Sentences with phrase «what kind of protest»

Not exact matches

There's kind of this idea that Missourians won't really believe anything unless you prove it to them, and a lot of times, when we were out on the protests, there was a consistent chant, «Show me what democracy looks like.
«How Arsenal respond this summer will be crucial» Admin, please save this article because you will need it next year this time around... This kind of articles are there for long 11 seasons (summers) and the specialist is here doing what his ego tells him to do... I say no, this time ALL fans should stand together and demand more, put more pressure on the board and the manger... This club is a top club and is not a 4th grade anymore... All those who are in UK should do something (protests, show banners, chants, boycott, whatever)... I know there are still fans who support Wenger, but you also should demand more from Wenger, I assume you are discontent with the results and the transfer policy... Doing nothing, our 4th - place trophy is not even guaranteed...
Uh if I remember correctly her husband was killed by her and lover, and she was protesting her innocence in the what - am - I - doing here - I had - nothing - to - do - with - it - I - swear kind of way.
Because of the kinds of things you talked about under the name of Fabianism, instead of democratic practices and accountability like popular participation and protests and other forms of civic or popular review, we've gone the route of professionalisation in the civil service and accountability via targets and standardisations and numbers, which enable what is often merely an appearance of accountability, and actually operate in a very different way from other more politicised forms of accountability.
On Neil Cavuto's show the other day, you kind of hesitated on whether you supported Jim Bunning's decision to hold up an extension of unemployment benefits as a protest against government spending, Do you support what Jim Bunning did?
«I'm always skeptical any kind of protest can be all that powerful considering what it's up against.»
«What Vanaman's doing here kind of is a form of public protest.
What's different today is not just the heightened economic inequality we see within the US, but also the widespread de rigueur expectation — reinforced by curators, academics, and, indeed, critics — that serious artists offer a kind of protest, working to subvert the very social and economic power structures their patrons uphold.
I'm not trying to have some kind of super-political Cuban protest gallery; that's not what it is about at all.
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