Expose
in sentence
443 examples of Expose in a sentence
By giving the green light to the Optional Protocol to the 1966 International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, the Council has established an important mechanism to
expose
abuses that are typically linked to poverty, discrimination, and neglect, and that victims frequently endure in silence and helplessness.
Addressing this imbalance between the two baskets of rights, the new Protocol establishes for the Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights a vehicle to
expose
abuse, known as a “complaint mechanism,” similar to those created for other core human rights treaties.
Hamas is ready to
expose
Gaza’s civilians to Israel’s devastating retaliations as long as this serves to mobilize the region against the Zionist aggressors and to mock PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s illusions of a diplomatic solution.
And, like past insurgencies, the Iraq conflict is one in which the insurgents use horrific acts to intimidate the public,
expose
the shortcomings of the government, and goad the regime into overreactions that might turn the public against it.
He sought to
expose
the bankruptcy of ascendant ideological nostrums: laissez-faire, spontaneous order, collective cooperation, central planning.
Though people have until the end of the year to deposit the notes in bank accounts, doing so in large quantities could
expose
them to high taxes and fines.
Just when it looks like the accumulating evidence has condemned him, a sudden turn of events will prove his innocence and
expose
those who framed him.
Muckraking broadsheets in the first half of the last century played cat-and-mouse games with Chinese government censors, ultimately helping to
expose
the corruption and moral bankruptcy of the Nationalist (KMT) government and contributing to the Communist victory in 1949.
They
expose
cracks in the wall of dictatorial power.
While those hints have not yet gone beyond generalities, they nevertheless
expose
a need which France in the past has rarely revealed, the need for partners, even in the nuclear field.
While America’s “war on terror” demands a stronger emphasis on security, the NSA’s activities
expose
an alarming willingness to violate the privacy of millions of individuals – including in allied countries, whose constitutions and sovereignty have also been breached.
Regulators permitting, insurance companies will then be able to write policies against loss of home value for individuals, and then will be able protect themselves against the risk to which these policies
expose
them by taking offsetting positions in the futures or options markets.
In many cases, they do so because investments undertaken in the name of development can disrupt the actual needs of local populations, are imposed against the population’s will, can
expose
members of the affected community to serious human-rights risks, and can damage the local ecosystem.
The great contribution of social science to the understanding of human evil has been to
expose
unpalatable truths.
This will create space for rising powers like China, but it will also
expose
the world to a period of heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
The law has proven to be a powerful tool in stifling dissent, which can include mass protests against election fraud, journalists working to
expose
corruption, or a librarian in Siberia fulfilling a patron’s request for a banned book.
Its name is a warning, informing humanity that the great inventions produced by rational minds also
expose
us to unprecedented dangers.
On its Web site, Wikileaks quotes the US Supreme Court ruling in that case: “only a free and unrestrained press can effectively
expose
deception in government.”
It also includes leaks that genuinely prejudice intelligence methods and military operational effectiveness;
expose
exploratory positions in peace negotiations (invariably helping only spoilers); or disclose bottom lines in trade talks.
This means moving beyond voluntary labels declaring that food is produced fairly and humanely to demand mandatory labels that
expose
non-compliance with these norms.
Even a relatively small amount of material such as cobalt-60 – used in radiotherapy – could cause serious harm if combined with conventional explosives in a so-called dirty bomb (or otherwise deliberately used to
expose
the public to dangerous radiation).
But the recent arrests in Ghana
expose
this strategy's true price.
The concern in such cases is that there may be information that could
expose
the official to blackmail.
Fortunately, the Ebola outbreak is unlikely to
expose
Americans fully to the poor fiscal choices of the past decade.
The Fed may hesitate to extend additional swap lines, because to do so could
expose
it to losses on foreign currencies.
The argument against transparency has been that, in the unusual circumstances of the ECB, to
expose
the votes of individual members of the Governing Council would put pressure on them as representatives of member states.
Floating the exchange rate would
expose
the country to instabilities that would lead to a host of further problems, particularly the country's shaky banking system.
Second, they
expose
taxpayers to the risk that salaries will rise more quickly than expected, which would increase pension cost.
The sometimes intolerable withdrawal symptoms that can make it difficult and hazardous to stop taking anti-depressants also
expose
many users to severe and depressing side effects: substantial weight gain, loss of libido, and mood changes, to name just the most common complaints.
If and when this crisis is ever properly investigated, it will not so much open a can of pharmacological worms, as
expose
questions about what medicine is and should be.
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