Terrorist
in sentence
1568 examples of Terrorist in a sentence
Congress, who has access to be briefed on these things, and now has the desire to be, has produced bills to reform it, and two independent White House panels who reviewed all of the classified evidence said these programs have never stopped a single
terrorist
attack that was imminent in the United States.
So when a
terrorist
is corresponding with somebody else who's not known to us but is engaged in doing or supporting
terrorist
activity, or someone who's violating international sanctions by providing nuclear weapons-related material to a country like Iran or North Korea, is trying to hide that activity because it's illicit activity.
Again, lots of weak governance which forms a breeding ground for
terrorist
activity.
You've heard the numbers about the tip of the iceberg in terms of numbers of
terrorist
attacks that NSA programs contributed to stopping was 54, 25 of those in Europe, and of those 25, 18 of them occurred in three countries, some of which are our allies, and some of which are beating the heck out of us over the NSA programs, by the way.
That's us finding intelligence on
terrorist
activities and interdicting them through one way or another, through law enforcement, through cooperative activities with other countries and sometimes through military action.
But that actually indicates a lack of understanding of how
terrorist
investigations actually work.
And I don't mean we have to know what the particular
terrorist
attack is they're worried about protecting us from, but we do need to know what the parameters of it is, what kind of surveillance the government's going to do and how and why, and I think we haven't had that conversation.
Adrianne lost her left leg in the Boston
terrorist
attack.
Naturally, when she lost her limb in the Boston
terrorist
attack, she wanted to return to the dance floor.
It was 3.5 seconds between the bomb blasts in the Boston
terrorist
attack.
My charges were dismissed, but a few weeks later, two FBI agents knocked on my door, and they told me that unless I helped them by spying on protest groups, they would put me on a domestic
terrorist
list.
Suppose a
terrorist
wants to blow up a building, and he wants to do this again and again in the future.
Now, it used to be the only way we had to stop this
terrorist
was with a hail of bullets and a car chase, but that's not necessarily true anymore.
No more phone, no more detonator, maybe no more terrorist, all with the press of a button from a thousand miles away.
So let's step back from this theoretical situation of making a
terrorist'
s phone explode, and look at something that actually happened to me.
So let's go back to that blow up the
terrorist'
s phone situation.
This is all well and good in a theoretical blow up a
terrorist'
s phone situation.
Are you doing that for protecting your people against
terrorist
attacks, or are you doing that for oppressing your people?
Bad people are those who plot
terrorist
attacks or who engage in violent criminality and therefore have reasons to want to hide what they're doing, have reasons to care about their privacy.
This is a conclusion that we should have all kinds of reasons for avoiding, the most important of which is that when you say, "somebody who is doing bad things," you probably mean things like plotting a
terrorist
attack or engaging in violent criminality, a much narrower conception of what people who wield power mean when they say, "doing bad things."
After the 9/11
terrorist
attacks, the FBI became less concerned with gangsters and crooked elected officials.
In the 14 years since 9/11, you can count about six real
terrorist
attacks in the United States.
He too was broke, and he had no connections to international
terrorist
groups.
Nonetheless, an FBI informant gave him a job, handed him money, introduced him to an undercover agent posing as a terrorist, and lured him in a plot to bomb an Irish bar.
Behind closed doors, the lead agent, the squad supervisor, described their would-be
terrorist
as a "retarded fool who didn't have a pot to piss in."
They described his
terrorist
ambitions as wishy-washy and a pipe dream scenario.
And we used the court file to find out whether the defendants had any connections to international
terrorist
groups, whether an informant was used, and whether the informant played the role of an agent provocateur by providing the means and opportunity.
The reason for that is that there is no such thing as a
terrorist
laptop, or a drug dealer's cell phone.
Her tail terminates in a cycloptic eyeball, made out of 1986
terrorist
cards.
When a cafe in Sydney was taken over by a terrorist, he went in with a rifle... and an iPad.
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