Sentences with phrase «big grand questions»

These big grand questions are the most intriguing to me — how we make room for another couple billion people in this one generation, and what we have to give up to to get there.

Not exact matches

The Thursday press conference kicks off every grand prix weekend, and in Australia three of the big guns were fielding questions - Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel, and Daniel Ricciardo.
Responding directly to questions for the first time since a Staten Island grand jury voted yesterday not to indict a police officer in the death of Eric Garner, Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a taped radio interview this morning that the Garner decision, which spurred peaceful but angry protests, is «bigger than Staten Island.»
No it would be crazy not to have an English Parliament, as such its is appreciated that Scots think the West Lothian question is a problem, how big of them, but then it matters not one jot, for the Scots voted for what they wanted, and got it, now its long past the time when English people get to vote for what they want, and if they want to be fobbed off with some rubbish Grand Committee fine I'll go along with it, but English people should also be given the opportunity to vote for an equal settle to what the Scots vote for themselves, unless you are saying Britain no longer does equality?
All indications are that director John Curran (who previously helmed Norton's The Painted Veil) and Junebug writer Angus MacLachlan are moving towards a big twist or some kind of grand revelation that will make sense of all the questions raised but sidestepped.
When asked about the acquittal of officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson and the grand jury decision not to indict officer Daniel Pantaleo in New York, how such decisions affect him, Bradford says it is «such a big question
«This is the first time we have seen a short and weak cycle since scientists began tracking the solar cycle in the 1700s, following the last grand minimum in the 1600s when there were almost no sunspots... The big question remains: Are we about to head into a grand minimum, as happened during the Maunder Minimum in the 1600s?
The big question remains: Are we about to head into a grand minimum, as happened during the Maunder Minimum in the 1600s?
The problem with trying to answer big questions is also that you sometimes don't answer anything — the House Science Committee staffer made it very clear that their objective was to at least get some answers on finite questions rather than simply adding to grand issues.
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