Sentences with phrase «ideological groups who»

«Every country has its own home - grown marriage of folks who are skeptical of the science and the ideological groups who just don't want regulation,» said Aaron Huertas, spokesman for the Union of Concerned Scientists.
But certain ideological groups who love to fight, want to proclaim one group of victims, the supreme victim in said event.
I du n no, I find extreme low carbers to be a nutty and ideological group who think lower is always better.

Not exact matches

In a study of his earlier pictures, Kolker notes that «Scorsese is interested in the psychological manifestations of individuals who are representative either of a class or of a certain ideological grouping; he is concerned with their relationship to each other or to an antagonistic environment... [and finally] there is no triumph for his characters» (A Cinema of Loneliness [Oxford University Press, 19881, p. 162) The Jesus of the Last Temptation fits this pattern (as do Travis Bickel in Taxi Driver, Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull and Paul Hackett in After Hours) By eschewing any reference to a resurrection — and, in an interesting theological note, allowing Paul to suggest that his preaching of the risen Christ is more important than the Jesus of history — Scorsese presents the crucifixion as the final willful act of a man driven by a God who makes strange demands on his followers.
But by aligning themselves with those who use a combination of racial theory and customized theology to promote a false narrative for the sake of Palestinian nationalism, the Telos Group is complicit in an ideological process that is not only anti-Israel, but one that leads to some very dark consequences.
Which brings us back to your question: If violence against a ideological group is allowed, that introduces a large amount of variance (Who is considered part of the group?
Islamic State is a group of extremist fundamentalist Muslims, many of whom are learned Islamic scholars, who are apparently willing to sacrifice everything in the name of ideological purity.
Despite her resistance to the ideological implications of selection, Christov - Bakargiev does in fact have a method for assembling group shows, which she calls «30/30/30»: Thirty percent of the artists should come from the location of the exhibition, 30 percent should be «question marks» — «artists I've never worked with before or who I don't fully understand» — and 30 percent should be the «core,» which she describes as «people with whom I have a strong intellectual connection.»
Already, deep fissures are emerging between, on one side, a base of ideological voters and lawmakers with strong ties to powerful tea - party groups and super PACs funded by the fossil - fuel industry who see climate change as a false threat concocted by liberals to justify greater government control; and on the other side, a quiet group of moderates, younger voters, and leading conservative intellectuals who fear that if Republicans continue to dismiss or deny climate change, the party will become irrelevant.
Yes, I think there were (are) ideological environmentalist groups, pro-authoritarian gov» t groups and green profit focused businessmen (etc) who looked upon scientists as useful tools to serve their pre-determined agendas.
4) «Climate Destruction Profiteers» — There is substantial overlap between the «sponsors» group and those who profit from the destruction of the climate but what I am calling the «sponsors» have shrouded themselves in the ideological mantle of the dominant neoliberal political philosophy that idealizes markets.
I would say that there is no group of people who are «innate skeptics,» and there is no issue where «innate skepticism» delineates groups across ideological or opinion or cultural boundaries.
There's been increasing alienation of the community from the foundation... The community is this volunteer group that is made up of people who largely buy into Wikipedia for ideological reasons.
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