Believes
in sentence
1033 examples of Believes in a sentence
But there is one area on which both sides agree: No one
believes
that the rich should be subject to lower rates than low- and middle-income taxpayers.
If one
believes
that less overweening unions and a smaller state are the first steps toward a better supply side in Europe, this referendum item deserves praise.
Today’s radical Republican Party represents a large segment of the population that
believes
that abortions and same-sex marriage are immoral, God sent America to Iraq, and that bailing out Wall Street is “socialism.”
Turkey has no desire to serve as a strategic counterweight to Iran and
believes
that only a territorially intact Iraq can continue to play that role.
But when the adviser
believes
his work will benefit those whom the leader effectively holds hostage, he has a duty not to withhold advice.
In today's crisis, anyone who
believes
in Western values must hope that such politicians emerge victorious.
He
believes
deeply in the centrality to Europe of the Franco-German relationship.
Anyone who
believes
devaluation is an answer to China's problems misses the point.
As a general principle of foreign policy, China
believes
that national borders are sacrosanct.
However, America also
believes
that rolling back popular support for Islamic fundamentalism in the long term requires a legitimate democratic government.
Throughout Latin America, no one doubts that Bush
believes
what he says and acts according to what he
believes.
Gulliver finds himself caught in a war between two tribes, one of which
believes
that a boiled egg should always be opened at the narrow end, while the other is fervent in its view that a spoon fits better into the bigger, rounded end.
America
believes
oil can grease the wheels of democracy, insuring independence.
The mainstream media, faced with a president who might sometimes be badly uninformed and yet really
believes
what he is saying, hesitate to label conspicuously false statements as lies.
But the Supreme Court's rulings affirm the fundamental principle that even grave dangers do not warrant the sort of blanket deference to which the Bush Administration
believes
it is entitled whenever it utters the words "war" and "terrorism."
Republican John McCain
believes
that it presents “a test of foresight, of political courage, and of the unselfish concern that one generation owes to the next,” while Democrat Barack Obama calls it “one of the greatest moral challenges of our generation.”
Although President George W. Bush says he
believes
in markets, in this case he has called for voluntary action.
Someone who
believes
that capitalism is unjust shares something with others who hold the same belief.
One camp, led by Germany and the Netherlands,
believes
that national governments are obliged, first and foremost, to deliver on agreed reforms, while respecting commonly agreed rules.
China, too,
believes
that if advocates of "regime change" do not push North Korea too hard, a strategy can be pursued that is based on slow evolution rather than a precipitous break--and a possible violent breakdown.
Despite India’s considerable improvement over the past quarter-century – its GHI rating has risen from 32.6 in 1990 to 21.3 in 2013 – the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization
believes
that 17% of Indians are still too undernourished to lead a productive life.
Today, as protests mount and multiply, the government of every Arab state in the Middle East and North Africa probably
believes
that, if left to its own devices, it can contain internal dissent.
Yet Trump confidently asserts that he will “get done” an agreement, which he
believes
isn’t “as difficult as people have thought.”
In Global Development Horizons 2011, the World Bank presents what it
believes
to be the most probable global currency scenario in 2025 – a multicurrency arrangement centered on the dollar, euro, and renminbi.
Ferguson
believes
that a doubling of public debt in the coming decade cannot erode US strength on its own, but that it could weaken a long-assumed faith in America’s ability to weather any crisis.
Today, however, the reigning Republican orthodoxy is a kind of smug pseudo-Friedmanism that
believes
that markets left to themselves can do no wrong.
It has been an aggressive and risky foreign policy, but Al Thani clearly
believes
that he can fill a regional leadership vacuum.
A globalized community that neutralizes the influence of nationalism, he rightly believes, is vital to enable us to confront existential threats like climate change and nuclear conflict.
Indeed, Henry Kissinger once told me that he
believes
that Chinese traditional thought has a greater chance than any foreign ideology (say, Marxism or liberalism) of becoming the dominant intellectual force behind Chinese foreign policymaking.
People feel so disoriented nowadays, he believes, that they are drawn to “Downton Abbey’s” tidy realm, in which the setting, clearly delineated in space and time, is governed by strict rules.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Their
Would
About
Should
World
People
There
Other
Government
Could
Power
Country
Being
Really
Public
Still
Wants
Right
Political