Sentences with phrase «serious about them citizens»

He said there is no record in Parliament to the effect that the two Yemeni nationals were made refugees, a situation he described as unfortunate though there was nothing serious about them citizens had to worry about.

Not exact matches

What are serious Jews, Christians, and other pro-life citizens to say about such laws and the institutions that bring them into being?
if we as Amercians do not care about basic rights and freedom of Religion that every citizen should have, then we are in serious jeapordy of losing it for everyone.
Second, citizens, especially those who are most serious about their faith, may reasonably consider the religion of political candidates on religious grounds.
Flippantly dismissing the concerns of millions of UK citizens about Trump's treatment of Muslim immigrants, his support for torture and his attitude towards sexual violence is not the act of a genuinely serious politician.
Providing funding in the Executive Budget would prove to New Yorkers, who have waited long enough for simple voting reforms, the Governor is serious about implementing early voting in New York State,» said Ethan Geringer - Sameth, Public Policy and Program Manager for Citizens Union.
How many more mass shootings must citizens endure before we as a country finally have a serious conversation about the scourge of gun violence that plagues our communities?
Citizens Union Director Dick Dadey said that there are still «serious concerns» about the ethical conduct of de Blasio's administration.
They were welcomed but they refused to talk about Brexit, attack Mrs May's disastrous handling of the dossier, or highlight the serious economic damage that will be done to London by leaving the single market and bringing in a new immigration control bureaucracy of Home Office jobsworths to make life miserable for anyone who wants to employ EU citizens.
In his statement on Wednesday, Mr. Paterson said: «Serious questions have been raised about contact the State Police may have had with a private citizen who filed a complaint against a member of my staff.
If Supervisor Gromack is serious about significant and lasting political reform in Clarkstown then he should acknowledge that he is three years late in accepting Ralph Sabatini's 2011 election platform and apologize to the 3,500 Clarkstown citizens who he referred to as a «fringe group».
They have said in recent weeks that the plan to crack down on benefit tourism showed No 10 was not serious about introducing major reforms because there is relatively little evidence of benefit abuse by EU citizens.
«If we're really serious about addressing the problem of Alzheimer's, we must start by not poisoning our citizens
For example, there are «open» sites for everything from senior citizens to those looking to cheat on their spouse (not the type of site you want to visit if you are serious about finding a relationship).
Has no one informed Dr. Akagi that he's living in a complex and serious drama about the morale of Japanese citizens toward the end of World War II?
Watching a government ignore its nation's needs and political leaders trick their citizens with promises they are unable to keep (to get more votes), serious concerns rise about the country's governmental system.
If the Democrats were serious about providing Connecticut citizens with the right to be heard on this critical issue they would hold a hearing in the late afternoon and evening.
What is needed instead is a fundamental shift in direction in federal education policy, and ESSA is not it; therefore every family that can afford it should opt out of state schooling whenever possible until No Child Left Behind's failed strategy for social improvement via annual testing and publishing the results is abandoned entirely, and until Sacramento gets serious about subsidiary devolution, which implies that assessing and reporting on the results of local schools should be left to the local districts, whose citizens may have different priorities and values that the state and federal governments should learn to respect.
isn't easy, the controls can be a little sloppy (just ask the countless citizens we accidentally ran over), your enemies can be a little slow to react (that was kinda useful in our case considering how long it takes us to react) but you can't ask everything from a game, and you know what, Red Dead has to make no apologies about it because it the game kicks some serious tail.
That dependence, by almost any projection, will take decades to overcome even if the country, and individual citizens, get serious about shifting norms.
«If the Liberian government is serious about turning the page on the past and using natural resources to improve the lives of its citizens rather than enrich the corrupt, enforcing laws and prosecuting government officials and companies who violate them should be its number one priority; this could make or break the country's future.»
While Ex-Im Bank's mission might not be to alleviate poverty, Friends of the Earth hopes that it would not use taxpayer dollars in countries where there have been serious concerns about freedom of the press, safety of their citizens and corruption.
We need a carbon tax, collected and returned to US citizens, to force the big fossil fuel producers to get serious about alternative energy sources and move away from coal, oil and gas as quickly as possible.
If the citizens of this planet became serious about survival of our species (which they are not at present), they could «bite the bullet» and replace that existing infrastructure with the low carbon equivalent; they have taken similar losses in wartime to save their countries.
You aren't serious about «climate change» if it means negative population growth — and doing so by ejecting those who aren't citizens.
Yet from supporting bike to work day through greening Madison Square to getting serious about physically separated bike lanes, the planning authorities, citizen activists and even politicians of New York City seem to have put their weight behind pedestrian, bike and mass - transit friendly planning.
i have seen these ideas about citizens assemblies popping up a long time, it's been seriously researched by academia and promoted quite a lot but it's not getting any serious support.
According to the National Safety Council, stairways cause about a million injuries every year and are the leading cause of injury - related deaths for senior citizens, who are far more likely to sustain broken bones and serious repercussions from a fall down a flight of stairs.
There is a lot of talk about ODR, but no serious attempt yet to introduce it for a class of problems that really matters to citizens.
Regardless of whether you are a student with looming tuition fees and school debt, a senior citizen nearing the golden age of retirement or an established family trying to balance work and play, you do not want to worry about the financial implications of a serious disaster.
The last thing you want to worry about if your jewelry has been stolen from your senior citizen complex or if you son has experienced a serious head injury in your apartment, is how you will pay for these problems.
But if the many anecdotes the ACLU has reported (some of which the Guardian lists in its story) are true, it leads to questions about legality and a serious invasion of privacy for any traveler, many of whom are citizens.
Certainly, we care deeply about and are serious about meeting academic readiness standards, but we also want to help our students become better learners, team members and civic - minded citizens.
These are good attempts, but these attempts will remain just attempts, unless we get serious about putting citizens first in our urban centres as well.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z