Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

114 Sentences With "fanned the flames of"

How to use fanned the flames of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fanned the flames of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fanned the flames of". Mastering all the usages of "fanned the flames of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Mr. Castro regularly fanned the flames of revolution with his oratory.
" Biden said previously the president "fanned the flames of white supremacy.
This president has fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation.
This, combined with Schuster's injury, only fanned the flames of their burgeoning rivalry.
Fox News host Sean Hannity fanned the flames of his feud with Sen.
"This president has fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation," Biden said.
The group's popularity has no doubt fanned the flames of Kevin Nguyen's online notoriety.
Instead of clearly confronting this outbreak of hate, he's often fanned the flames of fanaticism.
This type of talk only fanned the flames of dissent, and the Tea Party thrived.
Michael T. Flynn, fanned the flames of the so-called Pizzagate conspiracy by tweeting about Mrs.
In Iowa, Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden said Trump had "fanned the flames" of white supremacy.
United fanned the flames of outrage with the initial public reaction of Chief Executive Officer Oscar Munoz.
Hot, dry and windy weather fanned the flames of the two fires in Australia's already scorched southeast.
Still, the Energy Department's loan office had some high-profile blunders, which fanned the flames of Republican opposition.
I was angry as only a teenager can be with the politicians who fanned the flames of xenophobia.
In this election, the Republican Party has embraced a nominee who has fanned the flames of racism and hate.
The events of the past few weeks have only fanned the flames of the women's movement in this country.
" Context: In a speech Wednesday, Biden claimed that Trump has "fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation.
The company's decision to pull the game fanned the flames of discussion in the relatively small board games community.
He demonized immigrants, fanned the flames of hysteria over a caravan carrying migrants and wrongly claimed Democrats want open borders.
Some of Shirley's surviving relatives further fanned the flames of discontent by accusing the filmmakers of exaggerating the pair's friendship.
Sanford had been critical of Trump at times, saying he "fanned the flames" of intolerance and decrying his disregard for facts.
A Russian troll account, popular in the U.S. state of Tennessee, shows how easily social media fanned the flames of outrage.
Because for half a decade, Trump fanned the flames of birtherism: a toxic, malevolent, racist attempt to delegitimize our first African-American president.
Third, consider the catastrophic results of appeasement so far: Emboldened by Washington's conciliatory attitude, Tehran has fanned the flames of multiple regional conflicts.
Israeli officials have recently claimed that social media has fanned the flames of a spate of "lone wolf" attacks that began last fall.
His early tenure as governor fanned the flames of a nascent conservative movement that would reshape American politics over the next 50 years.
The state media fanned the flames of a backlash against the N.B.A. after a team executive expressed support of the protests on Twitter.
Trump in his comments fanned the flames of what had already become a controversy among critics and members of the media as well.
The Trump administration has fanned the flames of racism, xenophobia, and anti-Semitism while Congress has abhorrently refused to enact gun control legislation.
In their view, the state's political privileges have fanned the flames of separatism by encouraging Kashmiris to view themselves as irredeemably different from other Indians.
Sanford had been critical of Trump at times, saying he "fanned the flames" of intolerance and decrying what he characterized as his disregard for facts.
He famously fanned the flames of the "birther" movement in 2011 and today takes credit for President Barack Obama's decision to release his birth certificate.
Senior administration officials sought to combat the story in statements, but Trump fanned the flames of the story with a series of Tuesday morning tweets.
Sanford told Politico Magazine the same year that Trump had "fanned the flames of intolerance," and said it was "befuddling" that "facts don't matter" with Trump.
He told Politico Magazine the same year that Trump had "fanned the flames of intolerance," and said it was "befuddling" that "facts don't matter" with Trump.
Then earlier this year, "NCIS" fanned the flames of that theory with an episode in which Bishop (Emily Wickersham) worked a case that had ties to Ziva.
But he also fanned the flames of the interest in detangling the meaning behind his wife's clothing, affirming that there very much is something to see here.
He has fanned the flames of messy personal feuds, distracting from the GOP efforts on healthcare and taxes, while making unwanted forays into the bill-writing process.
But on the other, it's a coordinated effort to promote Islamophobic, right-wing content that produced millions of interactions and doubtless further fanned the flames of hatred.
Trump, critics say, refused to disavow the endorsement of former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke right away and fanned the flames of conspiracy around Obama's birthplace.
The fact that 2019 saw the release of Joker and IT: Chapter 2 fanned the flames of the dating clownery fire, but it did not start it.
Commentators on the major news networks fanned the flames of the meltdown by making sure their audiences were braced for what some promised were chaotic times ahead.
Adjacent but apart from music, social media fanned the flames of gang conflicts and created new ones, and opened a window into that world which outsiders could exploit.
Zay Hilfigerrr found a new use for a fire extinguisher -- instead of using it to put out a blaze ... he fanned the flames of a feud with his roommate.
"It's both clear language and in code: This president has fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation," said former Vice President Joe Biden in Iowa on Wednesday.
President Trump on Thursday fanned the flames of a controversy engulfing his administration, expressing his disgust at the national movement to take down statues honoring Confederate soldiers and politicians.
The United Nations also urged French towns to repeal the burkini bans, calling them a "stupid reaction" that only fanned the flames of religious intolerance and did not improve security.
Mr. Trump has fanned the flames of controversy over that episode as Hurricane Florence approaches, disputing the death toll and charging that Democrats had inflated the number for political reasons.
"In both clear language and in code, this president has fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation," Biden, the former vice president, said in a speech in Burlington, Iowa.
He wrote a New York Times op-ed calling on Trump to release his tax returns, said the president "fanned the flames of intolerance," and lamented his lack of constitutional knowledge.
It is certainly true that General Zia built a network of religious schools that prepared people to fight the Soviet forces in Afghanistan, and generally fanned the flames of religous zeal.
Since his election, President Trump has fanned the flames of a culture war over former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick's practice of kneeling during the national anthem as a form of protest.
It's not easy, after all, working for a company that's widely blamed for everything from poisoning political discourse to enabling the spread of hate speech that fanned the flames of genocide.
The conservative columnist and online personality — some would say "troll" — Milo Yiannopoulos was banned from Twitter permanently last month after he fanned the flames of abuse directed at Ghostbusters actor Leslie Jones.
The conditions may spark fears of a repeat of "Black Saturday" in 2009, when soaring temperatures and high winds fanned the flames of a series of bushfires across the state of Victoria.
In progressive Jewish circles, Mr. Kushner and Ms. Trump have been accused of sanitizing the president's refusal to cut ties with white nationalist supporters who have fanned the flames of anti-Semitism.
She fanned the flames of the twins' feud, screamed, "I'm from Southside!" and held a piece of paper on which was scrawled "The Vixen Will Fight You" up to the camera lens.
Trump fanned the flames of the theories about FBI misconduct, suggesting recently that the FBI never accused Flynn of lying in its probe and wishing Flynn "Good luck" ahead of Tuesday's hearing.
After a relatively amicable summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, US President Donald Trump again fanned the flames of his growing war of words with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Jones and his theorist flunkies, alongside many, many YouTubers, fanned the flames of this theory and, at times, suggested people they should investigate it themselves—some people, as they always do, took this too far.
The Oscar-winning Collateral Beauty actress, 71, and the Power star and producer, 41, quite literally fanned the flames of romance rumors when 50 Cent posted a flirty photo of the two celebrities on Instagram.
But elsewhere in the world, it has faced even tougher criticism for doing too little to moderate non-English-language content that has demonized minority groups and, in many cases, fanned the flames of communal violence.
A DEADLY car bomb in Ankara on February 17th just a few hundred metres from Turkey's parliament has fanned the flames of the war that Turkish troops are fighting against Kurdish insurgents in the country's south-east.
Sanford says Trump has "fanned the flames of intolerance," emphasizing that the president has repeatedly misled the public with his false account of events — most recently the national murder rate and the media's coverage of terrorist attacks.
And having fanned the flames of extreme partisanship for years, Republican leaders were powerless in the primaries to stop Mr. Trump's rise, and then were afraid to alienate his supporters by opposing him in the general election.
As social media and online forums fanned the flames of revolution across North Africa and the Middle East in the early 2010s, the dark web became a safe place for organizers to share information without government scrutiny.
Many politicians and media personalities have fanned the flames of hatred by mainstreaming antisemitism, promulgating conspiracy theorizing tropes about Jewish people and legitimizing hate groups who target racial and religious minorities and promote acts of violence against them.
Lionel London, Research Associate in the School of Physics and Astronomy at Cardiff UniversityIn the balmy summer months of 1998, I was an intellectually smoldering adolescent, and Hawking's "A Brief History of Time" fanned the flames of my interests.
Katie Arrington, the GOP nominee, ran against Sanford's criticisms of Trump — he argued last year that Trump "has fanned the flames of intolerance" and is one of the leading GOP voices in calling for Trump to release his taxes.
Some, like the former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, compare Ms. Merkel's austerity politics to the Treaty of Versailles, which imposed punitive economic measures on Germany after World War I, humiliated the country and fanned the flames of populism.
And since his election, President Donald Trump has fanned the flames of a culture war over former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick's practice of kneeling during the national anthem as a form of protest against police brutality and social injustice.
Moreover, the fact that The Birth of a Nation debuted amidst an ongoing Oscars controversy and potential boycott over the lack of minority representation among the nominees unintentionally fanned the flames of a protest that won't fade anytime soon.
It was his own father who fanned the flames of racial tensions during the Central Park Five case, indulged in name-calling to publicly denigrate women, and spoke suggestively about his daughter (Eric's sister) on the Howard Stern radio show.
In a 20-minute address delivered beside the tomb of the unknown soldier, Macron described the "unimaginable hell" of those who fought in the trenches, denouncing the nationalism that fanned the flames of war and now shows signs of resurgence.
They got together in late May, shortly after breaking up with partners they dated for multiple years — the rapper Mac Miller and Cazzie David, Larry David's daughter, respectively — and fanned the flames of the public's interest by flirting via Instagram comments.
For years, the greasy party rocker has gleefully fanned the flames of an online conspiracy theory about himself that claims that he is not the original Andrew W.K., but an actor hired to replace the man who initially portrayed him.
During a speech honoring the Kings a few weeks later, Good Wife star Julianna Margulies fanned the flames of speculation that the show was ending when she reportedly stated she would be "unemployed come April" after the current season is done filming.
But in her later years she became increasingly critical of the European project and fanned the flames of Euroscepticism, first with her Bruges speech of 1988 (when she warned of a "European superstate") and then with a fusillade of behind-the-scenes interventions.
" Biden's comments at the fair come one day after the former vice president made his sharpest attacks against Trump to date, arguing that he has "fanned the flames of white supremacy in this nation" and "aligned himself with the darkest forces in this nation.
Since beginning his campaign, Trump has fanned the flames of racism, bigotry, and xenophobia – from calling Mexicans rapists, making a border wall one of his central campaign promises, implementing a Muslim travel ban, and using dog-whistle politics to talk in veiled terms about black communities.
But while the slimy gender-versus-gender dimensions of that fight ensured it would never happen in a pre-apocalyptic world, both McGregor and Mayweather have coyly fanned the flames of a potential bout in recent days, feeding our delusions that the fight might go beyond idle talk.
Clinton aides floated pictures of Barack Obama dressed in traditional East African garb, fanned the flames of rumors around a mythical tape of Michelle Obama ranting against whitey, and ran a major campaign ad alleging that Obama couldn't keep the country safe in the event of a crisis.
Photo: APThe revelation that U.S. prosecutors have prepared an indictment against Julian Assange, a fact the government inadvertently made public Thursday evening, has again fanned the flames of speculation over what class of crimes he might be charged with should British authorities finally capture and hand him over to the United States.
Pundits such as Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck fanned the flames of conspiracy by inviting Tea Party leaders and other far-right guests onto their shows and humoring a number of fringe theories, such as the idea that FEMA was operating a vast network of secret concentration camps across the United States.
But it has done more than that: it has proved a crucible for fake news — a phenomenon that some of us might argue actually started in sports — but also has fanned the flames of tribalism, turning most interactions between fans of opposing teams toxic, generating a fierce, fractious, puerile sort of rivalry.
Spoilers for "The Queen's Justice" and past Game of Thrones plotlines ahead A long list of Westerosi ancestors laid the path for the fateful meeting between Daenerys and Jon Snow, including the Mad King, who fanned the flames of Jon and his Northern lords' distrust, and Torrhen Stark, whose fealty to the Targaryens gives Daenerys an opening to demand loyalty from the North.
In prepared remarks slated to be delivered later today in Burlington, Iowa, former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHarry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Warren offers plan to repeal 1994 crime law authored by Biden Panel: Jill Biden's campaign message MORE spared no criticism for the president, saying he has "fanned the flames of white supremacy" in the U.S and arguing that the president hasn't stepped up in the face of controversy as other presidents have in the past.
Wiedemann, pp. 170, 176. Höfler originally fanned the flames of their disagreement with a dismissive treatment of Kummer's work in his Kultische Geheimbünde der Germanen (1934), but Kummer fought back "with almost every weapon he could get." Kummer attacked Höfler's version of the Germanic Continuity Theory as based on the equation of the ancient Teutons with primitives and therefore inherently denigratory.
In the more independent northwest the rulers and priests, protected now by the Habsburg Monarchy which had taken the field to fight the Turks, defended the old Catholic faith. They dragged the Protestants to prison and the stake wherever they could. Such strong measures only fanned the flames of protest, however. Leaders of the Protestants included Matthias Biro Devai, Michael Sztarai, and Stephen Kis Szegedi.
The firm commemorated its first ranking in the Fortune Magazine list with a celebratory anthem titled, "Everyone's a Winner at Nixon Peabody." The anthem was leaked to the legal gossip blog AboveTheLaw.com. The firm threatened blogger David Lat with legal action if the anthem was not promptly removed from his blog, which only fanned the flames of the story and spread it to the mainstream media.
In April 1790 John Meares arrived in England, confirmed various rumors, claimed to have bought land and built a settlement at Nootka before Martínez, and generally fanned the flames of anti-Spanish feelings. In May the issue was taken up in the House of Commons as the Royal Navy began to make preparations for hostilities.The Nootka Crisis, pp. 1-3 , Canadian Military Heritage An ultimatum was delivered to Spain.
During the same year, Negoro began writing for the Nippu Jiji, which was published by Soga. He wrote articles that fanned the flames of the 1909 Sugar Strike, and established himself as one of the leaders. Negoro, Soga, and Makino were arrested during the strike and sentenced to ten months in jail and a $300 fine. They were pardoned and released after four months, on July 4, 1910.
Maxwell, p. 7 Statue of Wolfe Tone by Edward Delaney By mid-May 1798 the Commander-in-Chief, General Gerard Lake had organised British troops and the Irish Volunteers to put down elements of the growing rebellion. These actions, sometimes capricious and brutal, fanned the flames of rebellion. While Lake's actions had been effective in Dublin, rebel leaders successfully orchestrated the simultaneous start of widespread hostilities on 23 May.
In April 1790 John Meares arrived in England, confirmed various rumors, claimed to have bought land and built a settlement at Nootka before Martínez, and generally fanned the flames of anti-Spanish feelings. In May the issue was taken up in the House of Commons as the Royal Navy began to make preparations for hostilities.The Nootka Crisis, pp. 1–3 , Canadian Military Heritage An ultimatum was delivered to Spain.
While Lutheranism gained a foothold among the German- and Slovak-speaking populations, Calvinism became widely accepted among ethnic Hungarians. In the more independent northwest, the rulers and priests, protected now by the Habsburg Monarchy, which had taken the field to fight the Turks, defended the old Catholic faith. They dragged the Protestants to prison and the stake wherever they could. Such strong measures only fanned the flames of protest, however.
Pasay produced numerous heroes during the Philippine Revolution. The Katipunan, the organization founded by Andrés Bonifacio that spearheaded the revolution, had a chapter in Pineda organized by Pascual Villanueva, Jacinto Ignacio, and Valentin Ignacio. Several women also fought for the cause of the Katipunan including Marcela Marcelo. The execution of José Rizal, who authored the novels Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo (considered seditious by the colonial government) on December 30, 1896, fanned the flames of the Revolution.
The war grew out of U.S. interest in a fight for revolution between the Spanish military and citizens of their Cuban colony. American newspapers fanned the flames of interest in the war by fabricating atrocities which justified intervention in a number of Spanish colonies worldwide. Several forces within the United States were pushing for a war with Spain. Their tactics were wide-ranging and their goal was to engage the opinion of the American people in any way possible.
The five brothers, wearing a sort of school uniform with cap emblazoned with a crow symbol, strolled through Washington D.C., where Wonder Woman then lived. Using supernatural influence they fanned the flames of intolerance, envy, petty hatred and bloodlust. They both attacked Wonder Woman's reputation and the civil peace in the capital, triggering murders, arson and eventually riot. When the mighty heroine Power Girl responded, the Crow Children were delighted, taking over her mind and turning her against Wonder Woman.
The most serious challenge to the force has been civil disorder. In 1956, supporters of the China Nationalist movement defied government regulations providing the pretext for the eruption of conflict with pro-Communist activists and sympathisers - serious disorder was suppressed by the force and British military. In 1966, Communist groups fanned the flames of discontent: Riots broke out over a price rise on the Star Ferry. Following this, in the spring of 1967, at the time of the Cultural Revolution in China, left-wing workers instigated long and bloody riots.
A few years before the turn of the 20th century, eventful episodes took place in the town marked by fire and blood. The nationalistic fervor of the Katipuneros in Luzon fanned the flames of the resistant movement in Cebu. In Bogo, the younger kin of the Katipuneros, the so-called "Pulahans", exacted heavy tolls on the forces of the cazadores (guardia civil) (cf Caçadores) during fierce encounters near the outskirts of the town. Although the Pulahans were ill- armed, untrained and outnumbered at times, they nevertheless continued to hit back at the enemy.
His worst military failure came when he was called to support the bey at Médéa, whose support for the French and corruption had turned the population there against him. Berthezène led troops to Médéa in June 1831 to extract the bey and the French garrison. On their way back to Algiers they were continually harassed by Kabyle resistance, and driven into a panicked retreat that Berthezène failed to control. French casualties during this retreat were significant (nearly 300), and the victory fanned the flames of resistance, leading to attacks on colonial settlements.
Situated on the eastern shore of Manila Bay, the park plays a significant role in shaping the history of the Philippines. The execution of Filipino patriot José Rizal on December 30, 1896 fanned the flames of the 1896 Philippine Revolution against the Kingdom of Spain. The park was officially named in his honor, and the monument enshrining his remains serves as the park's symbolic focal point. The declaration of Philippine independence from the United States was held here on July 4, 1946, as well as later political rallies, including those of Ferdinand Marcos and Corazon Aquino, the latter having culminated in the EDSA Revolution in 1986.
In April 1775, tensions over British colonial policies in the Thirteen Colonies boiled over into war with the Battles of Lexington and Concord. Following those events, Patriot colonists surrounded the city of Boston, placing it under siege, although the encirclement was incomplete: the city could be resupplied by sea. News of this action and the June Battle of Bunker Hill fanned the flames of independence throughout the colonies. Although the Province of Georgia had managed to remain relatively neutral before these events, radicals in the Georgia provincial congress came into power during the summer of 1775 and progressively stripped Georgia's Royal Governor, James Wright, of his powers.
Thoroton frequently acted as the go-between for Richard Oswald and James Grant, particularly after those two gave up their Nova Scotia Grants to focus on East Florida, where a drumbeat of steady speculation (particularly from Dr. Andrew Turnbull and Dr. William Stork) had fanned the flames of interest in London. It was not until March 1781 that the Governor of East Florida, Patrick Tonyn, called elections for a provincial legislature.The Impact of Loyalists in British East Florida, page 7 Both Floridas remained loyal to Great Britain during the American War of Independence. Spain participated indirectly in the war as an ally of France and captured Pensacola from the British in 1781.
The appointed fasting day, in January, included church services, and Cotton preached during the morning, but with Wilson away in England, John Wheelwright was invited to preach during the afternoon. Though his sermon may have seemed benign to the average listener in the congregation, most of the colony's ministers found Wheelwright's words to be objectionable. Instead of bringing peace, the sermon fanned the flames of controversy, and in Winthrop's words, Wheelwright "inveighed against all that walked in a covenant of works, ... and called them antichrists, and stirred up the people against them with much bitterness and vehemency." In contrast, the followers of Hutchinson were encouraged by the sermon, and intensified their crusade against the "legalists" among the clergy.
American yellow press fanned the flames of interest in the war by fabricating atrocities during the Cuban War of Independence, in order to justify intervention in a number of Spanish colonies worldwide, like Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Guam and the Caroline Islands. Many stories were either elaborated, misrepresented or completely fabricated by journalists to enhance their dramatic effect. Theodore Roosevelt, who was the Assistant Secretary of the Navy at this time, wanted to use the conflict both to help heal the wounds still fresh from the American Civil War, and to increase the strength of the US Navy, while simultaneously establishing America as a presence on the world stage. Roosevelt put pressure on the United States Congress to come to the aid of the Cuban people.
" Throughout most of the season, the Phillies and Mets battled each other for the NL East lead, along with the Florida Marlins. Going into the final season series between the two teams, former Phillie and special hitting instructor Mike Schmidt fanned the flames of the rivalry with an e-mail to manager Charlie Manuel, later posted for the entire team in the clubhouse. > "One pitch, one at bat, one play, one situation, think ‘small’ and ‘big’ > things result, tough at-bats, lots of walks, stay up the middle with men on > base, whatever it takes to ‘keep the line moving’ on offense, 27 outs on > defense, the Mets know you’re better than they are… They remember last year. > You guys are never out of a game.
Frontispiece to Fielding's Tom Thumb, a play satirizing plays (and Robert Walpole) Robert Walpole's personal involvement in censoring entertainments critical of him only fanned the flames of the antagonism between himself and the stage. Henry Fielding, among others, was not afraid to provoke the ministry, and anti-Walpolean plays spiked after the suppression of Polly. Fielding's Tom Thumb (1730) was a satire on all of the tragedies written before him, with quotations from all the worst plays patched together for absurdity, and the plot concerned the eponymous tiny man attempting to run the kingdom and insinuate himself into the royal ranks. It was, in other words, an attack on Robert Walpole and the way that he was referred to as "the Great Man" and his supposed control over Caroline of Ansbach.
While they did not act immediately, French military authorities threatened to march into the sultanate if support for Abd al-Qādir was not withdrawn, and the border between Algeria and Morocco properly demarcated so that defenses against future incursions could be set up. By early 1844 French troops had constructed a fortification at Lalla-Maghnia, the site of a Muslim shrine near Oujda, and clearly not within territory traditionally claimed by the Ottoman Regency of Algiers. An attempt to dislodge these troops peacefully in late May 1844 failed when Alawī tribal fighters fired on the French and were eventually driven back to Oujda. Rumors surrounding this incident (including reports that the shrine had been defiled and that French troops had entered Oujda and hanged the governor) fanned the flames of jihad in Morocco.
Esquilache's plan was to terminate the wearing of long capes and broad-brimmed hats (chambergos) by male madrileños, replacing these traditional garments with French-style short capes and three- cornered hats. This reform was intended to modernize the appearance of conservative Spanish society and improve public safety, since the ankle-length capes were supposedly thought to facilitate the concealment of weapons, while the large hats were thought to conceal a person's face; a safeguard for criminals. The new policies did not immediately catch the attention of the populace, as more pressing issues fanned the flames of popular discontent; namely the rising prices in bread, oil, coal, and cured meat, caused in part by Esquilache's liberalization of the grain trade. Moreover, the clothing reforms at first were only applied to the royal household and staff (January 21, 1766).
Throughout the Ten Years' War, and after, "Spain sought, with considerable success, to divide Cubans along racial lines by portraying itself as the defender of white 'civilization'" against blacks who would plunge Cuba into a Haiti-type slave revolt and "Africanize" the island if not suppressed. Colonial authorities fanned the flames of racial fear so widely that the United States, under President Franklin Pierce, threatened to intervene (See also: Ostend Manifesto). Since his formative years were spent involved in, then fleeing from, the Ten Years' War, Juan Gualberto knew that one of the most important issues that Cubans had to resolve in order to unite and earn their independence from Spain was the problem of racism on the island. It was not enough to have abolished slavery, pro-independence groups also must abolish prejudice and conspicuous public discrimination if they wanted to unite Afro-Cubans behind the cause of independence.
Making his maiden speech on 10 July 1980 in an opposition debate on industry, McTaggart attacked the Conservative government's economic policy, claiming that non-intervention "fanned the flames of unemployment in Glasgow" and had caused the loss of 300 jobs each day.Hansard, HC 5ser vol 988 cols 799-801. In November 1981 he supported an increased borrowing limit for British Shipbuilders, urging that it set up a fund to take on new apprentices."BS improving its performance", The Times, 18 November 1981, p. 8. McTaggart was one of 33 Labour MPs to vote against the Government in a debate on the Falklands War in May 1982, defying party instructions to abstain.Philip Webster, Anthony Bevins, "Labour rebels inflame rift", The Times, 21 May 1982, p. 1. Boundary changes at the 1983 general election split the Glasgow Central seat four ways, and it constituted less than a quarter of the electorate of a new seat of the same name."The BBC/ITN Guide to the New Parliamentary Constituencies", Parliamentary Research Services, 1983, pp. 70, 182.
In 1970 Spiro enrolled as a student in the political science department at the University of Haifa, where he fanned the flames of political activism and was one of the founders of a joint Jewish-Arab student organization. He was one of the founders of the Yesh bloc, a federation of left-wing student groups - encompassing kibbutzniks, Mizrahim and South Americans - who were joined by Arab students led by Adel Manna (later a prominent historian and the director of the Centre for the Study of Arab Society in Israel at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem) and Issam Makhoul (later a Member of the Knesset and the General Secretary of the Israeli Communist Party). Spiro was elected editor of the student newspaper, which he replaced with a new publication called Post-Mortem, which dealt with social, economic and political matters and which published several scoops and exposés about the university. The newspaper’s subversive character, Spiro’s regular columns in it and the fact that Arab students were invited to contribute to it on an equal basis upset the rector of the university, Benjamin Akzin, and subsequently the political establishment in Jerusalem as well, headed by Golda Meir.

No results under this filter, show 114 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.