According to the polls, most
Americans see the dangers and want action.
Not exact matches
I can't believe I am hearing intelligent, well spirited
American individuals who do not
see the
dangers of Islam becoming a force in our Country.
You can
see the real
danger perhaps most clearly when the Indian novelist Arundhati Roy, universally admired author of The God of Small Things, writes in the Manchester Guardian that Osama bin Laden «is nothing more than the
American President's dark doppelgänger.
After a day - long conference in London on how to move forward the political process in Libya, other developments included: An admission the Coalition did not yet fully know who made up the opposition, which came after Nato said
American intelligence had shown «flickers» of al Qaeda among the rebels; A suggestion the Coalition would be prepared to
see Colonel Gaddafi go into exile if a country was willing to take him; A claim by the Italians that several nations were working on a deal involving a ceasefire, exile for Gaddafi and a talks framework between Libya's tribal leaders and opposition figures; Nick Clegg warning about the «
danger of overreaching» during a speech in Mexico, but stressing liberal interventionism must be upheld.
«Children have a right to books that reflect their own images and books that open less familiar worlds to them... for those children who had historically been ignored — or worse, ridiculed — in children's books,
seeing themselves portrayed visually and textually as realistically human was essential to letting them know that they are valued in the social context in which they are growing up... At the same time, the children whose images were reflected in most
American children's literature were being deprived of books as windows into the realities of the multicultural world in which they are living, and were in
danger of developing a false sense of their own importance in the world.»
Swashbuckling
American explorer and ladies» man Ethan Gage has
seen his fair share of
danger, having braved the sands of Egypt, the perils of the Atlantic Ocean, and the harsh wilderness of early America.
At this time, the U.S. Embassy in Seoul
sees no potential
danger to
American citizens in South Korea as a result of the possible launch and does not believe that any special actions are warranted by
American citizens other than to pay close attention to local news reports during this time period.
Americans have been
seeing health warnings on their cigarette packages since 1966; now many countries have full color, very graphic messages explaining the
dangers of smoking.
I've read about the
dangers of it before (didn't read the particular reference you posted) and I just think that with the amount being consumed by
Americans every day for the past 20 years we'd be
seeing some ill effects by now.