Sanders
in sentence
77 examples of Sanders in a sentence
In one shot
Sanders
reads a Popeye comic while his henchman torture a girl (this aspect is probably the intellectual highlight of this movie).
CJ
Sanders
and Sharon Warren also deserve special mention for their portrayal of Ray's mother (the inspiration of his life) and young Ray.
This interesting film noir features three very good performances: Sanders, Patrick, and Blackmer.
I've seen
Sanders
as so many enjoyable cads that it was fun to witness a rare good guy turn.
It was a careful choice -
Sanders
usually would play villains with occasional "nice roles" (ffoliott in FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE, the title hero in THE STRANGE CASE OF UNCLE HARRY, the framed "best friend" of Robert Montgomery in RAGE IN HEAVEN).
Sanders
and Hale click well together as they did in their previous Saint films together.
Only worth seeing for
Sanders
and Hale.
Although a source of much embarrassment (and biographical revisionism) to Paul Robeson in later years, by the standards of its day
Sanders
of the River isn't quite as obnoxiously racist as you might think.
Unfortunately there were some well-known actors in
"Sanders
of the river" it was well made and very popular in its day.Now it seems slightly hilarious to give it the broadest possible benefit of the doubt.
The sweeping programs
Sanders
is pushing – a single-payer health-care system and free tuition at public colleges – however impracticable, are popular, especially among younger people, who overwhelmingly favor him over Clinton.
Sanders
appears authentic;Clinton seems programmed.
They find that an insult to their intelligence, and young women in particular are largely supporting Sanders; they prefer his platform and are troubled by questions about her integrity.
The only group of women that Clinton carried in New Hampshire, where
Sanders
beat her by 22 percentage points, was those over 65.
In the latest caucus, in Nevada, Clinton’s presumed advantage among non-white voters, who are a far greater factor in Nevada than in Iowa or New Hampshire, seems to have served her well, with
Sanders
failing to win enough African-American voters, in particular, to defeat her.
But even if
Sanders
did somehow manage to break up the banks sufficiently, it would not solve the problem.
Sanders
appeals to the popular frustration with the compromises made by America’s leaders, including the centrist Bill Clinton.
With
Sanders
now polling well ahead of Clinton in New Hampshire, serious commentators have begun speculating that Americans will ultimately be asked to choose between
Sanders
and Trump.
But we are at an early stage and face a remarkable backlash from the global troika: witness Sanders’ treatment by the Democratic National Committee, the run against Corbyn by a former pharmaceutical lobbyist, and the attempt to have me indicted for daring to oppose the EU’s plan for Greece.
Sanders
has forcefully advocated the renegotiation of trade agreements to reflect better the interests of working people.
It is certainly difficult to determine whether the outsize revenue estimates of the
Sanders
campaign could be realized; many studies suggest otherwise.
Sanders
has stuck to his populist economic message with great discipline, and this has inevitably meant that many other issues get little, if any, attention.
Against this background, AIPAC’s invitation puts
Sanders
in an awkward position.
Sanders
knows that even if he does speak out on Israel, at the AIPAC convention or elsewhere, he would not win over the country’s more hawkish supporters, including among Democrats.
In his staunch commitment to advancing social justice,
Sanders
also clearly embraces this strand of American Jewish identity.
Sanders
is not simply an adversary; he leads a movement that opposes what Clinton and the “establishment” stand for.
But Clinton isn’t about to make
Sanders
her running mate.
Sanders
is temperamentally unsuited for the role of subordinate, and their policy disagreements reflect deeply held views about the role of the federal government.
She and her husband, Bill, are annoyed with
Sanders
for continuing to campaign (even though she did the same in 2008) and for not toning down his critique of her record.
Her campaign is counting on Donald Trump to unite the party, and that might well happen; but she will have her work cut out, particularly among young and first-time voters, who have overwhelmingly backed
Sanders.
Following prominent left-leaning economists,
Sanders
rails against the proposed new Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), even though it would do much to help the developing world – for example, by opening up Japan’s market to Latin American imports.
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