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This page is about the saying "One good turn deserves another"
Possible meaning: If someone helps you, they merit being helped in return.
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Contributor: Josef Essberger
One good turn deserves another.
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leave behind
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to leave a place without taking someone or something with you
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“A RE YOU in a good spot for hearing?” one woman asks another as they shuffle into a sitting room at a retirement home near Japantown in San Francisco . They fold their walkers and await Mark Farrell, a Democratic candidate for mayor in the city’s November elections. Mr Farrell launches into a typical stump speech—he grew up in San Francisco, is raising kids here—but the conversation quickly turns darker. What will he do about crime, homelessness and drugs, the grey-haired audience wants to know. Mr Farrell has an answer characteristic of liberal San Francisco’s changing politics. “We’re gonna bring them off the streets,” he says. “Hopefully it’s shelter, maybe it’s hospital, maybe it’s county jail.”
Mr Farrell is not the only mayoral candidate running a “law and order” campaign focused on empowering the police and cleaning up the city’s streets . All politicians with power in San Francisco are Democrats, but there are different flavours. The three front-runners, including the current mayor, London Breed, are moderates competing to become the tough-on-crime warrior that voters seem to want after several years of disorder made worse by the pandemic. Only one candidate with a chance of winning is from the party’s progressive wing. The irony is that San Francisco’s politicians have taken a right turn even while Donald Trump tries to persuade Americans that the city, where Kamala Harris made her start in politics, represents the worst excesses of liberalism.
Some of San Francisco’s problems during the pandemic were felt by cities across the country. Murders increased, though violent crime in San Francisco is relatively low. Drug-overdose deaths spiked as fentanyl spread. Car and retail theft rocketed. Police were ill-equipped to respond. During the summer of 2020, when protests against police brutality were roiling the country and “defunding” the police was in vogue among progressive activists, Ms Breed pledged to cut $120m from the police budget. It is not clear if that money was ever reallocated, but the number of officers in 2023 was the lowest it had been since at least 2009.
The loudest voices for political reform have been business and tech leaders. But residents of the Tenderloin, the neighbourhood most blighted by drugs and homelessness, are also fed up. “They are spending all these billions of dollars to fight this, but they have nothing to show for it,” complains JJ Smith, who rides through the Tenderloin on his scooter each day posting videos of what he sees on the streets. Stewards keep constant vigil at a local park lest needles and tents reappear.
Voters began to rebel in 2022 when they ousted the city’s progressive district-attorney and several members of the school board who were more concerned with renaming schools than reopening them. Earlier this year San Franciscans passed ballot measures that require drug testing and treatment for welfare recipients, and expand police powers. Now the mayoral campaign revolves around public safety.
After the Supreme Court affirmed in City of Grants Pass v Johnson that ticketing homeless people is not a cruel and unusual punishment, Ms Breed vowed to use “very aggressive” sweeps to remove tents from the street, and threatened to enforce criminal penalties for sleeping rough. She also strengthened a policy to bus homeless people out of town. Her opponents argue that she has conveniently found her nerve just in time for the election.
But they are running on similar policies. Mr Farrell, who was interim mayor in 2018, and Daniel Lurie, a charity founder and heir to the Levi Strauss fortune, say they would declare a fentanyl state of emergency. Mr Farrell would like the Honduran drug dealers prevalent in San Francisco to be deported. Both men argue that permissiveness has attracted seedier types. There is a debate over how many people sleeping rough in San Francisco come from elsewhere. Studies suggest most are locals, while officials maintain that it varies by neighbourhood. “I will say it every day from the City Hall steps for as long as it takes,” says Mr Lurie. “You do not come to San Francisco to deal drugs, to do drugs or to sleep on our streets.”
Because Ms Breed was in charge during the pandemic, it once seemed implausible that she could win another term. Yet her recent combativeness may convince voters that she deserves one. She is now leading the pack, according to the latest poll from the San Francisco Chronicle . But the city uses ranked-choice voting in local elections, so another candidate could receive enough second- or third-round votes to win.
The embrace of law-and-order politics can be seen beyond San Francisco. Gavin Newsom, California’s Democratic governor, celebrated the Grants Pass ruling, and issued an executive order directing agencies to clear tents from state-owned land. He argues that leaving people to suffer on the streets is a perverse kind of libertarianism. Mr Newsom also signed nearly a dozen new laws on August 16th aimed at cracking down on retail theft and property crimes.
This mirrors the strategy of another California Democrat: Ms Harris. The Democratic Party’s presidential nominee is using her history as a prosecutor in San Francisco to burnish her tough-on-crime bonafides. In one of her favourite campaign lines she recalls going after predators, fraudsters and cheaters. “So hear me when I say,” she pauses, “I know Donald Trump’s type!” During her run for president in 2019, Ms Harris argued for decriminalising illegal border crossings. Now she supports a bill that would have fortified the southern border. The evolution of both Ms Harris and politicians in San Francisco over the past four years is emblematic of a broader turn within the Democratic Party back towards the centre.
Yet to Mr Trump and many Americans, San Francisco is the rotten core of American liberalism, a place from which progressive poison emanates. “That sense of San Francisco as a villain speaks to the base,” says Jason McDaniel, a political scientist at San Francisco State University. Californians proudly say that “as California goes, so goes the nation”, but Mr Trump uses the idea that America could become like California—like San Francisco—as a threat.
Last year he argued that “Marxist monsters” were “unleashing mayhem” on the city. He refers to Ms Harris as a “San Francisco radical”. J.D. Vance, Mr Trump’s running-mate, recently called Tim Walz, Ms Harris’s choice for vice-president, a “San Francisco-style liberal”. Mr Vance failed to mention that he lived in the city for several years while working in venture capital whereas Mr Walz visited for the first time last month.
Mr Trump is not the first Republican to villainise the Bay Area for electoral gain. When he was running for governor in 1966, Ronald Reagan galvanised Californians in opposition to the Free Speech Movement at the University of California, Berkeley. He had contempt for the hippies that congregated in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district in 1967. In the 2000s Newt Gingrich, a former Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, derided the “San Francisco values” of Nancy Pelosi, who would soon become speaker herself. When Mr Newsom was mayor of San Francisco the city briefly issued marriage licences to gay couples when doing so was still illegal. Republicans tried to use the backlash to help re-elect George W. Bush.
“For a party that focuses a lot on guns, God and gays, San Francisco is just a perfect target,” says Peter Richardson, who has written several books on California’s counterculture. Expect attacks on “San Francisco radicals” to persist—no matter how conservative the city’s politicians sound these days. ■
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Once there was a slave who was very cruelly treated by his master. He was fed up with his miserable life. He wanted to escape. As soon as he got a chance he quietly left for a forest. On the way, the slave saw a lion with a swollen paw. The animal was in pain. He was too helpless to attack the man. Instead, he wanted the slave's help in ...
Origin of One Good Turn Deserves Another. This expression dates back to the 1400s. The word turn in this idiom doesn't mean rotate, as it commonly does nowadays. Rather it means good deed. Therefore, the idea behind this expression is that if one person does something kind, it is good to repay that kindness with a nice act of one's own.
One Good Turn Deserves Another. When someone does you a good deed, you must never forget it. You must look out for the opportunity to do a good deed to that person. If you do not get that opportunity then you must pass on the good deed to someone else. It is quite a strange fact of life, that a good deed done to another always bring some kind ...
Ka me, ka thee; one good turn asketh another; Nought won by the tone, nought won by the tother. To put me to cost, thou camest half a score miles. Out of thine own nest, to seek me in these out ...
The proverbial expression 'one good turn deserves another' has been in the language since at least 1636, as here in William Camden's Remaines concerning Britaine: "One good turne asketh another.". 'One good turn deserves another' is in use in colloquial English but is also a legal concept in the area of trade or exchange of goods ...
The proverb one good turn deserves another has been in use since the 1400s and may be found in John Heywood's A dialogue conteinyng the nomber of all the proverbes in the englishe tongue published in 1546 as: "One good turn asketh another.". The sentiment behind one good turn deserves another is credited to Aesop, a Greek storyteller who ...
Title: One Good Turn Deserves Another. Year: 1862. Creator: John Tenniel, Punch. Description: President Lincoln is shown trying to entice a black American to join the army in return for emancipation. He says: "Why I du declare it's my dear old friend Sambo! Course you'll fight for us, Sambo. Lend us a hand, old hoss, du!". Proudly ...
Quid pro quo is used both in colloquial English and as a legal concept in the area of trade. For example, a contract is said to be binding if it is quid pro quo, which is to say that it involves an exchange of goods or services for something of comparable value - whether that be money or other goods/services. More expressions and their source ...
1 Gratitude. After receiving a generous gift, she decided to show her appreciation by giving a thoughtful present in return. One good turn deserves another. 2 Helping Others. He volunteered at a local shelter and later received support from the community when he needed it. One good turn deserves another. 3 Reciprocity.
One good turn desrves another, and you've got the first chance. (F. Danby) There was a political ring in Philadelphia in which the mayor, certain members of the council, the treasurer, the chief of police, the commissioner of public works, and others shared. It was a case generally of "You scratch my back and I'll scatch yours".
One Good Turn Deserves Another. When someone does you a good deed, you must never forget it. You must look out for the opportunity to do a good deed to that person. If you do not get that opportunity then you must pass on the good deed to someone else. It is quite a strange fact of life, that a good deed done to another always bring some kind ...
One Good Turn Deserves Another Story for 1st Year students is also a Good bedtime Moral Story. You can write the same story under the title, Do Good and Have Good Story, Virtue is its own reward story, One Good Turn Deserves Another story, Kindness Never Goes unrewarded Story, Act well and be regarded well Story.
One Good Turn Deserves Another. Filed Under: Essays Tagged With: Films. 1 page, 266 words. There was a slave in ancient Carthage. His master was very cruel. He used to beat him severely over trifles. The slave was tired of this life. He ran away into a jungle nearby and hid himself in a cave. Very soon a lion entered the cave.
The man replied ''One good turn, deserves another''. Our Proverbs Back A man who is trampled to death by an elephant is a man who is blind and deaf. A hunter who has only one arrow does not shoot with careless aim. A mouse that removes the palm-nut that turns out to be the bait of a trap, would already have known that the palm-nut does ...
The 2nd tree was cut and made into a small fishing boat. His dreams of being a mighty ship and carrying kings had come to an end. The 3rd tree was cut into large pieces and left alone in the dark. The years went by, and the trees forgot about their dreams. Then one filtered day, a man and woman came to the barn.
The meaning of ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER is —used to say that a person should do something nice for someone who has done something nice for him or her.
A passing dove, seeing the ant's plight, snapped a leaf off a nearby tree and dropped it into the fountain. The ant climbed onto the leaf and floated to safety. That afternoon, the dove was pecking at some dirt when a hunter snuck up on her with his net at the ready. The ant, seeing the dove's danger, rushed over and bit the hunter's heel.
ITS GOOD TO BE GOOD. It is often said that "One good turn deserve another" Yes! But, why is it that when you supported someone he needed you most, he always repay you with a bad one. We were in our final year in secondary school, and we were asked to pay for WAEC and NECO fees. Some paid for WAEC only, some paid for NECO only, while some ...
You might say "one good turn deserves another" to. a. a policeman who has arrested you. b. a friend who has helped you. c. a friend you have just helped. See Saying of the Day today. Contributor: Josef Essberger. Next saying: One might as well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamb. EnglishClub : Learn English : Vocabulary : Reference : Sayings ...
ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER definition: 1. said when you do a helpful or kind act for someone who has done something good for you 2. said…. Learn more.
One Good Turn Deserves Another. There was a slave in ancient Carthage. His master was very cruel. He used to beat him severely over trifles. The slave was tired of this life. He ran away into a jungle nearby and hid himself in a cave. Very soon a lion entered the cave. The slave was terrified.
The boy spends time with girls and eventually wants to get away and start a new life on his own. The tree tries to stay in his life and be a part of it but can only manage to contribute by giving itself to the boy. When the boy needs to make money, the tree gives its apples to be sold.
In one of her favourite campaign lines she recalls going after predators, fraudsters and cheaters. "So hear me when I say," she pauses, "I know Donald Trump's type!"