Where he and Mr Conquest agree is in scorn for the progress-minded centre.
In his scorn for the Whole Foods types, what George Will seems to misunderstand is this: good technology gets adopted.
FORBES: Innovation, Consumer Reports, and the Prius: Why George Will Was Wrong
His reliance on texts brought him scorn in England in the end.
Everyone from the President Obama, Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan and Governor Walker weighed in with ridicule and scorn.
Maybe that is an accurate reflection of the adolescent mind, in its need to scorn or elide more senior lives, but dramatically it still feels like a waste.
It resulted in some low levels of scorn from colleagues, but that was of no consequence.
And he expressed scorn for judges in other states who hang on to cases that would be better heard in Delaware.
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Mr Abu Rumeila praises Mr Fayyad, a non-Fatah technocrat, for his repeated walkabouts in places such as Jenin, but pours scorn on his Fatah masters who seem either to jet around the world or stay cocooned in their government compounds in Ramallah.
She mentioned this with the slight scorn that such houses evoke in her.
Previous attempts to diversify with government support, such as making sports cars in New Brunswick and growing cucumbers in Newfoundland, have failed amid media scorn.
In those days, many Americans used to scorn the Europeans as soft-minded appeasers.
In Quebec, the Calgary declaration has elicited scorn and contempt from separatists.
In the 19th century biologists regarded parasites with scorn.
But the biggest cheers rang out for Mr Westerwelle, who supported the Gerhardt line in principle but spent much of his time heaping scorn on the Kohl camp.
He famously delayed apologizing for the iPhone 4 antenna by deploying defensiveness, scorn and even blame -- resulting in the enduring "You're holding it wrong" meme, a testimony of Apple hubris if there ever was one.
ENGADGET: Editorial: A conciliatory Apple would be real innovation
Mrs Brown said that when she first raised the issue of a paedophile ring in the area in the early 1990s, she was treated with "scorn".
When "Independence Day" opened in 1996, I wrote a review that was long on scorn and short on respect for Roland Emmerich's us-against-the-aliens saga.
He took it with him into the mountains to scorn it, delighted if he could catch it in error, even if that error was to his own detriment and that of his climbing companions.
The new John Waters picture takes its place in the long and semi-honorable tradition of Hollywood self-scorn.
The contractor, Able UK, has poured scorn on environmentalists' concerns - which are backed by green groups in the UK - as "scaremongering", and insisted the ships are safe to sail.
Mr Kerry's knowledge of French prompted scorn from the right-wing US press during his unsuccessful bid for the presidency in 2004, due to the souring of US-French ties over the war in Iraq.
If sports fans nationwide could heap scorn on Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens for allegedly taking steroids, then a special place in sports hell should be reserved for Paterno.
In 2009, Judge Roll denied the ranchers' motion to dismiss the case, a ruling that earned him scorn from some and even death threats.
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