Weapons
in sentence
2993 examples of Weapons in a sentence
They talked to every country that made nuclear
weapons
and asked them, "Which digital 'weapon' would you take off the table against somebody else's schools or hospitals?"
The things that people, some people at least, care about much more immediately, perhaps, is climate change, perhaps other issues like refugees, nuclear weapons, and so forth.
Humanity can rise up to the challenge, and the best example we have of humanity rising up to the challenge of a new technology is nuclear
weapons.
In fact, nuclear
weapons
prompted humans all over the world to change the way that they manage international politics to reduce violence.
Basically, we face an enormous and growing number of gigantic, existential global challenges: climate change, human rights abuses, mass migration, terrorism, economic chaos,
weapons
proliferation.
According to a lot of research, one of the best
weapons
is gratitude.
We use shower heads to deliver poison gas, letters with anthrax, airplanes as weapons, mass rape as a military strategy.
And Fury wields the
weapons
of the mob, the stone and knife.
So I started making things specific to the protest, things that would be
weapons
in a spiritual war, things that would give people voice and things that would fortify them for the road ahead.
Before empires and royalty, before pottery and writing, before metal tools and
weapons
– there was cheese.
Thanks to his inspiring victories and policy of distributing spoils equally, Spartacus continued attracting followers, and gained control of villages where new
weapons
could be forged.
Now, instead of crude tools made of sticks and stones, Israel now had iron plows, and sickles, and hoes and military
weapons.
To create their destructive blast, these
weapons
harness the power of nuclear fission– in which an atom’s nucleus is split in two.
Nuclear
weapons
are some of the most powerful tools of destruction on Earth, and it may seem naive to put faith in these straightforward protective measures.
The United States had developed a couple of atomic
weapons
through the Manhattan Project, and the idea was very straightforward: we would use the power of the atom to end the atrocities and the horror of this unending World War II that we'd been involved in in Europe and in the Pacific.
We had a few nuclear weapons, two of which we dropped on Japan, in Hiroshima, a few days later in Nagasaki, in August 1945, killing about 250,000 people between those two.
They could be "re-commissioned," but the way they count things, which is very complicated, we think we have about a third of the nuclear
weapons
we had before.
First thing is that the global nuclear weapons, in the stockpiles that I showed you in those original maps, happen to be not uniformly secure.
There's still enough nuclear
weapons
in the arsenals of the superpowers to destroy the Earth many, many times over.
There are flash points in India and Pakistan, in the Middle East, in North Korea, other places where the use of nuclear weapons, while initially locally, could very rapidly go into a situation where we'd be facing all-out nuclear war.
And Jack said the only way to deal with nuclear anything, whether it's war or terrorism, is abolition of nuclear
weapons.
And you want something to work on once you've fixed global warming, I urge you to think about the fact that we have to do something about this unacceptable, inhumane reality of nuclear
weapons
in our world.
The anthropologist Donald Brown has tried to list them all, and they range from aesthetics, affection and age statuses all the way down to weaning, weapons, weather, attempts to control, the color white and a worldview.
It’s also unstoppable: weapons, fire, extreme temperatures… no matter what you throw at it, it just regrows and continues its rampage.
And in that war, this little spider might be one of our greatest secret
weapons.
Which is why Orion has
weapons.
In unhealthy love, words are used as
weapons.
And I'm afraid there are far more deadly
weapons
in our near future than airplanes, ones not made of metal.
And when you get to a point where you control so much economic power, you use all the
weapons
at your disposal.
Martin Rees has recently written a book about our vulnerability to all sorts of things, from astrophysics, to scientific experiments gone wrong, and most importantly, to terrorism with
weapons
of mass destruction.
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