedo, because SoBe has probably the best swimming beach in the country, and everything feels better drunk.
"By foolishly agreeing to meet with Obama's nominee, Republicans are playing with fire, and they can't blame the conservative grass-roots when they get burned," said Adam Brandon, the group's president and chief executive.
Grab a foolishly strong, freezing Call a Cab from Wet Willie's while wearing only your bikini or Speedo, because SoBe has probably the best swimming beach in the country and everything feels better drunk.
The video wasn't cute — he foolishly sent it from his official account, and the camera angle was all wrong — but l'affaire Griveaux seems to demand a new recognition of how men picture themselves today.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit," Trump tweeted on New Year's Day.
Now the no-trade clause he was foolishly granted by the team president, Phil Jackson, is as much an impediment to a divorce as it is a protection from a destination Anthony won't approve.
The Senate will not convict on the Ukrainian extortion scheme alone, even though proven, and now the Democrats have foolishly thrown away their best opportunity to fully investigate and expose our most unworthy president.
The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools.
"In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield — including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi," Trump explained in his first State of Union address.
Conflating Rhoades's brother's bedroom and the studio of Brancusi is both a middle finger to exalting the artist's workspace and an unapologetic show of what that may foolishly require: littering a gallery with stale donuts.
"A lot of economic activity is generated by the growth in health care jobs yet we stand to lose all that if Republicans foolishly go ahead with their plan to repeal the ACA," Sanchez said.
And on top of that, I love to work out, travel, play music from time to time, occasionally hang out with friends, read books (and sometimes foolishly attempt to write them), and learn new skills.
"The United States has not come even close to properly investing in infrastructure for many years, foolishly prioritizing the interests of other countries over our own," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said in a statement.
"I was angry, not with the umpire, but with the New York fans, who haven't given me a square deal since I returned and I foolishly tried to take it out on Hildebrand," he said.
I feel no lack, for there just isn't any room for me to foolishly have those thoughts as I am (as are you) truly the luckiest, no matter what that silly filtered screen may tell me.
Ten years ahead was his preferred span, with many longer backward reflections, influenced by his lifelong love of Toynbee's "A Study of History", to see how states amassed power and how, often foolishly, they lost it.
St. Paul was where Fitzgerald was young, where he saw some of his own dreams flourish, but he thought, maybe foolishly, that those dreams would be better served somewhere else than the place that made him.
For Trump to be "committed to regime change" in Iran, as Giuliani put it, would not merely be to let a campaign promise fall by the wayside; it would be to actively and foolishly break it.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 85033 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," he tweeted.
She too became something of a conservative heroine when Dianne Feinstein foolishly decided to suggest that her Catholic convictions might make her unfit for a judgeship after Trump nominated her to the Seventh Circuit last year.
" His tweet: "The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools.
He could think —he was empathizing with the tree, for heaven's sake, for having been taken out of the woods and into New York City, where it was foolishly clad—but he really could not speak.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," he tweets.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit," America's president raged in his first tweet of 2018.
"The astonishing thing is these patients often spend a few days in the hospital, receiving respiratory therapies multiple times each day, so lack of effective inhaler teaching during hospitalization is a foolishly squandered golden opportunity," Moriates added.
The other brother, meanwhile, and his business partner (Michael Stuhlbarg) have foolishly borrowed money from an unknown party, bringing them into the orbit of a shady and menacing hood (David Thewlis) who proclaims himself their new partner.
The defense said that Mr. Manafort had foolishly trusted Mr. Gates to handle his personal and business finances, and had relied on a phalanx of accountants and loan officers to flag serious mistakes in his financial filings.
After burger connoisseurs grilled Google for its sorry excuse for cheeseburger emoji, which foolishly featured the cheese under the patty, CEO Sundar Pichai vowed the company would "drop everything" to make the emoji right with the world.
" POTUS also kicked off his trip to London by insulting the mayor, Sadiq Khan, on Twitter upon landing ... calling him a "stone cold loser" and saying he's "foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States.
I trekked out the door in a fancy, yet casual dress and my laptop, having checked Google Maps to ensure I gave myself enough time to arrive 15 minutes early (but, foolishly, not enough to eat breakfast).
" The article's author, Nash Riggins, added unequivocally that "it's been 365 days since a clueless megalomaniac sailed past a gaggle of dedicated, career politicians and was foolishly handed the keys to the most powerful office on the planet.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," Trump tweeted in January.
"It's fortunate that China is so strong that those forces foolishly clamouring can only add a bit of pressure from public opinion, but their dream of long-arm jurisdiction is in the end a mirage," the paper said.
In both cases, a same-sex duet is made to look trite — too foolishly gushy in "Not Our Fate," too tweely cute in "dance odyssey" (which elsewhere carries on as if same-sex meetings were a private aberration).
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit," Trump tweeted on January 1, his first tweet of that year.
And for those who foolishly complain about LED lighting looking too cold, the lamp actually has three different color temperature settings—cold white, amber, and warm white—that can be cycled by simply tapping BB-8 on the head.
Predictably, some Democrats and liberal pundits are already foolishly pouring cold water on this "feel good" Carrier story in a classic case of forgetting that the emotional power of this deal far outweighs any academic economic or philosophical arguments.
Making matters worse is the fact that a major chunk of the people not signing up are the younger and healthier Americans the ACA's architects were foolishly relying on to help absorb the costs from older and sicker enrollees.
That may, obviously, change during the remainder of the Trump presidency, so a Law School 101 lesson is in order before others get in trouble by foolishly trying to Sean Hannity their way out of the attorney-client relationship.
"All of the money that President Obama so foolishly gave them went into terrorism and into their 'pockets,'" he added, apparently referring to the Iranian funds that were freed up when Iran agreed to constraints on its nuclear program.
My college roommate said I shouldn't accept this stranger's invitation for pizza and waited behind a tree to note down the make of his car and license plate number after I foolishly (according to her) agreed to meet him.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday the United States has "foolishly" handed Pakistan more than $33 billion in aid over the last 15 years while getting nothing in return, and pledged to put a stop to it.
Clinton both sent and received classified information on "unclassified personal servers not even supported by full-time security staff," which Comey said may have led to "hostile actors" accessing her system, especially when she foolishly used that system on foreign soil.
Did all the fireside chats and sweet moments of affection between your faves warm your heart and make you foolishly believe, even for a moment, that there may be true happiness awaiting them on the other side of this war?
Writing on Twitter on Monday, U.S. President Donald Trump said the United States has "foolishly" handed Pakistan more than $33 billion in aid over the last 15 years while getting nothing in return and pledged to put a stop to it.
"@SadiqKhan, who by all accounts has done a terrible job as Mayor of London, has been foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States, by far the most important ally of the United Kingdom," Trump tweeted earlier this month.
Even for military hawks, the view took hold that something was profoundly flawed in the war effort, and that the president and Army General William Westmoreland had badly misled the American people and foolishly ensnared us in an unwinnable conflict.
Yet even with all of the public backlash and calls for regulation, Facebook still seems to lack or ignore the cynics and diverse voices who might foresee how its products could be perverted or were conceptualized foolishly in the first place.
I think that foolishly some big companies want that because they believe they're best equipped to deal with regulation and that there are times in history when regulation has actually entrenched big companies because they're the most capable of complying.
The pop star, reportedly worth nearly $400 million, foolishly failed to protect the rights to her own music, which were offered to her and then, when she declined to make the purchase, duly and legally sold to a third party.
The best thing about "All We Had" is Ms. Holmes's stormy portrayal of a desperate, foolishly trusting woman who rushes from man to man seeking security, only to find herself used and betrayed while her daughter looks on with increasing dismay.
Only the clueless or the foolishly optimistic, so the thinking went, would list a property in New York City around the Fourth of July, during the Jewish holidays in the fall, or any time between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day.
In recent weeks, pro-Brexit advocates in London have realized that the Good Friday Agreement may become a significant roadblock in their quest to leave the EU. So they are foolishly trying to discredit the mechanism that ended The Troubles.
And the very interesting thing about that is that, if I said I'm going to put a tax on of 10%, the free-traders, somewhat foolishly, they'll say "Oh, he's not a free-trader", which I am, I'm absolutely a free-trader.
Its fetishization of failure and its love for ideas that make everyone look up, even if only to shoot them down, are all in service of this single goal: If you're not failing constantly and even foolishly, you're not pushing hard enough.
My parents foolishly let me have a Robin Hood hat—the deep green felt one, with a red feather—and I am wearing it while strutting pompously across a bridge thinking I Am The Shit, like the harbinger of the goddamn Boss Baby.
The public rejected the duo's troublesome chamber western The Beguiled, starring Eastwood as a wounded Union soldier who foolishly tries to make playthings of the Confederate-aligned, Mississippi boarding school belles that nurse him back to health, while critics more or less shrugged.
"If they haven't managed to hit an artificial threshold that this government have foolishly put onto the statute books then I will stand by our members, and we'll all live, including the government, ... with the consequences of that," he told the BBC.
Love grabbed 14 rebounds Sunday night, had a Game 7 plus-minus of 19 — the highest mark by far of any Cavalier — and held defensively steady as Curry frantically and foolishly launched a last-gasp 3-point attempt that did not come close.
Because Democrats foolishly shattered longstanding Senate traditions by weakening the Senate's filibuster power for judicial nominations in 2013, and then trying to filibuster Justice Neil Gorsuch in 2017, they are left to lie in a bed of irrelevance of their own making.
MORE STORIES FROM THE HILL Trump's idea to 'open up' libel laws works just fine for us in Britain Learn to take a joke — Defending 'offensive' Halloween costumes To identify problems, solve them, and reach consensus, we have to do it foolishly.
The stock market has continued its precipitous fall, which is important and relevant because throughout his presidency, Trump and his team have foolishly relied on the stock market as a barometer for the health of the economy and, by extension, his presidency.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 28500 billion dollars in aid over the last 6900 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," Trump wrote in his first tweet of 2628.
Pocahontas was the daughter of a Native-American chief who married an English settler in the early17th century; Trump chose the name because Warren foolishly claimed Native-American heritage on the grounds that family legend pointed to her having "one 32nd" Cherokee ancestry.
In my view, EXIM Bank is actually the "Bank of Small Business" and it deserves to survive and be led by someone who believes in its mission and who is prepared to defend it against its naysayers who foolishly try to destroy it.
What is confusing here is that Margot's inebriated resignation, her anxiety about seeming selfish or strange or foolishly impulsive, leads her to have the kind of casual, unpleasurable and often regrettable sex that seems, perhaps, increasingly common, whether on college campuses or Tinder dates.
I took someone back who I knew I shouldn't have; I spent way too much time with someone completely inappropriate; I hooked up with a lover's friend; and I foolishly tried to turn a fling that was obviously not going anywhere into something bigger.
The story focuses on the diabolical relationship of a dead-eyed dental prosthetist in Caracas (the brilliant 60-year-old Chilean star Alfredo Castro) and a young hustler he picks up on a street corner who foolishly comes to regard him as a surrogate father.
"The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 85033 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," Trump wrote in his first tweet of the New Year.
Case in point: I once turned down a clearly stated invitation to come back to a woman's place for sex because I'd foolishly tried to match her drink for drink and was mere minutes away from creating a monochrome Jackson Pollack in her presence.
I'd recently abandoned teaching to go back to school full-time, which meant foolishly taking out several dozen thousand dollars in student loans to heap upon the $60,000 debt from my undergraduate education, bringing the sum total to a bloated figure in the six digits.
And before too long, the next state will take its cue from Illinois, and the pattern will be set, if not by law then by custom: State employees on a defined benefit pension will always come before investors who foolishly lent money to their state.
"I watch and listen to the Fake News, CNN, MSDNC, ABC, NBC, CBS, some of FOX (desperately & foolishly pleading to be politically correct), the @nytimes, & the @washingtonpost, and all I see is hatred of me at any cost," he wrote on Twitter on Sunday evening.
Some years after that, Frank Stella told me in an interview that things might not be quite as bad as they seemed for those who still insisted upon foolishly clinging to the illusionistic world of two dimensions — as long as Abstraction was rigidly adhered to.
In falsely declaring after his first summit with Mr. Kim that "there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea," while bragging that the risk of war — which he foolishly stoked — is now diminished, the president is intent on creating the illusion of progress.
Its author, JP Larocque, confessed that in 2008, he foolishly dressed up for Halloween as someone from south of the American border, thus being guilty, all at once, unusually for his considerate homeland, of racial insensitivity, cultural appropriation and a joke in inexcusable taste.
And events fall out from there, as poorly as in any of the endless horror films where scientists foolishly play God and get dramatically punished — or at least where scientists bypass sensible, rigorous experimental protocols in order to move things along at a cinema-friendly rate.
The story appears to follow the younger brother of one of the fictional film students killed in the original movie, who, in true horror-movie fashion, foolishly decides to lead a gang of friends into the haunted woods to try to discover what happened to his sister.
Six years ago, I was publicly fired from my job as Spokesperson for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee under Chairman Darrell Issa, R-California, because I foolishly, yet predictably, put my ego and vanity ahead of the best interests of my boss and colleagues.
On first reading Dumbledore's last words seem like a cry for help from someone he's foolishly placed his trust in, but in hindsight we know better: he's actually begging for Snape to give him a quick, easy end and fulfil the promise he's already made Dumbledore.
Looking back at the album a decade after its 22009 release, the album says so much to me about the Williamsburg I foolishly dreamt up in my dorm room in Ohio and the "rest stop for the dead" that I found when I finally got here.
"But for all the climate deniers, for all the fingers in the ears, all the heads foolishly plunged into the sand, right now you have global investment in renewable energy…you have activists in the most remote corners of the world saving rainforests," he pointed out.
Mr Parker said he was relieved that Mr Trump failed in a bid to buy American Airlines in 1989 and argued that one reason the businessman's Trump Airlines failed was that it foolishly offered to refund customers whose flights were delayed by more than 15 minutes.
If this is not enough, the bill also foolishly authorizes the Interior Secretary and Bureau of Land Management to establish a pilot program explicitly designed to undermine environmental analysis and public input by rushing reviews and approvals for oil and gas development, furthering our fossil fuel addiction.
"These leaders have foolishly paired a big package of tax cuts that will disproportionately benefit well-off New Jerseyans while decimating the state's ability to pay for essential services, promised obligations and other critical investments," said Jon Whiten, the vice president of New Jersey Policy Perspectives.
When my longtime editor initially proposed the project, I foolishly imagined it would be an easy task: not because the text is a simple one, but because I had often "corrected" what I considered inadequate renderings of many of its passages, either for students or for myself.
In her Oscar acceptance speech for Blue Jasmine in 2014, Cate Blanchett called out this way of thinking: And thank you to ... those of us in the industry who are still foolishly clinging to the idea that female films, with women at the center, are niche experiences.
His story involves naïve, chump-like leaders who foolishly toppled foreign autocrats—"foreign regimes that we know nothing about, that we shouldn't be involved with," as he puts it—instead of applying brutal, unsqueamish violence to the single task of eradicating Islamic State (IS) and other fanatical extremists.
The Governor is under siege, the Mayor of San Juan is a despicable and incompetent person who I wouldn't trust under any circumstance, and the United States Congress foolishly gave 92 Billion Dollars for hurricane relief, much.... ....of which was squandered away or wasted, never to be seen again.
The Governor is under siege, the Mayor of San Juan is a despicable and incompetent person who I wouldn't trust under any circumstance, and the United States Congress foolishly gave 92 Billion Dollars for hurricane relief, much of which was squandered away or wasted, never to be seen again.
The Governor is under siege, the Mayor of San Juan is a despicable and incompetent person who I wouldn't trust under any circumstance, and the United States Congress foolishly gave 201993 Billion Dollars for hurricane relief, much of which was squandered away or wasted, never to be seen again.
In his well-known article "The Arrogance of Power and the Case for Presidential Term Limits," Matthew Dickinson sets his sights on Roosevelt's fourth term, arguing that the president foolishly ran for and won a fourth term even though he should have known he was in very poor health.
I spy fire axes just waiting to be buried into skulls, foolishly positioned electrical wires that could so easily prove deadly, the potential to poison drinks, and to get up close and personal with Novikov by assuming the identity of the Sangine show's star male model, Helmut Kruger.
This administration also foolishly dismantled the in-country processing that the Obama administration had begun to establish, which for the first time provided potential refugees with the tools to demonstrate that they face danger and seek the possibility of resettlement elsewhere in the region before undertaking the dangerous trek across Mexico.
"In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds and hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield - including the ISIS leader, (Abu Bakr) al-Baghdadi, who we captured, who we had, who we released," Trump said in the speech, referring to the Islamic State militant group.
Even then, you're much more likely to have a reaction akin to a night of heavy drinking and bad sushi than you are to simply drop dead (unless you're Jennifer Aniston's coworker in the The Good Girl, who foolishly trusted a roadside vendor who was apparently slanging Satan-piss berries).
This means everyone had a 50-year or longer sentence to try and make it through, making these the most heinous criminals outside of death row—or more likely, in Texas, people who refused to plea bargain because they foolishly believed some fading ghost of Lady Justice still haunted courtrooms.
Maybe that's because individual rights, democratic choices, rule of law, competitive markets, high levels of transparency, low levels of government corruption, independent news sources, and freedoms of thought, conscience and speech are assets beyond price —ones that Westerners tend to value too lightly while foolishly assuming others do as well.
In 2006, Mr. Cameron had foolishly dismissed UKIP members as "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists" — a remark as unfortunate and ill-judged as Hillary Clinton's "basket of deplorables" — yet it was they who ended up winning the race they cared most about, bringing down the Cameron premiership along the way.
But since I&aposd started saving for retirement so late in life, and had foolishly cashed out my 401(k) in my 20s without understanding the long-term implications of that decision, I knew I&aposd need all the help I could get when it came to building a nest egg.
When it received an indication that he had foolishly exited into the rain, the computer, not to be outdone (or, to use tech jargon, "outdumbed"), distracted its scientist handlers with complicated prompts that caused them to carry it into the storm, which had by then settled over the entire East Coast.
"@SadiqKhan, who by all accounts has done a terrible job as Mayor of London, has been foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States, by far the most important ally of the United Kingdom," Trump said on Twitter shortly before Air Force One landed at Stansted Airport near London.
"The Governor is under siege, the Mayor of San Juan is a despicable and incompetent person who I wouldn't trust under any circumstance, and the United States Congress foolishly gave 92 Billion Dollars for hurricane relief, much of which was squandered away or wasted, never to be seen again," Trump tweeted on Thursday.
Either they stop the invasion of our Country by Drug Dealers, Cartels, Human Traffickers, Coyotes and Illegal Immigrants, which they can do very easily, or our many companies and jobs that have been foolishly allowed to move South of the Border, will be brought back into the United States through taxation (Tariffs).
A lifelong "raider," as he calls those skilled at exploiting opportunity, Kolomoisky in his youth ferried electronics from Moscow to Ukraine during the collapse of the Soviet Union—a train line once graced by robbers in leather jackets who snuffed out passengers for any rubles they might have foolishly failed to hide.
Yet it is Ms. Merkel, trained as a scientist in East Germany and the first woman to serve as German chancellor, who has stood up to Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin, who nobly — some now say foolishly — opened Germany's doors to refugees and who agreed to three bailouts to save Greece from bankruptcy.
Readers with conservative tastes may (foolishly) be put off by the novel's form — it is a kind of oral history, a collage built from a series of testimonies consisting of one line or three lines or a page and a half, some delivered by the novel's characters, some drawn from historical sources.
The violent, crack-riddled streets and project corridors, the ones conservative journals such as The Weekly Standard foolishly claimed were full of "Super-Predators" during Carter's youth, have become, if not universally prosperous, much less riven by shootings and robberies as crime, all over the city and the industrialized Western world, dropped.
Which means forest fires are not due to environmental terrorist groups, as Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke suggested, nor are they due to logging companies cutting down fire-resistant trees, as some activists have claimed, nor are they due to landowners opposing prescribed burns (and it's definitely not "water foolishly being diverted into the Pacific Ocean").
Instead of thinking of the Bolt as an electric car first — something that'll be a little bit tricky since the actual name of the car is, rather foolishly I think, the Bolt EV — buyers should just think of the Bolt as a car, and compare it to other potential vehicles on a level playing field.
Your hope that North Korea would give up its nuclear weapons, missiles and technology was viewed as a pipe dream even before you met Kim in Singapore -- and with North Korea's latest round of name-calling, your interlocutors see you and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo foolishly driving down a boulevard of broken dreams.
"Either they stop the invasion of our Country by Drug Dealers, Cartels, Human Traffickers, Coyotes and Illegal Immigrants, which they can do very easily, or our many companies and jobs that have been foolishly allowed to move South of the Border, will be brought back into the United States through taxation (Tariffs)," he added.
The Italian baritone Ambrogio Maestri sang his first Don Pasquale, bringing his powerhouse voice and larger-than-life presence to that touchstone role, a crotchety old bachelor in mid-19th-century Rome who, fed up with Ernesto, his footloose nephew and heir, foolishly decides to disinherit the young man and to take a wife.
Every year we endure more of these predictably edited, laughably plotted thrillers centered around a young girl foolishly toying with the tools of Satan (usually a Ouija Board), becoming possessed by a demon, and then being exorcised by a priest who was struggling with his faith but now sees the error of rational thinking.
Some analysts speculate that Mr. Mueller intended this result — that he knew that Mr. Manafort would lie to him, knew that Mr. Manafort's lawyers would brief Mr. Trump on those lies, and knew that Mr. Trump would foolishly repeat those lies in his written statement to Mr. Mueller, thus committing a new federal crime.
I know this because, alas, I tried — opting, finally and foolishly (but, in my defence, at a point of near desperation after sifting so much virtual chaff the whole enterprise seemed to have gained lottery odds of success and I frankly just wanted my spare time back), for a model sold by a well-known local retailer.
I (foolishly) avoided Dunkirk in theaters based on my typical dislike of war movies, but when I eventually caught up with it on the small screen (sorry, Christopher Nolan), I was so enamored of its unusual structure and pristine filmmaking I couldn't help be drawn into a story that, on paper, I couldn't have been less interested in.
Readers Center _____ As the title of her new collection, "Feel Free," suggests, Ms. Smith explores variations on a theme: freedom of language and thought; freedom from received narratives that tend to be foolishly consistent, if not downright constricting; freedom from the "impossible identities" society so facilely places on people, or from those we too readily adopt ourselves.
They resent their significant others, family members, and friends for messing up and leaning on them when it comes to "adulting"—Caps will help get your finances in order after you naively invested in a pyramid scheme, or help you sort things out after you foolishly thought you could move all your furniture to your new apartment without hiring any help.
President Donald Trump signaled Monday that he was prepared to cut off aid to Pakistan if the country failed to cooperate with the US. "The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," he wrote.
"My blood was in a ferment within me, my heart was full of longing, sweetly and foolishly; I was all expectancy and wonder; I was tremulous and waiting; my fancy fluttered and circled about the same images like martins round a bell-tower at dawn; I dreamed and was sad and sometimes cried," reads one passage in the translation by Isaiah Berlin.
Maybe Gordon Hayward will play you out of the rotation, and you'll be traded to the Pistons, where you will see your career slide down into the swamp of mediocrity until, one day, you find yourself plying a trade on a contender, but far away from the glory you dreamt of when you foolishly dunked on LeBron for no particularly good reason.
" In a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, he said it would be his "number-one priority...to dismantle the disastrous deal," adding that the "problem is that [Iran] can keep the terms and still get the bomb by simply running out the clock," and that they'll "keep the billions and billions of dollars that we so stupidly and foolishly gave them.
Harbaugh's Wolverines cost the Ann Arbor Ruth's Chris Steak House a great deal of money after the restaurant foolishly promoted a one-percent discount for each point difference in last Saturday's game against Rutgers (They used "Michigan beats Rutgers by 20 points, your discount would be 20% off your food," as an example, which, LOLZ to the idea of them beating Rutgers by only 20).
The House passed a bill last month that would limit U.S. aid to the Palestinians over concerns the government was "rewarding Palestinians who kill Americans and Israelis," per the AP. This follows another tweet from Trump claiming, "the United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit."
"President Trump foolishly set the collapse of the multilateral agreement in motion in 2018 when he unilaterally pulled the United States out of the agreement and reimposed crippling sanctions on Iran, despite repeated confirmation by the International Atomic Energy Agency that Iran was complying with its terms," Edwin Lyman, a senior scientist in the Union of Concerned Scientists' Global Security Program, said in a statement Monday.
Part of the answer, undoubtedly, is the combination of Bill Clinton's great talents and overweening appetites; part of it is Hillary Clinton's myopic sense of personal righteousness; part of it is that they are lawyers, who try to use words — foolishly, sometimes — to extricate themselves from mistakes; and part of it is that they are the perfect exemplars of the baby boom generation, charismatic and idealistic and greedy for glory.
"The hostile forces are foolishly keen on vicious sanctions to stand in our way toward promotion of people's wellbeing and development and to lead us to change and submission, but they will be made to clearly see over time how our country that has built its strength hundreds of times defying hardship build its own country as a powerful nation by its own strength, technology and efforts," he said on Korean Central News Agency.
And this is a perfect example of that: a simple, pure, family moment (daughter dancing foolishly) hijacked by 20 consistent seconds of daddery ("No, come on… you're going to pull something") for absolutely no reason at all, then topped with the cherry of a joke that makes absolutely no sense at all and isn't by any traditional metrics a joke, but is delivered like a joke so I guess it is a joke?
Charles M. Blow This may well be the beginning of the end: the early moments of a historical pivot point, when the slide of the republic into something untoward and unrecognizable still feels like a small collection of poor judgments and reversible decisions, rather than the forward edge of an enormous menace inching its way forward and grinding up that which we held dear and foolishly thought, as lovers do, would ever endure.
That's quite right: a certain type of Republican politician, the type represented by Nelson Rockefeller (the governor of New York, who ran a poorly mounted and hopelessly belated campaign against Nixon), George Romney (the governor of Michigan, who knocked himself out of the Republican primaries early by telling a reporter that he had been "brainwashed" about Vietnam), and John Lindsay (the mayor of New York, who some foolishly hoped might be Nixon's Vice-Presidential pick), largely disappeared from the Party after 21960.
The most recent tweet came in June, when he threatened to levy tariffs on Mexico if officials there failed to crack down on unauthorized crossings into the U.S.  "Either they stop the invasion of our Country by Drug Dealers, Cartels, Human Traffickers, Coyotes and Illegal Immigrants, which they can do very easily, or our many companies and jobs that have been foolishly allowed to move South of the Border, will be brought back into the United States through taxation (Tariffs)," Trump wrote.

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