Issues
in sentence
5298 examples of Issues in a sentence
Now, there is a movement in the United States of young people who I am very proud of who are dealing with the structural
issues
that need to change if we're going to be a better society.
I wasn't the only person grappling with these
issues.
Most women in the early 2000s considered themselves empowered, and men generally felt they were also evolved in this area, and, in fact, most people would have been aware of
issues
like human trafficking, for example, but they would have seen that as quite separate from more recreational adult entertainment.
In honoring this commitment, it means keeping girls
' issues
at heart every time.
The law which has just recently passed and the laws that in other countries have been there, they need to be publicized at the local level, at the community level, where girls
' issues
are very striking.
Girls face issues, difficult issues, at the community level every day.
There are so many important
issues
that we can't talk about.
Beyond abortion, pro-voice works on hard
issues
that we've struggled with globally for years,
issues
like immigration, religious tolerance, violence against women.
Pro-voice is about the real stories of real people making an impact on the way abortion and so many other politicized and stigmatized
issues
are understood and discussed.
They discussed taboo issues, like domestic violence.
By saying that we're going to fight for women's rights and fight extremism with bombs and warfare, we completely cripple local societies which need to address these
issues
so that they're sustainable.
These questions address fundamental
issues
about life, but maybe they seem a little esoteric.
If we're going to see a cultural shift in this atrocity, we need men talking to other men about the underlying
issues
fueling demand.
So those are other
issues
that brought to the NCO.
Equally as important is that we also have social
issues
that are often laid at the feet of law enforcement.
You're working on philanthropic
issues
together.
We have a monumental opportunity in front of us, before one of the few universal
issues
as individuals as well as a civil society: to rethink and redesign how it is we die.
We thought we were in a unipolar world, where all the big
issues
were resolved.
All of a sudden, there are going to be massive regulatory changes and massive
issues
associated with conflict and massive
issues
associated with security and privacy.
And we haven't even gotten to the next set of issues, which are philosophical
issues.
These are fundamental
issues.
These big
issues
that will change the world, change national security, change economics, create hope, create threats, can only be resolved when you bring together groups of people who understand science and technology back together with government.
The risks associated with 9/11 will not be measured in terms of lives lost by terror attacks or buildings destroyed or trillions of dollars spent. They'll be measured in terms of the costs of our distraction from critical
issues
and our inability to get together scientists, technologists, government leaders, at a moment of transformation akin to the beginning of the Renaissance, akin to the beginning of the major transformational eras that have happened on Earth, and start coming up with, if not the right answers, then at least the right questions.
They've created think tanks that study
issues
like education, job creation and asset-building, and then advocated for policies to support our most marginalized communities.
And those
issues
stayed with me and guided me, and in particular, when I was elected the first woman President of Ireland, from 1990 to 1997.
It was later when I started to work in African countries on
issues
of development and human rights.
Today, people cannot walk out of their door without security
issues.
China has boomed economically, but hasn't made much headway on human rights or environmental
issues.
And this stayed this way until about the 1980s, when this concept was challenged by the medical community and by the public health policymakers when they realized that by excluding women from all medical research studies we actually did them a disservice, in that apart from reproductive issues, virtually nothing was known about the unique needs of the female patient.
As we began to study and investigate how this possibly could have happened, we discovered there were other
issues
besides just financial ones.
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