Rodgers says it's
the law of the jungle and clubs like Leicester and today's opponents Wolves will struggle to change things.
'The regime continues to favour
the law of the jungle in pursuit of any inch of political gain,' Low's spokesman said in a statement.
Actress Lee Yeol-eum cheered as she caught the three giant shellfish in a Thai national marine park in March on the survival TV show "
The Law of the Jungle." Participants in the show then ate the clams in an episode that aired on June 30.
External interference and sanctions will only aggravate tension and bring back
the law of the jungle," he said.
But that is
the law of the jungle. According to the Oxford English Dictionary,
the law of the jungle is 'the code of survival in jungle life, now usually with reference to the superiority of brute force or self-interest in the struggle for survival.' In the world of animals, the golden rule is eat or be eaten.
From rule of law, back to
the law of the jungle In civilised societies disputes are settled and perceived injustices to individuals or communities undone not by resort to force but through peaceful protests, debates in parliament or recourse to the courts of law and depending upon the nature of the issue.
Justice Naimatullah Phulpoto said that the country was not under
the law of the jungle and the safety of the citizens was the basic responsibility of the state.
He said there is
the law of the jungle in Nawabshah, but we will allow this to be happened in Naya Pakistan.
Any delay in acting will allow the Saudi regime and its supporters to continue with their atrocities and effectively replace any remaining notion of human rights and decency, with
the law of the jungle.
"World trade cannot base itself on
the law of the jungle and the unilateral increase of tariffs is
the law of the jungle" - Bruno Le Maire, French finance minister attacks the US trade policy.
'Pakistan is being run by
the law of the jungle,' he said.
He said the government 'is inviting
the law of the jungle' by constantly ignoring court orders.
However, while modern society may pride itself on replacing
the law of the jungle with so-called civilised conduct, the fact is that human civilisation still views economic success as the primary marker of human achievement.
No legal system is perfect, but each of us should ask ourselves whether we would prefer to live in a world where even our leaders are bound by laws and conventions; or would we prefer
the law of the jungle? Today it is Syrians, Congolese, Southern Sudanese and the Rohingya being tortured, displaced and slaughtered in their tens of thousands; tomorrow there is little to prevent such a fate befalling ourselves.