Sentences with phrase «bad thing in this country»

«That's a barrier to home ownership, and a barrier to home ownership is a bad thing in this country.

Not exact matches

If things go bad in either city, lenders could retreat, triggering a tightening of credit across the country that would crimp demand for houses.
Perhaps the problem is that with more sources of news and communication, most of us in developed countries only recently learned how bad things are in some other places.
Things could be worse: We could have higher unemployment and slower economic growth, like many countries in Europe.
And instead of printing new treasury bonds to give away in exchange for these bad mortgages it would have established simply a line of credit which at first would have been the same thing but the credit would have been repaid not only by the banks that borrowed but by all the banks in the country paying insurance — essentially bank insurance.
Broader investment and currency exposure is in my view favourable not only from an additional diversifying perspective, but also as a protection against bad things happening in your home country.
The funny thing about people saying their faith isn't shaken is that these are the same people who will often look at other natural disasters in foreign countries and say God is punishing these people, or that something bad happened because of some aspect of the culture that God disapproves of.
However the United Nations, as well as other financial experts have said that Greece's debt is unsustainable, and the methods in which the country is being forced to adopt are making things worse.
Albie if you think religion is holding this country back try living in Afghanistan or Pakistan the Taliban has these countries living in the literal stone age the thing holding this country back is greed and a mistaken belief in the Ayn Rand theory of «i got mine too bad about you if you're not careful i «lll have yours too»
I believe free handouts in America may be worse than n other countries, but giving people a sense of worth is one of the great outcomes of paying for the things you need.
Some how it's felt that values, morals, virtues are not there in a secular world only faceless solid lifeless laws of men rather than what has been relayed by Holy books that calls for good deeds and reject bad deeds and to build a faithful societies, communities, nations since communications among nations or even among the nations of mixed cultures and beliefs... Laws or God and universe are to be prepared by some thing that is equivalent to UN but built on nations beliefs to achieve the code of understanding among nations but as can see now it is build on groundless bases if not of words of God to faiths... in addition to those non spiritual secular beliefs to make decisions of faith but at the moment the secular world make and take the decisions while the beliefs and faiths has to pay for it when it becomes a war between all faiths or religions outside your world, it would become back into your inside among the mixed culture and beliefs of the nation or nations under one country flag...!
You can never tell what to expect with this Arsenal team, Westham can have all their best players, be on a solid run of wins and we turn them over easily, or they might be going through a bad patch and without a few of their best players and beat us so easily it will be embarrassing, the only thing consistent about us is our inconsistency, if am not mistaken they turned us over at home in the first game of the season, with a 17 year old boy in their first 11 and about 3/4 new to the country and the league....
You're right about a lot of things you say but the three biggest clubs as far as the media are concerned are Manchester United, liverpool and believe it or not Newcastle.The media, especially Sky Sports would like the Premier League fought out between these three teams every year if they could get their way and ironically they were the three teams who had the worst hooligan problems in the dark years of the 70s and the 80s of all the clubs in the country
much like when a country can't divulge highly classified information publicly for obvious economic and military reasons, a professional soccer organization must keep certain things in - house so they don't devalue a player, expose a weakness, provide info that could give an opposing club leverage in future negotiations and / or give them vital intel regarding a future match, but when dishonesty becomes the norm the relationship between cub and fan will surely deteriorate... in our particular case, our club has done an absolutely atrocious job when it comes to cultivating a healthy and honest relationship with the media or their fans, which has contributed greatly to our lack of success in the transfer market... along with poor decisions involving weekly wages, we can't ever seem to get true market value for most of our outgoing players and other teams seem to squeeze every last cent out of us when we are looking to buy; why wouldn't they, when you go to the table with such a openly desperate and dysfunctional team like ours, you have all the leverage; made even worse by the fact that who wouldn't want to see our incredibly arrogant and thrifty manager squirm during the process... the real issue at this club is respect, a word that appears to be entirely lost on those within our hierarchy... this is the starting point from which all great relationships between club and supporters form... this doesn't mean that a team can't make mistakes along the way, that's just human nature, it's about how they chose to deal with these situations that will determine if this relationship flourishes or devolves..
In countries such as the US, where paid maternity leave doesn't exist, let alone leave for the father, things are even worse.
Among the suspects on the list of the country's 10 worst mass shootings, Cruz is alone in one thing: He was taken alive.
In 2003, a prominent Christian pastor in Ghana warned that God would send «earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, fire outbreak, volcanoes and the bad things that happen in the Western countries» if Ghana's sodomy laws were repealeIn 2003, a prominent Christian pastor in Ghana warned that God would send «earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, fire outbreak, volcanoes and the bad things that happen in the Western countries» if Ghana's sodomy laws were repealein Ghana warned that God would send «earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, fire outbreak, volcanoes and the bad things that happen in the Western countries» if Ghana's sodomy laws were repealein the Western countries» if Ghana's sodomy laws were repealed.
The Liberal Democrat leader had said that «isolation in Europe» was a «bad thing» for British jobs, growth and «the livelihoods of millions of people in this country».
Similarly western hemisphere countries have said some kind things to the decedents of indigenous people who faired poorly under previous policies, and revolutions have blamed deposed rulers for bad things, but I'm not sure that it is in the spirit of the question to count changes in government.
Even as members of Ghana's ruling New Patriotic Party remain resolute in demonizing former President John Dramani Mahama, describing him as the worse thing to have ever happened to the country, party leader and President of the Republic, Nana Akufo Addo has not shelved his admiration for his predecessor at Heads of State summits he has attended so far.
«President Akufo Addo says one thing and does the opposite, he said he'll not form a government of family and friends, but he's done worse in the history of this country.
But we also have to recognise that the work done with Libya that turned them away from a weapons of mass destruction programme and from sponsoring international terrorism was important and was the right thing to do otherwise of course we would be facing an even worse situation now of a country in the situation that Libya is in today also in possession of some very, very deadly weapons.
WASHINGTON (CNN)- A new national poll suggests Americans are becoming slightly more positive about the condition of the country, but the vast majority still say things in the nation are going badly.
The governor, who was clad in a military camouflage, lamented that security challenges in the country had made things worse, adding that robbery and kidnapping had become the order of the day.
As long as you can choose to go to any public service in the country and the government pays for travel costs, post code lotteries are not really a bad thing.
There had never be a time when the southerners have culture, inter-trading, religion, inter marriage with the so call Arewa people of the northern Nigeria in the history, The worst thing that colonialism did was to cloud our view of our past, let split the country we know the real map of Biafra and Oodua
He should stop claiming that people are better off, they are not, poverty has increased under Labour and doubling taxation for the five million lowest earners in our country has only made things worse.
The opposition was grounded in four things: first, many thought the term simply shouldn't be applied to same - sex couples for logical reasons, as it had only ever been applied to heterosexual couples; second, it was viewed as cynical pandering to the agenda of the militant left; third, there were many worse things wrong with the country that required not just the time, but the goodwill of Tory MPs, to get through; and fourth, Cameron had no mandate to do it.
If you were to ask most lefties what were the two worst things to happen to this country in the last decade, most of them would surely answer Iraq and the credit crunch (quite a lot of rightwingers would give the same answer, but that's another story).
But I think one of the things that scientists and other people concerned about science education in the country need to do is make it clear to publishers that as citizens and voters, wherever they live, whatever state or town that they live [in], they will make sure that their elected officials know that textbook X, Y or Z is not to be used in this district because of its bad science.
Why this is a bad habit: It is a common occurrence in this country to see kids walking around with food, eating while being pushed in their strollers, or being fed piecemeal while they're busy playing or doing other things.
It wasn't always be chilly in Manado so whenever I went to Tomohon / Tondano / Sonder and in this case I had a chance to visit the Prayer Hill which has chilly spot last year, I jumped at the chance once again wherein I could dress up for the cold and wear my coat again without the thought of people will give me their odd stares when I'm out (one of the bad thing living in such a tropical country with only two seasons haha * crying *).
as a teenage blogger in probably the country worst hit by american cultural imperialisation, one thing that constantly occupies me is my leaver's prom, which will be in july 2011.
Nature girl — Yes, there's a lot of bad things going on in India and primarily in the neighbourhood country Nepal which has made us pretty scared and shattered.
Although the situation isn't as worse in comparison to some of the western countries such as the United States or Canada, medical experts believe that if adequate measures aren't taken at this moment, things would get out of control.
about internet dating, with women from ex-ussr it is very difficult.you see there are a lot of scammers in these countries.it is very difficult also to find visa for the girl to meet you in your country, some times before marriage, in order to know each other better.from the other hand i think that for a western man to visit a woman first time in these countries it is very dangerous.you do not know what you will find there, your personal security in these countries is zero.also i believe that the dating sites make a big mistake.they ask only from western men membership and not from women, so one scammer woman can login in 100sites, it costs nothing.if women paid a membership things would be different.after 3 years in marriage sites have happened a lot of bad things to me and i think that if you want to find a REAL marriage minded woman the possibilities is 0.01 %!
New to Disc: Secret in Their Eyes Sicario • Eastern Promises • Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call, New Orleans • State of Grace • Brooklyn's Finest Casey Affleck: Gone Baby Gone Anthony Mackie: Gangster Squad Aaron Paul: Need for Speed Woody Harrelson: No Country for Old Men Chiwetel Ejiofor: Dirty Pretty Things • Salt Clifton Collins Jr.: Transcendence
The film is good to excellent in every way except morally, and there it's questionable more often than it should be, not because it's an evil film, or because the filmmaker or actors are bad people, but because the interplay of means and ends has been under - thought or misjudged, to the point where the film becomes a catalog of obscenities: a horror thrill - ride drawn from life, a thing for viewers to test themselves against while feeling just awful about Agu and his country, whatever its name is.
Blue Country, Cat and Mouse, Dear Inspector, The Toy and We Will All Meet in Paradise may not have been such bad things in isolation, but seen in close order (and cross-plugged among the operative theatres) they had the power to clog sinks.
In the end, it's difficult to say what's more troubling — that the film doesn't do enough with its clever premise, or that it doesn't seem to care — but one thing is certain: «The Cobbler» is McCarthy's worst movie to date, and by a country mile.
The oldest boy in the class chimes in, explaining that the Egyptians in Jersey City must have had to leave their country because they «did bad things,» he says, as he searches for the precise words to explain power, discrimination, flight, and exile.
This set of standards is what we know today as the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), and whether you think they are great or the worst thing ever, they have changed how we look at standards and education in this country, particularly in English language arts (ELA) education.
Whether you think the Common Core State Standards are great or the worst thing ever, they have changed how we look at standards and education in this country, particularly in English language arts (ELA) education.
I see so many amazing things that librarians are working on, really preparing our students for the future in innovative ways, and yet I still hear stories about «bad» librarians and positions being cut around the country.
Such a shame that a good local company bought out by a larger company in another country could change things so much for the worse.
If you want to use that money and maybe don't have the time to wait a few years if things should go bad, than you will definitely want to hold a good bunch of your money in the currency you buy most stuff with (so in most cases the currency of the country you live in) even if it is more volatile.
Seeking, seizing and holding «control,» necessary as it sometimes seem in a so - called civilized society, almost always leads to bad things, including most of the dog abuse that occurs in our country.
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The HFC agreement isn't in itself a bad thing necessarily, but if countries start counting it toward their [Paris commitments], or if the cost of early phase - out of HFCs takes away from efforts that reduce CO2, it will in fact in the end make it much harder to limit future warming.
The Kyoto Protocols to the FCCC, and the Clean Development Mechanism (which allows rich countries to burn coal and oil if they pay poor countries to plant trees, and so is neither clean nor results in development), only made things worse, CDM only gives credit for planting trees, which are only at best a temporary reservoir and not a real stink, while they ignore ALL the real long term carbon sinks.
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