It shows he's out of touch what's been going on in America over the last three years. |
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Rarely has the church appeared so out of touch with present-day Scotland than it did during the cardinal's sermon. |
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Then again, perhaps we were just a bunch of Chardonnay swilling elitists totally out of touch with middle Australia. |
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On field training exercises, combat soldiers will be out of touch from loved ones for days. |
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Dame Stella is somewhat out of touch with modern archive services, which can be innovative and challenging. |
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During winter I usually hibernate to the point of feeling quite out of touch with most of my friends. |
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There was also a discussion after the dinner about whether the media elite is out of touch with America. |
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If that's true, then the UBP and the community are out of touch with the way the capital punishment debate is going. |
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When so out of touch with public and media attacks, that is when a First Minister should turn to his special advisers. |
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He's an easy target and they all laid into him with predictable criticism for being out of touch and old fashioned. |
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Policy holders want cash today, not the promise of jam tomorrow, and if people don't appreciate that then they are out of touch. |
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Estimates put the numbers of errors out of touch at somewhere between seven and nine. |
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They may be excusable, but they are out of touch or misled or thinking wishfully. |
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The problem is that many of us are out of touch with our natural inclinations. |
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Then again, perhaps we were just a bunch of chardonnay-swilling elitists totally out of touch with middle Australia. |
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Throughout this campaign he has demonstrated how out of touch he is by failing to make any impact on the dominant public services issue. |
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If such longtime supporters abandoned ship, surely the gerontocracy in Hanoi was out of touch. |
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One of the most intriguing sections of the commentaries is how totally out of touch the creators feel with their audience. |
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And to be priggish about the sunglasses that people buy is out of touch with how people live their lives. |
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Am I that old and out of touch, so entirely uncool and devoid of reasonable advice and emotional support? |
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On the flip side of the coin they cost the British tax payer millions every year, and have become out of touch with the public. |
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These are two fat-cat millionaires who couldn't be more out of touch with Ohio. |
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It was the speech of a politician who is out of touch and has led his country up a blind alley. |
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If the government seems unbothered by problem alleyways and graffiti, then, runs the thinking, it will seem out of touch with voters themselves. |
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Despite his high rhetorical tone and biblical cadences, even Jack sounded bored and out of touch. |
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That they were surprised by the voters, and have no Plan B, tells us just how out of touch with the grass roots the elite is. |
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So I think his statement says more about his being out of touch with his own state than it has anything to do with me. |
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It is run by an ex-army martinet absurdly out of touch and absent-mindedly rooting about in irrelevances. |
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It's a perfect example of how conservative elites are out of touch with the reality of people who do earn an honest living. |
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But Mr Waters says inspectors can be out of touch with what it is like to be working day-to-day in a classroom. |
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And the ruling authorities seem out of touch with the hopes and desires of this new generation. |
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I am saying to him that he should stay in his cloistered, academic gown, hopelessly out of touch with the real economy. |
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They were historic movies out of touch with history, out of touch with morality. |
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This president is completely out of touch with reality, and it showed again in his speech today. |
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People who deride the poor for laziness are out of touch with the difficulty of finding decent jobs. |
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Part of this strategy was to portray the press as members of a liberal elite that was out of touch with these real Americans. |
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Westminster has been besieged over the past week by public sector workers protesting that the government was out of touch with them. |
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At the core of the crisis is the fact that many of our doctors are out of touch and elitist. |
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Some people are impermeable to information or wholly out of touch with the topical subjects of the day. |
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The Sikh protesters objected to violent scenes in the play being set in a gurdwara and to the depiction of the giani as an out of touch buffoon. |
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It shows the minister seems to be out of touch with what's happening on the front lines of the teaching profession. |
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The recent kerfuffle in Russia over the Kyoto accord is another example of how the government is out of touch with the people of this country. |
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These contemplatives, who appeared so oddly out of touch with the world as it was, knew far more about it than those whose days were spent mastering the marketplace. |
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The liberal elite showed it was way out of touch even before the election. |
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The fact that the leader of the free world used to be a doddering old guy completely out of touch with reality seems more cute than menacing these days. |
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Since then, alas, he has shown himself to be diffident, patrician and out of touch with people's everyday concerns. |
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Republicans could either get with the program or get comfy with their image of being woefully out of touch. |
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But researchers say parents appeared out of touch with their concerns. |
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Mr. Speaker, this government is out of touch with reality and the people who are suffering because of the economic crisis. |
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If the members of the Conservative caucus are incapable of seeing this, I can only say that they are out of touch with reality in Quebec. |
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It is a conservative and unacceptable position, which is out of touch with reality. |
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It is another example of how out of touch with reality and relationships the government is with the first nations. |
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How can this government be so out of touch with reality and the wishes of Canadians? |
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Proposing to extend the anti-discrimination regulations to practically all areas of life is out of touch with reality, however. |
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It is precisely because the European institutions are out of touch with reality that the people are remote. |
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Furthermore, the applicable toy testing procedures are out of touch with reality. |
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In this situation, any discussion of a date for phasing out the analogue system appears to be totally out of touch with reality. |
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A vessel equipped of such a system of propulsion is completely out of touch with the real universe and is translated into tachyon hyperspace. |
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It may be harebrained or hopelessly out of touch, but if you don't have a rosy outlook, you don't belong here. |
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Sexually objectifying women in this way is misogynistic, out of touch and frankly downright lazy on the part of the advertisers. |
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Despite the contrived jollity anent the election result last May, Liberal Democrats are not so completely out of touch with reality as to be deceived by their own propaganda. |
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We have discussed this project, there is a sure risk that some representatives would kick out of touch line, but we want to believe in it. |
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Big Bazar now appeared out of touch and outdated, a feeling shared by the majority of the troupe, who decided to disband. |
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One cannot imagine that a government could be so out of touch with the people. |
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Could the member opposite explain to Canadians watching why his position is so out of touch with that of his leader? |
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Keep in mind that we live on an island, which means we are a bit out of touch with the rest of the world. |
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Manifestos will be written by small groups of experts out of touch with the lives of real people. |
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Unfortunately, the male-dominated leadership at the time was out of touch with the reality faced by CRs in the workplace. |
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Seriousness must be seriously out of touch with our highest intelligence, with our highest self. |
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Obviously, that course may, increasingly, be out of touch with the way individuals live their lives. |
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Now that wireless technology makes it possible for us to never be out of touch, there's a growing expectation that this should be a right. |
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Peace and security cannot be maintained by a Security Council that is out of date and out of touch. |
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Her original statement caused an uproar from working mothers who argued Paltrow was out of touch and elitist. |
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How about the totally Beltwayized and out of touch with America clique versus the people who retain some remnants of common sense? |
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Widely derided as being out of touch with the country, in fact the prime minister showed an acute awareness of the opposition's weaknesses and how best to exploit them. |
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I admire Bill, and I wish the Labour Party had a few old buffers of his calibre around to glance over some of the more radical proposals, but he's out of touch here. |
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Plus, while the two had jointly helped man a field office for months, they had fallen out of touch since. |
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I am completely out of touch with what's going on in the world. |
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Bangladesh played well today and Australia seemed a bit out of touch. |
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The pitch, when you strip it down, is that the party is hopelessly out of touch, and needs someone to lead them back to where the rest of the country is. |
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Once, that uncompromising stand would have kept him in office no matter how corporatist or out of touch he became. |
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He could come off as simply out of touch, like a critic reared on whistler going after Picasso. |
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It is an outrageous comment, which could only have come from someone who is more arrogant, snobbish and out of touch than the prince he is condemning. |
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If your idea of an insurance agent is a badly-dressed, harassed looking, middle-aged man pleading with you for a policy, you are way out of touch with reality. |
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His people were saying he was ineffective, was out of touch, was insensitive to the rough times they were going through, wouldn't listen, and didn't lead. |
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But there has been far more opposition in Hornsea, which has become the hotbed of opposition to a council some in the town see as out of touch and arrogant. |
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Bill C-10, the bill for mandatory sentences for gun crimes, was also held up at committee by opposition members who are so out of touch with Canadians and still prefer to coddle criminals. |
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Is the person acting in a strange manner, behaving illogically and seemingly out of touch with reality? |
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It is the arrogance of a Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, lounging around the water fountain at Versailles, completely out of touch with the needs of their people but lording it over them anyway. |
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As I said earlier, in my introduction, this government harks back to the Duplessis era, it is out of touch with reality, behind the times, old-fashioned, undemocratic and despicable. |
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Representative democracy cannot afford to be out of touch with public opinion trends, neither with segments of the population that are politically active or those that chose to play a more low key role. |
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I had been out of touch with my old friend for a long time when she called. |
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By the time they had reorganised they were well behind schedule and out of touch with the creeping artillery barrage. |
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Surrounded by sycophants, he is out of touch. |
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That one simple example shows a government that is out of touch with a segment of its people when it has huge surpluses and it is mismanaging and misspending. |
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High levels of booze, smoke, coke and speed had caused a personality change wherein I was out of touch, vain, obnoxious, a traitor to even my closest friends. |
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Prof. William Ryan: They're a very small splinter group, for one thing, and they're certainly way out of touch with the whole 3,500 years of Judaeo-Christian culture. |
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One has to ask oneself if it is because the Liberals are completely out of touch with northern Ontario or, worse yet, if northern Ontario is just not a priority for the Liberal Party of Canada. |
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Previously, she was completely out of touch when at the circuit, and had to work late into the night when she could get access to a PC back at the team hotel. |
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The chamber is mystifyingly out of touch with the realities of everyday life for today's working families. |
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Thus, when the Act became law on 23 December 1920 it was already out of touch with realities in Ireland. |
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Finally, many stakeholders interviewed-including those who were the most praiseful about the contents of the PRSP-felt that it was out of touch with existing implementation capacity. |
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Has the Liberals' time in office led to such arrogance and to being so out of touch with Canadians that they cannot even make the link between economic and social equality? |
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These one-sided resolutions are not only out of touch with reality and anachronistic, they are counterproductive and run counter to the very spirit of peace. |
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Should we endorse the disappearance of farms in our country, and the misfortune of a whole race, in the name of a theory, the Ricardo theory, which is simplistic and out of touch with reality? |
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Mr. Speaker, in politics, an undeniable sign that a government or an elected representative is out of touch with reality is when they show contempt and arrogance. |
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When the member says that their consultations are an accurate reflection of working people, he is completely out of touch with reality and he needs to realize that. |
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Sometimes, in our ivory towers, we produce schemes for action which are out of touch with reality in the places where, with the best will in the world, we want them to be applied. |
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That quote goes to show how deluded and out of touch these people are. |
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True, here, in Ottawa, we are a bit out of touch with reality. |
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They are out of touch with reality and subject to lobby groups. |
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There is a huge surplus in the program due to the fact that so few can use it because the Liberals' idea of family is so narrow and so out of touch with reality. |
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In any case, I would say to the Heads of State and Government, do not allow a mechanism to be imposed upon you that would lead to proposals being made that are out of touch with the interests and preferences of our people. |
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Populations are often highly critical of the State, which they deem inefficient, a tool used by politicians to further personal ambitions, out of touch with its citizens' worries and reeking of corruption. |
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The research shows that one reason parents fall out of touch with the children is lack of parentchild communication during the period of separation and divorce. |
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During that election certain parties were either well financed or had policies that were way out of touch with reality but were still well financed. |
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More than that, developments on the ground, with all major Transnistrian companies now working legally with Chisinau, show that such an approach is increasingly out of touch with reality. |
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They feel that public action taken at local, regional, national and European levels is often inappropriate and out of touch with their daily concerns. |
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Mugabe is totally out of touch with reality. |
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But they may sometimes be wrong, ignorant or out of touch. |
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This announcement was just one more example that shows the Harper government's budgetary policy is out of touch with the views of Canadians, including the members of the Public Service Alliance of Canada. |
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Sadly, she wasn't out of touch with reality. |
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They were not afraid to lock horns with the central government on issues vital to their local communities, with which the central government was demonstrably way out of touch. |
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The force remained proudly committed to its traditional way of doing things and out of touch with the new developments in police management and organization that were changing traditional policing. |
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In short, this woman is to DC public schools what Lord Curzon was to the British Raj a high-minded and self-serving autocrat who is woefully out of touch with the local population. |
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A metropolitan is intellectual, arrogant, rootless, possibly foreign, possibly sexually unorthodox, and certainly out of touch. If metropolitans did not exist, the opposition would have to invent them. |
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Our only object in limiting the period of the duration of Parliament is that the House of Commons shall not get out of touch with the opinion of the electorate. |
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I'd like to dispel the notion that the only people standing up to protect our water, our air, and our communities are tree-hugging hippies or out of touch dreamers. |
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He's always daydreaming and seems to be out of touch with the real world. |
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