«We must have population control at home, hopefully through a system of incentives and penalties, but
by compulsion if voluntary methods fail... The birth rate must be brought into balance with the death rate or mankind will breed itself into oblivion.»
We must have population control at home, hopefully through a system of incentives and penalties, but
by compulsion if voluntary methods fail.
The planters therefore demanded a guarantee of labor supply over the long term, enforceable
by compulsion if necessary.
Not exact matches
«
If the poet can say, «Everyone is drawn
by his delight», not
by necessity but
by delight, not
by compulsion but
by sheer pleasure, then how much more must we say that a man is drawn
by Christ, when he delights in truth, in blessedness, in holiness and in eternal life, all of which mean Christ?
That there may be some who need
compulsion, some who,
if they were free - footed, would riot in selfish pleasures like unruly beasts, is doubtless true; but a man must prove precisely that he is not of this number
by the fact that he knows how to speak with dread and trembling; and out of reverence for the great one is bound to speak, lest it be forgotten for fear of the ill effect, which surely will fail to eventuate when a man talks in such a way that one knows it for the great, knows its terror — and apart from the terror one does not know the great at all.
At one time, Brandeis said, the government «could compel the individual to testify — a
compulsion effected,
if need be,
by torture.
«
If we're dealing with a serious
compulsion, it's not enough to change our conscious mind... a New Year's resolution, a promise made to oneself to «really do it» this time, a fail - proof plan approved
by experts.
He stresses the measures being announced
by the government will be there for schools
if they want and need them - there will be be no
compulsion.
Having been consumed
by the delicious multi-year
compulsion that's been my surrender to Dark Souls, I'm interested to see
if I can get as much of other experiences as I have with From's classic, as well as giving a nod back to the motivations of my younger self as well.
His early works played with that seemingly irresistible desire to construct taxonomic systems, and with the equally ubiquitous wish to identify order to any apparently inchoate or amorphous entity — or, with its converse, an instinctive
compulsion to disrupt the systematic
by taking it to its logical
if absurd conclusion.
If they are stripped of their right to silence
by statutory
compulsion, their answers can not be used against them in subsequent criminal proceedings and «exclusion of the evidence is compulsory».
While the duty of confidentiality allows disclosure in certain situations, such as when disclosure is necessary to abide
by a court order, the privilege,
if it applies to a communication, prevents court
compulsion.