It's also worth noting that it's easier to write a damning review than an effusive one. |
|
If that is true it is a truly damning confession of character assassination by the man who is the president's most trusted advisor. |
|
But what's possibly the most damning aspect of this is the level of dishonesty, subterfuge and cover-up. |
|
You might argue that these young writers are painting us a damning portrait of ourselves. |
|
We passed our damning evidence to the police, who swooped on the companies' premises and arrested the masterminds behind the bogus operation. |
|
His lifestyle was too threatening, his irresponsibility too damning to make him sympathetic. |
|
When afflicted, he scandalizes his comforters by damning the day that he was born. |
|
More than anything, however, it is a damning indictment on the legal system at that time. |
|
There can be no more damning accusation today than to accuse a politician of believing in politics. |
|
It's a fascinating portrait of a so-called serial killer, and a damning one of the society in which she lived. |
|
As I sat there, damning and condemning myself, the same two words floated through my mind over and over again. |
|
This is an interesting evening and that is not damning it with faint praise. |
|
Black thinks it's their best work to date, though he admits this is damning it with faint praise. |
|
I will admit the animation itself is nice, which is essentially my way of damning the film with faint praise. |
|
After the blow-up, David went to authorities with a box of damning evidence. |
|
If his hair and Natalee's hair is on it, yes it'll be very damning evidence and possibly proof beyond a reasonable doubt. |
|
The doctor gave damning evidence in the trial of Mrs Symons, saying that one of her children, Jenny, had died from being shaken. |
|
Each witness sits on the witness chair and delivers a piece of damning evidence. |
|
Despite its denials and stonewalling, damning evidence has come to light implicating it in the deaths. |
|
As a junior attorney on the case, I recall all too vividly the many hours spent combing through those documents for damning evidence. |
|
|
There is the possibility, still, that further and far more damning evidence has yet to be divulged. |
|
Frank discovers that the good Reverend may be involved in some shady, sinister dealings when he discovers damning evidence in a wall safe. |
|
The police unearthed some fairly damning evidence against the Freemans, and the list of alleged victims only grew longer. |
|
Not surprisingly, Edmunds's defence team did not attempt to challenge any of this damning evidence. |
|
For some, no amount of damning evidence will sway them from their allegiance. |
|
The inquiry also heard damning evidence that CSL and other Government bodies failed to protect public safety. |
|
Potentially damning physical or forensic evidence is scant in the Peters case. |
|
According to a Sunday newspaper, the damning evidence is contained in an e-mail sent by Jones. |
|
His lawyer uncovered some potentially damning evidence against the opposition. |
|
A school for children with learning difficulties has been severely criticised and branded ineffective by inspectors in a damning report. |
|
Despite the damning report, education chiefs have welcomed the criticism which they say is balanced and helpful. |
|
A damning critic of the United Nations, he was also the Senate's champion of international law. |
|
Instead of a damning critique he offers redemption through the invocation of a moral imperative. |
|
Regeneration plans for the town centre have been slated in a damning report by English Heritage. |
|
Both reports are a damning indictment of the criminal negligence of the military. |
|
Hers is a damning indictment of Executive policy and she makes a strong case. |
|
How many more damning reports have to be written before the Government takes epilepsy seriously? |
|
My third and most damning criticism of expanding numbers in further education is an economic one. |
|
Poor financial planning was one of the many criticisms in a damning report on the council by the Audit Commission earlier this year. |
|
These remarks, intended as praise, are in reality the most damning criticism. |
|
|
Listening to Burns, it is difficult to quibble with his damning assessment. |
|
Chomsky gave a damning critique of US and British imperialism in the Middle East. |
|
The report on the operation of the Communications Centres Service Centre is very damning. |
|
The Auditor General's report into hospital waiting lists last week was pretty damning any way you look at it. |
|
There has been a damning indictment of living conditions at a remote Aboriginal community by the West Australian coroner. |
|
The recovery plan to be put into action by the new team addresses issues raised in a damning Corporate Governance Inspection report last summer. |
|
Everyone is afraid that you'll write something damning about them for all to see. |
|
Given the damning evidence that Secrest and Hyland present, this view no longer holds up. |
|
It is, no doubt, the wont of every generation to look back at the past with an over-egged fondness and to be too damning of current standards. |
|
Garages are giving faulty cars the all-clear in safety tests, a damning investigation reveals. |
|
Predictably, the editors buried the lede on this story, literally pushing the most damning revelations down to the last four grafs. |
|
The Electoral Reform Society has produced a damning analysis of the anti-democratic nature of the 2005 general election. |
|
When the US State Department issued its damning report, again he was late and off the mark. |
|
His report was never going to be the searing, damning indictment some had longed for. |
|
Experts on such matters say they have rarely seen such a comprehensive and damning judgement. |
|
The contents break, shatter, explode, leak and escape, usually in the way most damning of the innocent drudge attempting to sort them. |
|
Behind both these minatory visions stands a bloodthirsty Father, damning and punishing. |
|
To call a person a liar, is, to my mind, the most serious and damning thing that a person can do. |
|
Nothing here is damning, but the whole affair ultimately drifts by inoffensively and unmemorably. |
|
Then the damning evidence piled up and his journey from superstar to common cheat proved as swift as it was unsavoury. |
|
|
They reveal so many surprising and new facts that it is a damning indictment of the usual histories that are peddled in schools and colleges. |
|
We can destroy with a cutting quip or a damning phrase but nobody expects us to create. |
|
Hazy but damning snapshots of the episode were released on that evening's television news. |
|
So that makes Costello's seeming change of heart on interest rates all the more damning. |
|
A stoush is brewing between state and territory governments and their federal counterpart, over yesterday's damning report into mental health. |
|
She repeatedly demonstrates that they are spiritually damning as the evils of heated passion often are not. |
|
The damning criticism is contained in a report which also reveals the Isle of Wight's three jails are failing. |
|
Not long after this damning report, criticism again rained on the Bank. |
|
Bluntly, Republicans win when they distinguish between work and welfare, lauding the former and damning the latter. |
|
Though the decision was quite damning, maco got what amounted to a slap on the wrist. |
|
Perhaps the most damning evidence is in the chapter by Painter, which argues that the use of questionnaires imposes culture on others and inevitably predetermines responses. |
|
He has the freedom now to speak his mind on issues that affect us all, and he presents a solid case damning them, without a lot of romantic claptrap. |
|
In this case, though, the facts are so damning and discontent so mobilized that silence is unfeasible. |
|
It's by turns damning, hilarious, devastating and galvanising. |
|
Flaubert's most damning irony consists in his maintaining that an entire nation of shopkeepers can be reduced to the complacent murmur and bombination of a single voice. |
|
Perhaps the most damning fact is that there are no breeding golden eagles, hen harriers or red kites on what should be prime breeding habitat for those species. |
|
Needing to prove that compassion is not a luxury but a fundamental requirement of a healthcare system is a damning indictment of our current ways of thinking. |
|
Portlaoise hospital was seventh from the bottom of the 54 acute hospitals in the damning report that shows widespread neglect of basic hygiene practices. |
|
However some of the damning evidence later proved to be inconclusive. |
|
A revelation like that, combined with laxity in this biogenesis investigation, would be damning in the extreme. |
|
|
These perceptions are as equally damning as the lack of sleep itself, Winter says. |
|
But rather than vindicating the staff I think this is more damning. |
|
Together they constituted a quite damning indictment of the whole program. |
|
But, as is often the case, what may be equally as damning as the crime will be the cover-up. |
|
There is damning evidence that their human rights have been routinely violated over many years and allegations that this has continued until very recently. |
|
Even though a grand jury chose not to indict the cop who killed Eric Garner, the video is damning of police. |
|
It may turn out that there is damning evidence that we have not yet seen. |
|
The affable John Southworth registers his discontent mildly yet emphatically, his soft British accent shading the offending phrase with the damning taint of dismissiveness. |
|
Here is the damning evidence of the extent of the government's betrayal. |
|
Suspicion rested on a handful of a details, which the Crown took as damning evidence and for which her defence said there was a perfectly innocent explanation. |
|
One in 10 asthma deaths in Scotland is due to inadequate treatment and widespread ignorance of the condition among health staff, a damning new report has revealed. |
|
It was a brutal, gut-wrenching case to begin with, and the damning evidence just keeps rolling in. |
|
Kunstler has the tartness and timing of a stand-up comic, so his complaints about American life often end up being as hilarious as they are damning. |
|
Education chiefs have pledged that lessons will go on at a tertiary college despite a damning report which criticised most teaching as unsatisfactory and management as weak. |
|
The damning report into e-voting confirmed all the warnings from critics. |
|
The RNC numbers are inarguable and damning, and there is only Steele to blame. |
|
How then, does the intelligent design movement persist, in the face of so much damning contrary evidence? |
|
Like a priest preparing a sermon damning the heathen sinners, one can almost see the expression of pious self-satisfaction on the author's face as he pens his purple prose. |
|
McClatchy goes on to try and level a damning critique, which amounts to a lot of handwaving about things we already know. |
|
This comes in the wake of a damning report on the Bretton Woods institutions by the World Development Movement. |
|
|
Using this thing that people would consider harsh or damning in a survival situation, you've created a thermalized structure. |
|
Despite these damning findings by fellow MPs, Vaz still twists and turns and bad-mouths parliamentary commissioner for standards Elizabeth Filkin. |
|
But seldom has an example of a postcode lottery been so blatant, so heart-rendingly unjust and acutely damning as that concerning young mum-of-two Samantha Cousins. |
|
Now and again, someone quits the team by writing a cancel-my-subscription letter and damning NCR as pond scum, with me in the subaquatic waters below. |
|
But these deprecators, were they so inclined, could all identify such behaviours even among fellow colonials, if not quite in such a hastily damning mode. |
|
Three days before his 28th birthday, on 24 April 1975, Ham committed suicide by hanging himself, leaving a note that included damning comments about Polley. |
|
It's yet another damning indictment of this heartless Tory Government that many places have had to cancel Remembrance Day parades due to a lack of police. |
|
However, to Holmes, from the outset, there seem to be a number of facts that do not fit the inspector's case against Simpson, damning as it looks. |
|
It is ironic that the usual criticism regarded as damning Lawrence is precisely that he is heavyhanded, that he labours the point, that he is overinsistent. |
|