Exposing
in sentence
241 examples of Exposing in a sentence
I suspect that we have only just scratched the surface when it comes to
exposing
foreign meddling in our democratic institutions and processes.
Freedom of expression and unfettered media bolster this confidence, not by highlighting the system’s strengths, but by
exposing
its weaknesses, which can subsequently be corrected through responsive, rule-based mechanisms.
The editor and deputy editors of Beijing News, a relatively new tabloid with a national reputation for
exposing
corruption and official abuse, were fired.
By developing nuclear weapons, South Korea and Japan would each be risking its relationship with the US and
exposing
itself to economic and energy sanctions.
Chen Guangcheng, a blind lawyer – famous for
exposing
a forced abortion scandal in Shandong – was given a four-year jail term on the dubious charge of “organizing a mob to disturb traffic.”
It also risks
exposing
the IMF to even heavier political pressure, accentuating legitimate questions about the uniformity of its treatment of member countries.
Once we do that, we must devote ourselves to identifying, untangling, and
exposing
the networks of Islamic hate and terror with the same energy and ingenuity that are now being applied to unraveling the global schemes of tax evaders.
Unfortunately, the ongoing economic crisis is exerting downward pressure on defense budgets across NATO,
exposing
the need for greater cooperation among the alliance's European members.
Even the editor-in-chief of China Youth Daily, the newspaper affiliated with Hu Jintao’s own China Youth League power base, which had been aggressive in
exposing
official corruption, was recently detained.
Some of WikiLeaks’ releases of sensitive material have been perfectly defensible on classic freedom-of-information grounds,
exposing
abuses that might otherwise have remained concealed.
None of this makes Julian Assange a Daniel Ellsberg (who 40 years ago leaked the Pentagon Papers,
exposing
US-government thinking on Vietnam).
If member states do not uphold their end of the bargain, the ECB will find it difficult to carry the policy burden effectively –
exposing
it to criticism and political pressure.
Given China’s long record of exploiting its diaspora for economic and political gain, some in the West will be tempted to look upon all ethnic Chinese with suspicion,
exposing
them to discrimination and potentially even subjecting them to surveillance.
Nowadays, the banking industry shapes decision-making worldwide, exemplified in its enduring right to unlimited speculation and its capacity to capture profits that are unmatched by any other industry, especially for its senior managers, while
exposing
the world to overwhelming risk.
By
exposing
the fundamental challenges and anxieties facing a society, a TV series can, at times, almost prefigure the future.
Land-use patterns interweave industrial and residential districts,
exposing
vulnerable (and growing) populations to a host of negative spillover effects.
The reason that politicians and corporate managers alike hate CDSs is precisely because CDS rates are so useful and so prompt in
exposing
their mistakes.
On the contrary, “the disastrous turn toward austerity has destroyed millions of jobs and ruined many lives,” he argued, with the US Congress
exposing
Americans to “the imminent threat of severe economic damage from short-term spending cuts.”
Second,
exposing
the arrogance and venality of the state was no doubt necessary to enact liberal reforms.
NTV and TV-6 may be more truthful than state TV about the war in Chechnya, and both upstaged their rivals in
exposing
government corruption.
By refusing a planned and orderly restructuring, the eurozone is
exposing
itself to the risk of a messy default.
But Bild has already proven that it can do serious investigative work, such as
exposing
how Russia propped up the Donbas region’s economy after it broke away, paying salaries and pensions and funding job-creation efforts.
Journalists at Bild also seem to have done everything in their power to authenticate the notes from the meeting, even if they cannot publish them in full for fear of
exposing
their source.
Furthermore, it proposes 25-year prison sentences for those convicted of
exposing
or possessing state secrets.
Exposing
Climate Change ObstructionSTANFORD – Twenty-five years after the adoption of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change on May 9, 1992, the world has yet to implement a treaty that effectively addresses global warming.
That means following the money that funds the pseudo-science of delay, and
exposing
the co-opted scholars who feed false images of debate to the public.
Perhaps the initial argument was wrong:
Exposing
Chinese censorship has done little to reduce it.
Hu Shuli belongs to the same generation: the journalist whom the Economist magazine calls "China's most dangerous woman," moved from her first job, with the Party press, to editing Caijng , a business magazine that runs stories on corruption,
exposing
businessmen and public officials.
It is also a way for China to capitalize on the US trade sanctions imposed against it –
exposing
liabilities in these sanctions.
A business-as-usual approach would risk
exposing
Africa not only to economic underperformance and a brain drain, but also to criminality, political and social unrest, and even armed conflict.
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