Now, this standard has a certain perverse appeal, at least if we felt it would be universally followed. |
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Ruthlessness toward members of the same species is not only unethical and unaesthetic, it is perverse, against nature. |
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DeMille-the-Christian-artist was not being overly zealous, perverse or unauthentic here. |
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To place the unclassifiable Rodin among the Impressionists might be considered perverse. |
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It was a perverse choice considering most radio stations would be unable to broadcast the unedited album version. |
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There is a curious, arguably perverse, symbiosis in football between physical prowess and serious injury which remains unexamined. |
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There is something about Moscow's untempered extremes, its perverse anarchy and its extreme beauty that appeals to him. |
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I was fingering my car keys, wondering if my perverse appetite would last all the way to Tesco's and back, when I had a sudden brainwave. |
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But one day by dint of sheer chance and perverse good luck Vernon happened to be struck by a rather smashing train of thought. |
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It's retro kitsch, wonderfully camp, gleefully perverse and exaggerated and utterly great fun throughout. |
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What could be more perverse than playing hard to get when looking for the one we can really open up to? |
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It may seem difficult, if not impossibly perverse, to justify the highest ranking for a record of solo contrabass improvisations. |
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The USA has always stylized the founding of the West, from lottery like homesteading to the perverse pull of the rush for gold. |
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How did white supremacism, and the populist politics of racial solidarity, offer them a kind of perverse security within that world? |
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In the sweep of history, this will be seen as a perverse act by a political party that allowed its own insecurities to undermine its best asset. |
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Yet in a perverse way, this hubris by the Senate's more potent conservative bloc compounds the value of any dissent. |
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I have always had an almost perverse desire to mix with people who make their living from crime. |
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The vicarious emotions that the accounts of the trial provoked range from the honourable, through the ignoble to the thoroughly perverse. |
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This year in a perverse way has been a very good illustration of these basic facts. |
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Call me perverse if you like but I'm fed up with the good guys always being the main characters. |
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His considerable powers of concentration served to amplify the more extreme, uncompromising, even perverse, aspects of his personality. |
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The example du jour is his persistent, some might say perverse desire to ram roads through some of our last old-growth forests. |
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Instead of being taken aback, he felt a perverse obstinacy rise up inside him. |
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I'm one of these perverse people who will deliberately take a spite against something, just because everyone else likes it. |
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So his decision to show the way last night smacked of a perverse desire to prove something to himself and the world. |
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Also, I'm so stubborn and perverse that her rudeness just made me more determined to get to know her. |
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It would be utterly illogical and perverse to deal with this matter on anything other than a UK-wide basis. |
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These new rules should be structured in a way that removes perverse incentives to lower standards. |
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Worse still, in countries where development is the central problem, uniform standards may have perverse effects. |
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To argue that we are powerless to change the political environment in the face of irrational fanaticism is a perverse form of defeatism. |
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She describes the proposed development of the old bus depot as unpopular, illogical and perverse. |
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Shall I judge you by their perverse standards, until you can prove otherwise? |
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Is it about the fundamentally deluded nature of human existence, or its perverse, incorrigible optimism? |
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So, ironically, even the economic consequences of the neo-liberal program are likely to be quite perverse in practice. |
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There is sometimes in us a perverse refusal to accept or to believe in good, a deep-seated, hardened refusal which belittles or despises good. |
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If that is correct, of course, the only comparison with the steriliser's immunity, with which I am dealing, is of a perverse contrast. |
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The extension of this model to securities pricing has created a widely accepted but perverse understanding of financial markets. |
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Human nature is far too perverse for anything this simple to be successful! |
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In the perverse logic of defense contracts, the more complications the better. |
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The refusal by the government to accept the best science is irrational and perverse. |
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It could only do so if satisfied that the decision was so perverse that the judge must have fallen into error. |
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It is asserted in this appeal that the jury's verdict was perverse and that the answers were incontrovertibly unreasonable. |
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It is a perverse verdict and it is a miscarriage of justice in relation to costs. |
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Where, however, a jury reaches a perverse verdict on the evidence, it is open to the Court of Appeal, to reverse that verdict. |
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It will also prevent unnecessary appeals in cases where a perverse jury verdict is returned. |
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One of the most perverse incentives, however, is provided by the statutory formula method of calculating FBT for vehicles. |
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So perverse, in fact, that it could only be regarded as a deliberate attempt to counter the opposite position. |
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Taxi drivers as therapists may seem perverse, but more and more of us seem to be pouring our hearts out in the back of cabs. |
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This exploration of the trash of the 20th century proposes a more underground and degenerately perverse origin and use of the medium. |
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As the United States pulls farther and farther ahead of Europe economically, this idea appears more and more perverse. |
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Employing language that is purposefully stylized and mannered, it reads something like a perverse Lewis Carroll. |
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And, because I'm a contrarian at heart, I'll root for perverse storylines that will upset the apple cart and disturb the powers that be. |
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In Bushell's case habeas corpus was used to release a juryman who had been gaoled for returning what the court regarded as a perverse verdict. |
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My comrade saw the perverse and absurd side of life and was happy to laugh along with it over a nice rare steak and a beer. |
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In the event, the judge held that the decision was not perverse and he dismissed the appeal. |
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It may be that the decision to interfere with such an editorial decision will have perverse and regrettable consequences. |
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Now I understood how women felt when being leched at by some perverse and dirty old man. |
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To spend so much for the sake of legislating against a minority doing something they never did is, to my effete southern mind, perverse. |
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A widower forensics expert investigates perverse serial killings with a Biblical link to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. |
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His performance pays perverse homage to an entire tradition of Australiana. |
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Moreover, the Machiavellian in me cannot help but wryly shake the head in perverse tribute to what the Cubic boys have pulled off. |
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It isn't just the imp of the perverse that suggests that a total wipeout for Microsoft is avertable. |
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The scrupulous fabrication of the low-relief wall ensembles in this show approaches the perverse. |
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There's a sense of perverse, masochistic enjoyment associated with sitting through something on the level of this movie. |
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Attempts have been made to subordinate sympathy to self-love, but they appear to me perverse. |
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This eliminates perverse growth, anticipating the metastasis that is seeking to re-enter the system. |
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His decision to work in mezzotint was partly perverse, as it was an antiquated medium so labor-intensive that it was only rarely practiced. |
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But any significant new insights into that strange, perverse Jacobean tragicomedy contrived to pass me by. |
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I don't think a daughter of mine should be influenced by such perverse minds. |
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Policemen shooed us away from near the lake not out of being perverse but because a great big tree had fallen down and blocked the road. |
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Even the person who hurts himself does so because he mistakenly believes this will give him some perverse form of pleasure. |
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An old truism about the perverse ways of big business surfaced again last week in the pages of the Financial Times. |
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In a perverse turnabout, the intense fear of mistakes just makes for more mistakes. |
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This perverse attitude says more about their blinkered view of what the country should aspire to be. |
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He got a perverse enjoyment out of seeing people undertake him on quiet stretches of motorway and wondered why they got so hot under the collar. |
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In the 1960s and early '70s, manic civil engineers and perverse planners decided to demolish a great deal of the centre to make way for free-flowing traffic. |
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I always have this perverse but burning desire to be scared, and it's hard for me to achieve this goal simply because it's hard for me to get scared. |
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But the eccentricity of his performances, some of which seem wilfully perverse, with their mannered phrasing and exaggeratedly slow or fast tempos, was less easy to take. |
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In an exceptional feat of perverse alchemy he has, during his 22 years in office, changed gold into lead and ruined a once relatively prosperous southern African state. |
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These were independent works, shot mostly with actors unknown outside Denmark, dismissed as perverse and uncommercial and thus poorly distributed beyond Europe. |
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This creates some perverse effects, similar to those of rent control. |
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It has the creepy, perverse, hyperreal atmosphere of a dream. |
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However halting, impaired, almost uncommunicative the poem, I still have the perverse sense that the station to which it is tuned, however low, is merriment. |
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There is, however, an inflexibility and perverse bias already present in the environing world, and it's this which defamiliarises and removes our projects from us. |
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It is perverse because everyone accepts that regular exercise helps reduce the risk of heart attacks, high blood pressure, obesity and even depression. |
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The reign of George II practically revels in this perverse transparency. |
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She glanced around quickly, and then looked to the the suspected committer of criminal and perverse acts, barely meeting his eyes before her own shifted over to the door. |
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Thousands of e-mails began pouring in, some writers chastising us with perverse and filthy language while others described us as heroes with guts. |
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All sorts of rumors had been circulating over the weeks prior, and me being the secretive type, derived a perverse pleasure in being privy to the real story. |
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He seems to take perverse pleasure in making things as difficult as possible. |
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There's a perverse obliviousness to the fact that we equate our national security and welfare with foreign policy that deprives others of the liberties we supposedly cherish. |
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A federal law designed to cut Medicare costs would have had the perverse effect in at least one state of increasing Medicare costs and patient copayments. |
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Smith's fearsomely focused narratives and majestically brutal accompaniment are alternately highlighted or hamstrung by perverse and frustrating production decisions. |
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If at that time humans were any less perverse, selfish, materialistic, profane, etc., than they had ever been, this should come as a great shock to all social historians. |
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The notion that a perverse finding of fact does not reveal an error of law in a court of law of our judicature is one I will never accept never, ever. |
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A mere debunker would take perverse satisfaction in exposing America's sin and hypocrisy. |
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But your perverse attempts to wring blushes from little baggages in convenient corners outrage my love of Love! |
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Like many other subcultures considered perverse by much of the general public, bronydom has its roots in the infamous website 4chan.org. |
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She and Henri had some kind of cyberdeath pact. If one didn't come back, the other one wouldn't. It was all very perverse, and confused. |
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Every encounter with friend or foe, every clash with or submission to authority bears the perverse traces of family romance. |
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And, yes, it probably would give us some perverse pleasure to say 'Fuck you' to this decaying business model. |
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A perverse will easily collects together a system of notions to justify itself in its obliquity. |
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She argues that perverse sexual activity constitutes an attempt to restage the primal scene in such a way as to eliminate its traumatic aspects. |
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The sessions judge considered the acquittal as perverse and referred the case to the high court. |
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This is explained by their more democratic governance that reduces perverse incentives and subsequent contributions to economic bubbles. |
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Neither his fake narrative nor Eileen's perverse echoes of it are memories, stories, affording the reciprocity of an auratic relation. |
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In its usual perverse way all the talk has been about black holes and all the observations have been about white holes. |
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What fanatics like the Taliban and now ISIS enact in the name of their perverse sense of God is not animalistic or inhuman, but all too human. |
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Metapolitics traced the disastrous role of perverted imagination and correspondingly perverse politics in Germany. |
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As such, being classified with EDNOS gives those with eating disorders a perverse incentive to get worse in order to get better. |
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One needs a rather perverse sense of humor to stomach the Eurotrash excesses found here. |
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They often have perverse effects, due to the distorted signals they send to the market. |
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Family fabric has slowly weakened due to society getting more perverse and unreligious, where everything is legislated as legal and acceptable. |
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Like some unrepentant, polymorphously perverse Humbert Humbert, Lucien intoxicates with his language, accepting his predilection for the dead as what it is. |
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Though whether the males do so simultaneously or sequentially, I cannot remember, not being an authority on the perverse mating habits of grunions. |
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The pioneering researcher Sigmund Freud believed that humans are born polymorphously perverse, which means that any number of objects could be a source of pleasure. |
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To worry about Chinese underpopulation might seem perverse but it is worth remembering that the Chinese economic miracle has been built on plentiful and cheap labour. |
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The stories of his adventures outzany those of any other figure in jazz, even certified cuckoos like the maniacal Jack Purvis and the perverse Joe Venuti. |
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It might be slightly perverse, but acknowledging the failure of a kind of institutional gentrification project felt more honest than being paternalist or just feeling guilty. |
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It is his lesbophilia that sets Proust's narrator apart from the author, that marks the novel as a novel rather than a perverse exercise in selective autobiography. |
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Walter Benjamin saw the cult of the movie star as a rather perverse perseverance of auratic elements on the postauratic ground of mechanical reproduction. |
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For Shen Buhai, correct or perverse words will order or ruin the state. |
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In his pathological addictions to wealth and crystal meth, spree killer Andrew Cunanan became the perverse and unwanted icon of my gay generation. |
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Luc is trying to keep the parasite from attacking him, but on the other, he could be read as being threatened by her vision of a sexualized, polymorphously perverse society. |
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The saving grace for Haffenden's publishers seems to have been Empson's perverse encouragement of his wife's infidelity and his attachment to troilism. |
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