> It's a common technique in journalism to describe and attribute someone's recollection of events in a series of narrative paragraphs. Yes, it's called forwarding a narrative as opposed to reporting on objective facts.
Get rid of Bananas?
Now do gentrification.
"Hey middle America, sucks that you went to trade school because college is expensive and doesn't yield the returns required to justify the expense but we are going to need you to cover the costs of all those art…
I thought the concept that PG&E is legally responsible for forest fires is a new development, hence the new power outages.
I was a dishwasher/line cook in my 20's, I could hop jobs on a dime. Got fired one Friday, and had a better paying job Monday and that was in 2008. I wasn't even that good.
>immediate short-term compensation bump Did you believe you could deliver better long term compensation? This phrasing suggests that, it's a clever way to suggest something without promising it.
> It's a common technique in journalism to describe and attribute someone's recollection of events in a series of narrative paragraphs. Yes, it's called forwarding a narrative as opposed to reporting on objective facts.
Get rid of Bananas?
Now do gentrification.
"Hey middle America, sucks that you went to trade school because college is expensive and doesn't yield the returns required to justify the expense but we are going to need you to cover the costs of all those art…
I thought the concept that PG&E is legally responsible for forest fires is a new development, hence the new power outages.
I was a dishwasher/line cook in my 20's, I could hop jobs on a dime. Got fired one Friday, and had a better paying job Monday and that was in 2008. I wasn't even that good.
>immediate short-term compensation bump Did you believe you could deliver better long term compensation? This phrasing suggests that, it's a clever way to suggest something without promising it.