Value
by Affirmative on Oct 31, 2014 15:08:27
1.
adds something to work product that cannot be produced by the original
author of such work;
2. being acknowledged and appreciated by ones
clientele; and
3. earning more money than what one spends.
Values
by ShartyPants on Oct 21, 2010 09:19:12
A very dynamic set of beliefs that serve as a core tenant of political candidate campaigns, yet are not a reliable metric to determine a
candidate's worthiness of office.
The term represents one or more beliefs in
the candidate's belief system. A popular strategy is to campaign on strong core values while avoiding clearing defining what those values actually are.
Candidates typically avoiding defining their values and will typically deflect to another
talking point. However, when cornered, candidates may attempt to define their values, but throughout the rest of the campaign they are free to add, edit, or remove any subset of their values for the sake of voter turnout.
Example:
Sarah Palin boasts about her small-town values, which include Christianity,
pro-life, small government, being able to see Russia, giving
shoutouts to elementary school classrooms during a televised debate, and allowing her daughters to throw massive parties, destroy property, and let innocent boys
take the fall for their actions.
Value Vampire
by PaperBiiiiitch on Sep 28, 2011 13:00:33
Example:
Owen, Tom and Jordan are together having a great time and are all adding value to each others mood. James arrives
on the scene and unbalances the harmony by not adding any value at all and in fact sucking some of the value out of the situation and everyones mood.
When James
leave's Owen might say to Tom and Jordan: "I'm Glad James is gone, he is such a
value vampire". The mood would then improve as value is replenished.