Sentences with phrase «feel about the country»

Beijing may hope for a second - child baby boom but Chinese citizens have mixed feelings about the country's famous one - child policy being abandoned.
He divorced his second wife becuase «There's no question at times in my life, partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked too hard and things happened in my life that were not appropriate.»
We hope that these films will help students understand the crisis and encourage them to imagine themselves and their family in that position, and how they might feel about the countries offering help».
I did pass through Germany on a European tour in my twenties, but I've always had slightly negative feelings about the country after being robbed while sleeping on the train.
At this point I still have mixed feelings about the country.
Using painting they're asking questions such as - how do we feel about our country in the light of our past conflicts?

Not exact matches

«How do you feel about your involvement in a country that has been described as the North Korea of Africa with respect to human rights violations?»
Jerome called me this week to tell me that he had been contacted by people all over the country who felt inspired by his success, and by people who wanted to learn more about getting into parking lot cleaning.
Zhang: How do you feel about Trump's executive order barring people from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the US?
That the bragging happened a decade ago doesn't change the reality that a man who might be president sees half the country's population not just as objects for his own aesthetic gratification — we knew that thanks to the beauty pageants and the string of model wives — but objects for his physical gratification as well, regardless of how the women in question feel about it.
A recent EU study found that 59 percent of consumers feel confident about online purchasing in their own country, but only 36 percent feel confident about purchasing from a vendor located in another EU country.
Some countries have rules that operators need to be open about their traffic management.There are countries that state that so far they have had no problems with net neutrality and so haven't felt a need to regulate.
To get a sense of how Canadians feel about the Sun News Network, take a look at the submissions filed about it with the country's broadcast regulator.
This has been an historic presidency, but it's hard to feel optimistic about where the country is on race.
Perhaps it's not a surprise that Pakistan had the unfortunate accolade of being the most anxious country polled — nine in 10 Pakistanis reported feeling anxious about the current state of the world, as well as their place in it.
To hear that we are helping people feel safer, helping them feel more positive, more hope about the future of our country.
We «ll get new data on how the consumer is feeling about their finances and the broader economy, and the manufacturing sector will be in focus, data will be released showing how strong conditions are in two areas of the country.
The cuts have put financial markets on edge, sparking worries of a «currency war» as other countries feel pressure to devalue and raising questions about the health of the world's second - largest economy, where growth is already slowing.
Surprisingly, today's dose of cold water came from an unexpected source, when Indonesian energy minister Ignasius Jonan told reporters in Vienna that he has «no expectation» ahead of the OPEC meeting, and that his country has «mixed feelings» about the meeting, but will listen to major players in group.
The survey queried small business owners across the country on what they think are keys to small business success, where and how they use business credit, and how they feel about the...
«The Fatalist Conceit»: The frustration many liberals feel about President Trump is a byproduct of the left's unreasonable expectations: They think they can change the country through politics.
2017.03.20 Canadians Remain Conflicted About Our Most Precious Natural Resource: Fresh Water Today, as Canada Water Week kicks off across the country, RBC released its 10th annual Canadian Water Attitudes Study - an in - depth examination of how Canadians think, feel, and act in regard to our fresh water.
Intrigued by the observations about gender, he surveyed 64,000 people in 13 countries on how they felt about government, the economy, and the (mostly male) leaders pulling the levers.
Sep 05, 2016 Each election year, many of us feel uncertain about the new personnel and policy changes that could be in store for our country.
No matter how one feels about Michelle Wolf, the comedian whose performance at the Saturday dinner got a thumbs down from President Donald Trump, the notion that the First Amendment or journalism generally benefits from the country watching a hotel ballroom full of black - tie guests hobnobbing with the D.C. blue book...
Prudential Retirement commissioned a survey in 2015 that asked plan participants across the country how they truly feel about...
Top military commanders and leaders of his country felt powerless to stop the carnival because they worried about the perception of limiting free speech.
If you love your country and care about people, you don't mind being inconvenienced to make others feel safe.
are people so simple they crave the misguided beliefs of others to feel better about themselves or are we triing to understand the lunacy of our citizens to believe something as pathic as a 3000 year old IDEA in order to act properly when voting in those who will run this country for the next 4 years a.k.a. voting in one who using rational thinking and logic to make choices!
This is just a hunch - I think he probably felt that since He is a Christian missionary and works in other countries Christians would be the appropriate audience for him to address and inform about what he has seen.
Sure, we hear about trafficking in modern countries like the United States or Canada (and slavery remains a growing concern in North America), but it doesn't feel like the most pressing injustice on our country's radar.
In another letter, when asked about his thoughts about building a monument to Gen. Thomas «Stonewall» Jackson, he said again it just wasn't a good idea: «As regards the erection of such a monument as is contemplated, my conviction is, that, however grateful it would be to the feelings of the South, the attempt, in the present condition of the country, would have the effect of retarding instead of accelerating its accomplishment, and of continuing if not adding to the difficulties under which the Southern people labor.»
I personally feel that a Klingon would really help restore our country to balance right about now.
His typical pattern of writing is to take a hackneyed, obvious notion like the Romantic view of the corrupt city and the innocent country, and twist it into complex, awkward shapes in an attempt to make it express the far denser mood - thought he felt about the city.
They know about the anti-Jewish polemics of certain church fathers; about the forced baptisms, especially of children; about the church council decree that sanctioned the removal of such children from their parents; about a papal edict encouraging raids on Jewish synagogues by the faithful; about the expulsion of all Jews from a country like Spain; about Luther's hate language directed against Jews when they did not convert according to his timetable; about the prohibition against Jews living in Calvin's Geneva; and about all the cruelties Christians have felt justified in perpetrating against the people they called «Christ - killers.»
Funny how we criticize and mock other countries that have governments based on religious fanaticism (i.e. Iran) while a large segment of our voters are also religious fanatics who seem to think their view is the only «morally correct» way to feel about an issue (i.e.abortion).
As a U.S. policymaker, Lancaster probably felt some pressure to keep quiet about her country's aid to unsavory African regimes, whose brutality lives on in the violence and disorder of states like Liberia, Somalia, Sudan and Congo - Kinshasa.
At that point, for example, when the perceived interests of one's country run counter to that of other peoples, it is widely felt to be unpatriotic to care about those other people.
Anti-Mormonism is especially prevalent, and I can't help but feel that those who dishonestly mock the faith of another (left and right) are more concerned about their special interest than they are for the Country.
You recently wrote about how you feel like after being outspoken about advocacy of some of these big issues that are happening in the country, you felt like there were some people, even your own fans, that turned on you.
Well that's exactly how unbelievers feel about having Christianity shoved down their throat day in and day out, in this country.
Also, who wouldn't want to spend their last days on Earth with their families and friends, in the company of loved ones, rather than traveling around the country trying to convince people they are right so they feel better about themselves.
Ireland's recent decision to approve same - sex marriage, by popular referendum, has left the country's Catholic reputation in ruins.Of course, this shift didn't come about overnight — secularization has been in the works for some time — but the vote reinforces the feeling of a dramatic break with Ireland's Catholic heritage, and a step into an uncertain future.
How we took an hour and a half to walk one time around a lake that should take only 25 minutes, about how we stood on the bridge, and watched the moon fade into the coming day over the blue lake water in this western city in the country, how we ate blueberries they picked with their own hands, and we felt the wonder of it all, all three of us, quiet, and watching a ghost moon, together, and it felt like prayer, and a cathedral, and communion, and a gift, and kingdom come.
Hartley felt compelled to speak out against the trafficking to some of the highest - ranking officials in the country and ended up being permanently expelled from the country about a decade ago.
ok well in the bible it is against divorce also but god forgives to but it is still wrong and yes i am from nc and i do live in catawba country where this took place but i do nt have to sit around and watch people make out with each other and u know lesbians and gays should read the bible more pentcosal think the same way about that it is wrong for a man and man to be togather and a woman and woman to be togather and some of you people are just plan stupid and i think that some of you just need to think it is god place to judge this pastor and it might be old fashion but back in the ol days we did nt have all this volice and all these crimes but look now there is alot of crime and volice and all we are doing is mad that a pastor said how he felt about gays and lesbiens
I get that you don't have the slightest care about the laws in the country that you reside and that the only laws you feel you are bound to are the ones in the bible.
In describing and accounting for the lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his relationships with presidents and other prominent political leaders; the resistance of evangelical and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's — and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born - again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976 and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level than is represented by winning elections; and, finally, by addressing crucial questions about the appropriate relationship between religion and politics or, as we usually put it, between church and state.
that was we americans can worry too much about what other faiths feel about this being a christian country.
Wait a minute, since you and your bigoted friends aren't really talking about taking away citizenship from our gay brothers and sisters (it would be a civil war if you tried, I'm not gay and I would fight against you), how could you take away any of their «God» given rights as a citizen, you know the same «God» given rights that you and your patriotic friends enjoy (I am assuming that you and everyone else that feels like you have served our great country in uniform just like me and my gay brothers and sister have done, are doing and will do).
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