Psychotic disco drums and vivacious octave bass lines introduce us to the Liars new mania. |
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The double A-side Prayer For The Broken Hearted and Liars release will be available in records shops and online from www. |
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Some fakers are compulsive liars who convince themselves of the truth of their own stories. |
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No, Joe, you sniveling toad whose pathetic job it is to lie for other liars. |
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They are so pathetic that it would be easy to show them up for the liars they are. |
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The essential similarity is that both men are lawyers more than they are liars. |
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We also have to remember that many intelligence officers are trained to be skillful liars. |
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Polygraphs are not only worthless but they cause innocent people to be branded as liars. |
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With the exception of sociopaths, who are expert liars, most people sound tense, their voices highly pitched, when they fib. |
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In this cartoon, all elected representatives are self-interested liars, devoid of principle, who are making a hames of running the country. |
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For decades scientists have sought reliable ways to detect deception, only to be outwitted by liars capable of deceiving their instruments. |
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This film matched elegant Hitchcockian suspense with a playful appreciation of the way love can make fools and liars of us all. |
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The electorate perceives her cabinet as a bunch of liars who don't have the skills to even run a chook raffle. |
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The many officers who signed those glowing fitness reports and awarded those citations are either liars or they are incompetent. |
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No claque of paid liars can cheapen the sacrifice and nobility of the cause. |
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Then, if we did get an annulment, our reputations would be fixed as liars and hypocrites. |
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The liars and image-makers in Washington and the media understand little of the historical process and its deep impact on popular consciousness. |
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The more they appear as fakes and liars, the more they will resort to naked political power in pursuit of their goals. |
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Our culture is filled with liars and cheats, those great purveyors of falsity in the government, the media, the shops, and our homes. |
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To be blunt about it, by any normal standard most of these guys are liars and phonies. |
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So, not only are the students feckless, lazy, promiscuous and drunk, they're also liars. |
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I often wonder what journalism's legendary scribes would say about this year's crop of liars, plagiarists, and incompetents. |
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Meanwhile, the hit parade of plagiarists and liars turning their moral shortcomings into cold, hard cash continues. |
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Sooner or later events expose lies and find liars out, as the minister is already finding to his cost. |
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Accomplished liars will beat polygraphs, mislead interrogators, and hoodwink the most sophisticated security regime. |
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What politician is going to call what the public perceives to be a well-meaning group of tragedy-stricken widows a gang of frauds and liars? |
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In such small communities, thieves, liars, and goldbrickers could easily be identified. |
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By openly admitting to being philanderers, draft dodgers, liars, weasels and cowards, liberals avoid ever being hypocrites. |
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We can do so much better than this tawdry ragbag of liars, thieves and war criminals. |
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As a result, liars are passed off as scoundrels or rascals, or even lovable rogues. |
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We are so inured to the laxness and corruptness, that we defend the bullies and liars. |
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They may be impulsive, manipulative, reckless, quarrelsome, and consistent liars. |
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If natural born leaders are also natural born liars, can we really hold it against them when they do what comes naturally? |
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Known hypocrites and liars may, of course, tell the truth about a particular incident. |
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The point of the book is not that all marketers are all liars, but that they're storytellers. |
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That's a mighty weak basis on which to call us frauds, liars, and smear merchants. |
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In a world full of liars, cheaters and the deceitful, who has always given me honesty? |
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The liars, the traitors, the thugs, and the outlaws cannot be handed the destiny of a nation like India. |
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Tests have shown that a sensitive thermal imaging technique which spots heat coming off the face can detect liars. |
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What I mean is that some liars will spend a lot of time convincing themselves and others that they are not really lying at all. |
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At worst, such politicians are liars, with the blood of innocents on their hands. |
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They should not be abandoned to the tender mercies of manipulative liars and gold-diggers. |
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In any other country, where politicians were not assumed to be liars, parliament would demand the whole lot be tossed out. |
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All writers, he once said, were liars and with regard to his military service he lied on a grand scale. |
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To those who call politicians liars and the like, please be optimistic! |
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Some parts of the brain register activity when lying, and it also appears that liars take fractionally longer to respond to questions than those giving truthful answers. |
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There are quite enough liars and careerist frauds in academia as it is. |
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No, the problem comes from a steady diet, week after week, and year after year, of images of politicians as liars, cheats, compromisers and fools. |
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Recently at least, they are, for the most part, ignominious liars, dissemblers, shape-changers, not particularly attractive people, even by their own reckoning. |
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Acquittal on all counts was the only fair outcome from a prosecution case cobbled together by one man with a vendetta and a family of liars and defrauders. |
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If the chief executive officer or financial director are corrupt, it is extremely difficult to flush out the liars and cheats, unless there is a whistle-blower. |
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He makes movies about problem people, often inveterate liars, who are found out, but who are so compellingly alive and above the world that people let them pass. |
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At last, humanity has a ready means of putting pathological liars and other disparate evildoers under the collective microscope of blogdom every time they try it again. |
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I entirely agree that a lot of spirits are liars and manipulators. |
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People who say that are liars and should be ostracised from the group. |
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If writers use them to disguise their fabrications, I call them liars. |
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We all know the old axiom that writers are, by their very nature, liars. |
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I don't like schmoozers, I don't like liars and I don't like cheats. |
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Now if, in the view of many Australians, lying does not disqualify you from national leadership, then it is no good just going on calling politicians liars? |
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I can hardly think of a worse fate for any society than to be led into the future by the political class of gangsters, marauders, looters, and liars. |
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Throughout this case he has shown himself to be the slipperiest of liars and constantly changed his story to fit the facts. |
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Instead, they attacked the reliability of the Eskimos who had made the gruesome discovery and called them liars. |
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One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, The Cretians are alway liars, evil beasts, slow bellies. |
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Instead I learn that the majority of public opinion dictates that we are all sleazebags and liars. |
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And like all bad liars, immediately gave into the urge to embellish. |
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The duping delight increases when the liars have successfully deceived people with high reputation of being difficult to be fooled. |
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It subtly sends out a loaded political attack message supporting one position, centrism, while surreptitiously dismissing other positions as lies and their adherents as liars. |
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We should not forget it was the compelling testimony of the women Clifford abused many years ago which convicted him even as he tried to claim they were liars and fantasists. |
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