But in the very next sentence, it is Bush's «distaste for stem - cell research» that
raises public suspicion, seemingly with the effect of increasing the prevalence of creationism.
Not exact matches
A person who, all in all, does not like Jews
raises a reasonable
suspicion of anti-Semitism if he makes a
public point of it.
«The facts are clear - By proclaiming to the
public that «Muslims are trying to kill Americans every week,» Walsh
raised suspicion of the American Muslim community and incited fear.»
Concerns have also been
raised about the powers under section 60 of the Criminal Justice and
Public Order Act 1994, where the police can stop people without reasonable
suspicion when a senior offi cer believes there is a real risk of serious violence in an area.
Following the election, The Daily Telegraph detailed changes to Wikipedia pages made from computers with IP addresses inside Parliament
raising suspicion that «MPs or their political parties deliberately hid information from the
public online to make candidates appear more electable to voters» and a deliberate attempt to hide embarrassing information from the electorate.
With the assistance of a lovely primatologist named Caroline (Pinto, You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger), who later becomes Rodman's romantic partner, they struggle with
raising this wonder chimp without
raising suspicions around them, and protecting Caesar from a leery and dangerous
public.
The ensuing discussion was a simple proxy of some of the issues I was beginning to see
raised in the discussions surrounding climate engineering proposals: controversy around the legality of intentionally changing the atmosphere (on any scale),
suspicion of private interest in the name of the
public good, confusion regarding the science behind it, unpredictability of the outcomes, or questionable logic of nature conservancy rules, to name a few.