No matter if the science of global warming is all phony... climate change provides the greatest opportunity to bring
about justice and equality in the world.
No matter if the science is all phony, there are collateral environmental benefits... Climate change provides the greatest chance to bring
about justice and equality in the world.
He found welcome political ground in Ontario exemplified by Former Canadian Environment Minister Christine Stewart who said, «No matter if the science is all phony, there are collateral benefits... Climate change (provides) the greatest chance to bring
about justice and equality in the world.»
In 1988, former Canadian Minister of the Environment Christine Stewart told editors and reporters of the Calgary Herald: «No matter if the science of global warming is all phony... climate change [provides] the greatest opportunity to bring
about justice and equality in the world.»
«No matter if the science is all phony, there are collateral benefits... Climate change (provides) the greatest chance to bring
about justice and equality in the world.»
And, as Dr. Bullard and the environmental justice movement remind us, «once we talk about people we have to talk
about justice and equality.»
Jupiter and Uranus, both «power to the people» planets, remind us to be vocal
about justice and equality now.
Ramos said she's helped «spark important conversations among neighbors
about justice and equality, sustainability and our quality of life» and hopes to continue to work on affordability issues and improve traffic safety in the neighborhood, she said.
Not exact matches
Girl: Uma Libras are all
about equality,
justice and serenity, so Uma is the perfect name for a Libra girl, as it means «
equality of all people.»
I'm to the point where every time a progressive claims «This analogy is
about resisting movement towards
justice and equality for all.»
This analogy is
about resisting movement towards
justice and equality for all.
Yup, bigots can always find some irrelevancy to complain
about while ignoring calls for
equality and justice.
If this is true, then it is reasonable to question whether this was
about equality and justice or
about discriminating against the Ashes because of what they hold to
about Christianity.
The eight criteria of a «mature faith» include these: «Holds life - affirming values, including commitment to racial
and gender
equality, affirmation of cultural
and religious diversity,
and a personal sense of responsibility for the welfare of others,»
and «Advocates social
and global change to bring
about greater social
justice.»
Pastors
and mentors will of course feel compelled to offer guidance
and prayer as young adults navigate the tricky terrain of sexuality, but they should not be deceived into thinking that the all the questions
about faith, science, technology, religious pluralism, politics,
justice,
equality,
and ethics emerging from the Millennial generation are related to sex
and can be solved by abstaining from it.
In response to our coordinate efforts for Mutuality 2012, I have heard from women who say they feel their dignity
and worth have been restored, from multiple readers who have changed their minds
about women in ministry, from couples relieved that they can finally put a name to how their relationship has functioned all along, from singles freshly inspired by the «great cloud of witnesses» that surrounds them, from followers of Jesus whose passion for
justice and equality has been renewed, from women ready to «get on with it»
and stop asking permission to use their gifts
and start unapologetically using them.
Many atheists I meet are passionate
about equality and justice.
This is
about law,
about justice and fairness,
about equality under the law
and our civil
and human rights goddammit!
For example, Selma is not shy
about tying Martin Luther King Jr.'s thirst for
equality to God's love of
justice,
and Interstellar certainly orbits the perimeter of a biblical worldview when its characters identify Love as a force outside the bounds of time
and space.
She is passionate
about community, healing,
equality,
justice, spiritual
and transformation,
and is the author ofDown We Go, a challenging book
about following Jesus into the hard places of community.
Today these various concerns
about culture, socio - economic
justice, true
equality for women, institutions,
and the natural world are in some tension with one another.
Just when the culture starts asking questions
about economic
equality and issues of international
justice for the poor, the church also starts teaching
and writing
about similar issues.
When gospel - related themes
about justice, peace,
and equality are raised in the various elements of culture, the church may suspect that these issues did not rise solely out of the hearts
and minds of unregenerate people, but were created by the gentle breezes of the Spirit upon all people in our society.
Children's books
about fairness are sure to strike up great conversations
about equality, fairness,
and justice.
The second question is related to the above: a «free market» baseline of
justice is
about procedure - how outcomes are arrived at, who is involved in making decisions, has rights over their own actions, how actions are agreed by parties etc. (or something like that) whereas
equality is an outcome, that may or may not be achieved under various procedural arrangements,
and may or may not be viewed as desirable by people who hold different views
about what forms of society - specifications over who has what rights to do what to who.
«All who believe in social
justice, in
equality and in democracy
and are concerned
about the future of our children
and young people will recognise the need for a change of political direction after the 2015 General Election.»
«It is essential that those who care
about social
justice, fairness
and equality, who value public services
and care
about the future of state education, do not allow this to happen.»
Mayor Warren also talked
about Susan B. Anthony's ties to Rochester
and told the crowd they they all collectively carry a torch, that will be passed on to future generations, to light the way for freedom,
justice and equality.
Their rhetoric has been
about «
equality and diversity», «fairness»
and «social
justice»
and the reality has been greater levels of inequality
and a decrease in social mobility.
Chattel slavery, child labor, economic inequality, racism, sexism
and discriminations of all types abounded until the liberal tradition of fairness,
justice, care
and equality brought
about a free
and fair society.
Using the greatest hits blueprint, one would think any big - time film treatment
about Thurgood Marshall, an American hero for racial
equality, has to include Brown vs. Board of Education
and his ascension to become the first black U.S. Supreme Court
justice.
Framing the unfinished work as a radical narration
about race in America, Peck matches Baldwin's lyrical rhetoric with rich archival footage of the Civil Rights
and Black Power movements,
and connects these historical struggles for
justice and equality to the present - day movements that have taken shape in response to the killings of young African - American men including Trayvon Martin, Tamir Rice, Mike Brown,
and Amir Brooks.
In Young Mr Lincoln (1939) director John Ford
and actor Henry Fonda used a relatively minor episode in Lincoln's life to demonstrate far more convincingly
and compelling how his personal convictions
about equality,
justice and democracy influenced his actions.
The International Day of Peace is a great opportunity to think
about how, individually, each
and every one of us can contribute to ensuring that resources are managed in a sustainable way, fostering values such as
equality, social
justice,
and fraternity
and thus reducing the potential for disputes
and paving the road to a sustainable future.
Freedom is no longer
about equality, social
justice, or the public welfare, but
about the trade in goods, financial capital,
and commodities.
Although they are seemingly similar terms, the concepts of
equality, equity,
and justice orient thinking
about policy in different
and important ways.
Continue the conversation
about equality and justice —
and put your experiences to work — through Facing History Together.
Historically, the Civil rights struggle in education was all
about justice,
and it was understood that
justice was impossible so long as social
equality was denied.
When I served as student body president at AU
and began working on the issues I had always cared
about — gender equity, racial
justice, opportunity regardless of economic background,
and, yes, LGBTQ
equality — it became clear that making a difference in the world wouldn't diminish or dilute my own pain
and incompleteness.
She has been displaying her art on Ocean Front Walk, by Dudley, for
about five years while at the same time being an ever - present advocate for love,
justice and equality at our community meetings.
«If
justice and equality are
about anything,» Marshall told me, «they are
about a kind of balance.»
«It was
about Holly's own values around
equality, fairness
and justice.
Awareness is the key,
and don't forget
about people,
justice and equality.
It's not just
about biking, you have to talk
and deal with the issues of social
justice and equality.
It is of particular relevance to women's
equality and access to
justice for a variety of reasons, including the fear that an ICBC adjuster can read
about a woman's therapeutic abortion or sexual assault history, which may in turn prevent women from seeking damages in personal injury matters.
«How we treat those who have made mistakes speaks to who we are as a society
and is a statement
about our values —
about our dedication to fairness,
equality and justice,
about how to protect our families
and communities from harm, heal after loss
and trauma
and lift back up those among us who have earned a chance at redemption.»
The speakers discussed the lived struggles of those experiencing homelessness
and offered attendees an opportunity to learn
about the issues preventing access to
justice and equality.
She writes frequently
about social
justice and workplace
equality issues,
and her work has been published in Plaintiff Magazine
and on the CELA Voice blog.
Worldwide
About Blog Rooted in faith
and justice, this global project amplifies faith voices that protect human dignity
and achieve
equality for LGBT people
and their families.
About Blog The Society Against Sexual Orientation Discrimination (SASOD) is a human rights organisation
and movement dedicated to achieving
equality and justice for all Guyanese, especially those suffering discrimination based on their sexuality, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity
and gender expression.