Sentences with phrase «not economic devastation»

In our letter, we asked the Department to collect and release the data necessary to ensure that student loans are a tool for economic advancement and not economic devastation for borrowers of color.

Not exact matches

High school students in television look nothing like high school students in real life (well, not The Roaring Twenties was a decade of great economic growth and widespread prosperity, driven by recovery from wartime devastation and postponed spending, a
On the topic of general ignorance, most Americans don't begin to grasp how deeply their consumption habits — house size, commuting habits, reliance on trucked - in food, air conditioning — contribute to environmental devastation and economic instability in the world at large.
Thus, those lifestyle maintenance activities just could not happen in the wake of the economic devastation your plan would probably cause.»
While we could not survive if the natural environment were utterly ruined, we could prosper very well under many scenarios of terrible ecological devastation, and so straightforward utilitarian economic analyses of environmental problems are not enough on their own to justify protecting nature.
«It is up for Parliament to decide... whether or not the government should be allowed to explain it is simply too late for Kyoto to be complied with and would cause too much economic devastation,» counsel said but stated that Ottawa has determined the Act is simply impossible to meet.
His stories for The Times have taken him to Greece, where he wrote about the country's growing ranks of nurses who aren't really nurses; Ukraine, where he covered the economic devastation caused by war; and Poland, where he followed so - called rathole miners into illegal coal pits.
In New South Wales, the only criteria for claims is membership of the Local Aboriginal Land Council, which can claim land within or outside its area if «claimable land» (effectively, unoccupied Crown land that is not needed for a public purpose).53 The Act expressly acknowledges the spiritual, social, cultural and economic importance of land to Aboriginal people in the long title, but also recognises the devastation effected upon traditional laws and customs and connection to land by colonialism through this broad basis for claims.
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