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A while back I wrote a blog on this topic for theguardian.com/money, and the comments revealed a real depth of hostility to the online trend.
At a meeting in Beijing this month, Western academics were taken aback by the depth of hostility toward Japan among Chinese foreign policy experts.
(There could be a simpler reason for this: they are Greeks, and it would be a miracle if Akin had got under their skin. Given the depth of hostility between the two nations, it's a miracle that he even tried).
Revealing the depth of hostility felt by some Muirfield traditionalists towards the admission of women, it emerged that a group of about 30 members had written anonymously to fellow golfers before a ballot, urging them to reject the change.
The depth of hostility toward Penn even in a time of triumph illustrates the combustible environment within the Clinton campaign, an operation where internal strife and warring camps have undercut a candidate once seemingly destined for the Democratic nomination.
The cabinet at the time was concerned about the depth of hostility to statutory regulation and a Dorrell memo to Major warned that such a move would cause "a major row" with the press.
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The topic has been exhaustively covered in other memoirs, but Mr. Blair's account uncovered new depths of hostility.
But how to explain the depth of the hostility, which was also directed at marathoners themselves?
When he curses people with slurs in his simmering voice-over, we realize he might be a bit aggressive, but the actual depth of his hostility emerges later.
By chance, today's decision by Tony Blair, a keen cuts enthusiast, to pull out of a public event to promote his memoirs for the second time in a week offered an object lesson both in the effectiveness of protest – and the depth of public hostility to a politician still trying to impose a failed political brand.
"The amazing thing about Allan Bloom's book was not just its prodigious commercial success... but the depth of the hostility and even hatred that it inspired among a large number of professors," John Searle, the Berkeley philosophy professor and former proponent of the '60s radical Free Speech Movement wrote in The New York Review of Books in 1990.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com