Lee Westwood got off to a terrible start Thursday when his approach shot ended up at the bottom of such a slope on No. 1.
It is perhaps no accident that up the slope sits the Yarai stage of the leading school of Noh theatre.
As a sport, freestyle speaks to them far more than watching one skier after another race the clock down the same old slope -- Vonn or no Vonn.
Ten years ago, apart from a few grazing goats and donkeys, no one paid much attention to the western slope of the island, where nine of the project's 12 finished houses dot the landscape.
The doctor said "the slope is most slippery when there is no light on it" and added "the biggest advantage of Dutch law is that everyone can talk about euthanasia".
The idea that this is going to result in the death of the indie bookshop seems like a nice slippery slope fallacy which reads well but makes no real sense.
He also said that "no-one had any difficulty" while descending the scree slope of the mountain's east ridge.
She was found clinging to a rocky outcropping no bigger than a yoga mat on a near-vertical slope.
An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that although drivers had been given safety training, there were no appropriate measures in place to prevent vehicles parked on the slope from rolling away.
Now, no one is suggesting there is nothing Facebook can do to change the slope of the curve ever again.
Thus, the slippery slope argument often is used implicitly to make the argument that society can make no distinctions between "good things" and "bad things" and that any policy effort to rid society of bad things will invariably engulf good things.
The climbers were on a steep slope where there was snow, which meant an avalanche was possible, but there was no reason to suspect it would happen then, he told CNN affiliate BFM TV.
In other words, the slippery slope argument becomes a lazy man's way of asserting the proposition that society can draw no valid, or at least effective, value-based lines.
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