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486 Sentences With "more tolerant"

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

Tech has been more tolerant and these are their values.
Americans are generally more tolerant of offensive speech than Europeans.
The government appears more tolerant of company failures as well.
We're going to have to be a lot more tolerant.
In Iran, by contrast, the discourse has been more tolerant.
Maybe ancient Egypt was more tolerant of refugees than Trump?
Similarly in Britain, views on homosexuality have become markedly more tolerant.
And younger people in Botswana are more tolerant than their elders.
We've become a nicer, more tolerant, gentler nation in many respects.
A more tolerant Wahhabism might yet take root in the desert.
Yes, I thought, we who preach tolerance should be more tolerant.
Obviously, not every LGBT person can move to a more tolerant country.
Some of the animals are more tolerant of sharing space than others.
And there is plenty of evidence that society has grown more tolerant.
Japan may be becoming more tolerant of those who are different, however.
"I see a much more tolerant, nonjudgmental openness emerging," Dr. LaBier said.
" She added, "The more tolerant you are, the more compassion you have.
"I think it's only embodied androids where we'll become more tolerant," she says.
History suggests that over time more pluralist countries become more tolerant of immigration.
But females are generally much more tolerant of males during the breeding season.
They are also more tolerant of their owners'—sorry, butlers'—erratic working hours.
In the biggest Latin American countries attitudes are more tolerant than in Ecuador.
The people who move there tend to grow richer, freer and more tolerant.
Armed with this, we might become a little more tolerant of their situations.
This actually worked in reshaping the values of citizens, making them more tolerant.
Another draw is the perception that the authorities in Europe are more tolerant.
Adapting to this ecosystem, bonobos may have become more tolerant of each other.
But there are signs the public might be growing more tolerant of violence.
Even today, some doctors believe that African-Americans are more tolerant of pain.
One has his hand on the other and looks cool and more tolerant!
Its people are not intrinsically nicer or more tolerant than Europeans or Americans.
I hope we prove more tolerant -- not of crimes -- but of each other.
There is a mentality, it is more tolerant, it is more socially forward.
A sense of isolation and siege is unlikely to make anyone more tolerant.
Meanwhile, the other five ideological subcategories seem to have become more tolerant of everyone.
Together we can promote a more tolerant and respectful world with less LGBT phobia.
British voters are no more tolerant of Muslims than most of their European peers.
Dense urban centers force multiculturalism upon people and inevitably produce a more tolerant society.
And the country as a whole has been growing more tolerant on trans issues.
It is far less poor, less unequal and far more tolerant, diverse and enlightened.
"The more you're exposed to something, the more tolerant you become to it," said Santangelo.
Khan dismissed the protesters in Islamabad, seeking to project a more tolerant image of Pakistan.
They are much more tolerant than the image of Jerusalem as a city of lunatics.
But in another he heralded a more tolerant country, where homosexuality is becoming grudgingly accepted.
Mexico is evolving into a country that's more tolerant of different sexual orientations, albeit slowly.
"Hopefully by the time he's of age," he said, "people will be even more tolerant."
"We see the ... corporate environment being more tolerant toward starting a new business," he said.
Some of the spiders are more tolerant and relatively placid, while others are more aggressive.
And the democratic world, over time, has gotten more stable, more wealthy, and more tolerant.
Now, more than 25 years later, they have not grown more alike, only more tolerant.
Many progressives hope that encouraging conservatives to disengage from religion will make them more tolerant.
If you want society to be less wasteful or more tolerant, then tell the world.
Or will it take the more tolerant, inclusive, live-and-let-live approach of Barnette?
But by and large, Republicans have seemed more tolerant of infractions in their own ranks.
Liberals are more tolerant of mess, ambiguity, and uncertainty; conservatives prefer tidiness, clarity, and certainty.
"We can finally start building a more tolerant society," she said in a Tuesday statement.
Some Muslim-majority nations are more tolerant toward the issue and accepting of the LGBT community.
"We want to offer a more tolerant space for anybody to explore their identity," she said.
Yet the law is rarely enforced and Kenya is seen as more tolerant than its neighbors.
It is possible that its citizens are more tolerant today than they have ever been before.
Despite some ongoing conflicts, the world at large has never been more tolerant or less violent.
"Let's be more tolerant and leave room for trials and errors for new things," Wu said.
The censors are also always more tolerant of criticism when it's not aimed at officials themselves.
There are all sorts of ways we can work to make America more tolerant and inclusive.
Victimhood during World War II did not necessarily make us wiser, more tolerant or politically astute.
Our country is not perfect, but it is more tolerant than any other nation I know.
Roaches have been shown to be more tolerant than most — including humans — in a nuclear explosion.
He said that living in a majority-immigrant neighborhood had made him more tolerant toward immigration.
" He forecasts, if trends continue, "the formation of a more tolerant and pluralist politics in Iran.
Perhaps post-sensitivity-training Starbucks will become a more tolerant environment that more resembles historical prototypes.
One reason this franchise is more tolerant of so-called distraction is that it's used to it.
Hopefully, we make stories about people that the world can appreciate and can make us more tolerant.
Deng Xiaoping revived the parties in the 1980s to show that China was becoming more tolerant again.
In contrast, the world of American business has never been more productive, more tolerant, and more cooperative.
If you want hope that the world can become a more tolerant place, just look at kids.
That said, American companies also have many Chinese employees, who may be more tolerant of state meddling.
People are more tolerant of software, even if it's awful, hence Apple Mail continues to be terrible.
What you have is a new kind of morality that isn't relativistic so much as more tolerant.
Sometimes it's a good thing — nostalgia helps people fight loneliness and can even make them more tolerant.
But experience shows that banishing God from the public square does not create a more tolerant world.
One analyst suggested that, as society becomes more tolerant of L.G.B.T. people, some opponents become more radical.
It happened close to the underpass that had been named after his father in more tolerant times.
Surprisingly, perhaps, our increasingly licentious behavior has not been reflected in more tolerant public attitudes toward infidelity.
As audiences grow progressively more tolerant, these artists are starting to find a way to step forward.
Second, is forcing religious people to serve same-sex weddings how we create a more tolerant society?
It is American credibility that has underwritten the "less violent, more tolerant" world to which Obama alludes.
"The Chinese are more tolerant of pain because we have been poor for so long," he said.
For instance, we discovered that Nellie has an adaptation that makes her more tolerant of high altitudes. 
This concert is a pathetic attempt to show that the country is becoming more tolerant toward women.
China, which until 1997 considered homosexuality a crime, has grown more tolerant of gay and lesbian people.
For years liberal United Methodists like Harris have pushed for the church to adopt more tolerant policies.
Generally, Chinese are more receptive to new things and more tolerant of imperfect products, including mobile apps.
Pets who are less territorial may be more tolerant of a new animal, though that's no guarantee.
As Mr Correa's vice-president, he portrayed himself as more tolerant and less power-hungry than his boss.
More tempering "makes the whole screen more tolerant to overall bending, as in dropping the phone," he says.
They are more tolerant of hagglers and are resorting to gimmicks, including Black Friday discounts, to boost sales.
In this polarized political climate, how do you feel that people can encourage others to be more tolerant?
We need to be more open and more tolerant of differences, even on issues we care about deeply.
Some went so far as to say that reading about other experiences and cultures made them more tolerant.
When you're living in Mississippi, it's difficult to find places to hide, even in more tolerant, welcoming areas.
They were key in pushing Brazilian music toward the psychedelic and pushing Brazilian politics toward the more tolerant.
As with the individual trials, they found people on the treatment did largely become more tolerant to peanuts.
Let's be more polite to each other, more tolerant of people who think differently than we do. Fine.
The exception may be in Lebanon, which has slowly grown more tolerant thanks to the work of activists.
Both Levan Gelbakhiani and Bachi Valishvili (left) say they will stay and fight for a more tolerant society.
"People are far more tolerant of bad roads in urban settings, because speeds are lower," Mr. Engstrom said.
For 20 of the hazards, white men were statistically far more tolerant of risk than any other group.
The stock market has become more tolerant of rising bond yields, which contributed to its violent sell-off.
The French youth, which are generally more tolerant of diversity, end up looking more radical than they are.
"We are a society more just, more free, and more tolerant," she said, adding, however, that inequality still persisted.
This does not mean Chinese attitudes to sexual minorities will soon catch up with those in more tolerant societies.
In particular, some are measurably bolder and more tolerant of potential threats, such as nearby human beings, than others.
He says that despite this, Sisi's government are no more tolerant and accepting of said culture than the predecessors.
The UAE is more tolerant of different religions than some of its neighbors in the Gulf, particularly Saudi Arabia.
He argued that China needs to be more tolerant in order to show the world it's an open market.
We wanted to find women who could remind us that another, more tolerant, hopeful way of being is possible.
"We should be more tolerant of people who post 'untruthful information' that aren't malicious," he said in a post.
"Their literacy in financial matters means that they are more tolerant of taking investment-related risks," Stanley Fallaw wrote.
We are more tolerant, globally aware and service-oriented than previous generations, and thus capable of walking this path.
It also means that while the country is growing more tolerant, they're also more polarized over race and ethnicity.
Westerners often point to Iran's lax rules on the hijab to make the case that it is more tolerant.
Banks were more tolerant of drawn-out proceedings because they wanted to reorganize companies so they could take on loans.
Despite apparent setbacks in Brazil and in Donald Trump's United States, young people around the world are becoming more tolerant.
To start, we should all forget last week and move on to a hopefully better, more tolerant and constructive time.
But even as I got older, and those mean kids grew into more tolerant teens, I still resisted wearing them.
Hopefully, Kim will be more tolerant of holiday season copycatting if it comes from someone outside of her immediate family.
Badly recorded music or people yelling on YouTube videos are also less harsh with this more tolerant pair from MrSpeakers.
In some ways, the flower children and their fellow travelers, like my parents, succeeded in fashioning a more tolerant America.
Why can't you be more tolerant?" and under the meme it said, "share if you understand this is Obama's religion.
"Those of us who grew up in a more tolerant environment about drugs are less afraid of them," he said.
Frequent participation in religious traditions also appears to bolster more tolerant attitudes and volunteer work among Muslims, Mormons and Buddhists.
Sydney is a more tolerant city than it was decades ago, and critics say that police attitudes have changed considerably.
People potentially can reduce their prejudice by training themselves to be more tolerant of broken patterns in the physical world.
Each year they seem to grow in numbers at CPAC: young conservatives who are more tolerant of differing social views.
Could it be that culture plays a role -- that British people, overall, are just more tolerant and accepting of gloominess?
He was an educator, someone who should be bettering the minds of his students to create a more tolerant society.
Even in more tolerant and cosmopolitan areas, though, many LGBTQ people feel they have to maintain a constant background vigilance.
Unless the US starts getting much more tolerant of immigration much more quickly, that's not really something we can replicate.
Clinton's approach, while arguably more effective at reducing systemic risk, is more nuanced and technocratic, and more tolerant of large institutions.
But the ones I've done artificial insemination with by myself and without physical restraint, they're much more tolerant of other people.
But interestingly, Trump supporters were not unusually racially resentful compared with Rubio supporters; Cruz and Carson supporters appear relatively more tolerant.
Also note that in general, people with left-wing ideological commitments are overall more tolerant than people with right-wing ones.
Racism certainly is not as loud and violent as it once was, and the city overall is a more tolerant place.
That doesn't say that movement toward progressive goals is impossible — America is becoming both more diverse and more tolerant over time.
The party said hopes were fading that the government might become more tolerant of dissent than the one it had replaced.
That has raised concerns of radicalization, especially in West Africa where the more tolerant Sufi Islam has historically been more dominant.
Better education and a more civil society should help people become more tolerant of one another, and also of their differences.
Islamic thinkers like Ibn-Sina accepted such constraints, and during the Middle Ages Muslims were often far more tolerant than Christians.
The Karen people are an ethnic minority trying to escape centuries of persecution in Burma, for the slightly more tolerant Thailand.
"When I had a choice I feel that the Democratic Party views are more inclusive, more tolerant, more favoring," he said.
It's personally confounding because this is the America I love, where attitudes are in many ways more tolerant than in Europe.
Professor Smith joined campaigns for civil rights in the 1960s and for a more tolerant understanding of Islam in the 2000s.
"The locking up of women dissidents is not exactly a great advertisement for a more tolerant vision of Islam," said Sen.
However, in the current context, I think the MPC will be more tolerant of fiscal slippage and continue with accommodative cycle.
Adherents of these more tolerant schools live across the wider Muslim world, from Morocco to Indonesia, from Turkey to South Asia.
The east African nation is seen as more tolerant than neighboring Uganda and Tanzania, but the LGBT+ community still faces discrimination.
Trump, meanwhile, has signaled a more tolerant view, naming a US ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, who supports an expansion of settlements.
If it cannot forge a more tolerant laïcité, it runs the risk of estranging a generation of its own young Muslim women.
Democracy has always been a mess, and yet the democratic world has, over time, gotten more wealthy, more stable, and more tolerant.
Perhaps female and minority viewers were once more tolerant of films that offered only caricatures of themselves, or omitted their likenesses altogether.
That includes R&D to create tobacco plants that are more tolerant to temperature extremes and insects, or to increase crop yields.
Rising divorce rates reflect the spread of more tolerant, permissive values towards women, but legislation tends to favour men in divorce settlements.
Promoting a healthy self-esteem early on, will give the youth a head start in molding a healthier and more tolerant future.
" Richard Gelfond, the chief executive of IMAX, said: "I used to be a little more tolerant of what others say in email.
In today's supposedly more-tolerant society, they serve a dog whistle function that allows users to denigrate people without suffering social consequences.
Liberal ideologies, traditionally more tolerant and beneficial to minorities than those of conservatives, are therefore regarded as a sort of political cucking.
For example, he took up anti-communism when that was fashionable but put it on the back burner in more tolerant times.
The French in the past have been far more tolerant than most societies in accepting high taxes on gasoline and diesel fuels.
Older adults may also be more forgiving of themselves than they once were — and more tolerant of a wrong note (or six).
I didn't know too many Muslims, and I've learned a lot about the Muslim faith, and that I should be more tolerant.
Here I have met wonderful people, I've built a career as a video editor and I have learned to be more tolerant.
Millennials are considered the most racially diverse generation in American history and are generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors.
He desperately wanted the politics of his time to work better: to be less cruel, less arbitrary and more tolerant of human difference.
Although church leaders remain decades behind on acceptance, Packer said churchgoers have "becoming more informed, more tolerant, and more loving" in recent years.
Farms capture huge amounts of carbon back into the world's farmlands and result in resilient farming systems more tolerant to extreme weather patterns.
Psychology research from Georgia Tech also showed that those with high curiosity are more tolerant of ambiguity, which requires a sophisticated thinking style.
The isolates gathered after 2009 were, on average, more tolerant to the alcohol compared with bacteria taken from before 2004, the researchers discovered.
Maybe I could be a little more tolerant of their comments if I didn't have cancer, in addition to two other autoimmune issues.
After all, here we are, almost a century later, and America has become more powerful, more tolerant, more wealthy, and even more democratic.
He said he was weighing whether to move to a more tolerant Chinese city, or leave the country again to resume his studies.
Over all, we're clearly becoming a more tolerant nation, one in which people have increasingly positive views of others' religious beliefs, including atheism.
In a separate interview, the elder Ms. Kavakci said that Wednesday's decision simply made Turkey more tolerant of religion, rather than less secular.
But more recent polls suggest that white evangelicals overwhelmingly support Trump, and that they have grown more tolerant of politicians who behave badly.
He was determined to create a more tolerant world so no one would have to feel the sting of hate like he did.
They require 24-hour-a-day involvement with humans for many weeks when they are puppies to become more tolerant of human beings.
Her book is titled iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood.
So if prices come down, users might be more tolerant of needing to wiggle their smart whatnot to get it to work as billed.
They all stemmed from a GOP political culture that is far more tolerant of corruption than national Democrats have been in the modern era.
These have far more tolerant power consumption and heat dissipation requirements, given their larger size, which made them ideal for use in wearable devices.
Both men were inducted in 1942 and, in 1943, they joined the Navy hospital corps, which was known to be more tolerant of gays.
Although Chinese society is becoming more tolerant of diversity, even at the top, the state worries that such groups are becoming increasingly well organised.
"We hope to return...in a more tolerant climate...in a country that really looks like what it brags to be," Mashrou' Leila said.
These include growing crops which use less nitrogen and are more tolerant to drought, restoring forests, changing livestock feed, and ploughing the land less.
Natives recognized the benefits of speaking the tongue of the Arabs, who rarely learned other languages, and who were more tolerant than previous overlords.
"Students have an uncanny ability to be more tolerant, respectful, and educated about diversity than most adults," he said in a statement to WPTV.
In writing "Far From the Tree," I was trying to expand the national conversation about identity, to champion a more tolerant and accepting society.
While the law can still penalize homosexual acts, Lebanese society has slowly grown more tolerant as activists have worked for more rights and visibility.
It could hypothetically become more tolerant of liberal views among its players and start treating problems like domestic violence with the gravity they deserve.
They also have often been more tolerant of losses by tech companies, particularly younger ones, than they have of red ink from other firms.
Vincent helps Ray with the house he is trying to sell, and Ray becomes, at least briefly, a little more tolerant of Vincent's showmanship.
Fish are generally more tolerant to increasing salt concentrations, but the longer they are exposed to high chloride levels, the more toxic it is.
Crops of the future may need to be more tolerant to drought, high temperatures, and saltier soil (as a result of sea-level rise).
Perhaps it is the case that citizens are more tolerant of democracy's limitations — and thus inoculated from populist appeals — when their expectations are low.
For candidates like Rubio — following the pace set by Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton — it's about embracing a new, more diverse, more tolerant country.
His vision for the future is of a more open, more tolerant, and more inclusive France at the center of a strong European Union.
Kaufman says the ability to call phone numbers is in the roadmap, which could make Portal more tolerant of people who don't live on Messenger.
Pinterest, interestingly, seems to have been a little more tolerant of making what might seem like small design changes but may have substantial user implications.
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungary's once virulently anti-Semitic Jobbik party tried to show a more tolerant face this year by sending Hannukah greetings to local Jews.
In fact, Americans—particularly whites and Hispanics—are generally quite hostile to public protest, although they are more tolerant of nonviolent protests than violent ones.
But "Judeo-Christian" carries a nicer, more tolerant tone—indeed, the idea of ecumenical tolerance spurred its most vibrant coinage among liberals in postwar America.
Why it matters: The island had been more tolerant of homosexuals than many Caribbean countries, but no laws currently exist that grant them equal rights.
In the United States, most voters are growing more tolerant of immigration, but a committed minority is increasingly demanding limits on immigration in all forms.
During negotiations, studies have found that men are considerably more likely to lie than women — and men are more tolerant of lying as a strategy.
Mariah Carey was performing in Saudi Arabia last week, "a pathetic attempt to show that the country is becoming more tolerant toward women," he said.
By virtually every metric, the liberal international order has made the world healthier, wealthier, wiser, more secure and more tolerant than it has ever been.
The yellow fever mosquito competes with a cousin, the Asian tiger mosquito, that has also colonized the United States, and is more tolerant of cold weather.
What you see here is that people on the moderate left really have become less tolerant of racists while growing more tolerant of all other groups.
In my time at Baruch, I definitely got to hear a lot more opinions and I learned to listen and to be a lot more tolerant.
"There is currently a lot of interest in creating more tolerant corals through genetic engineering and of restoring reefs by targeting more resilient corals," she says.
But he also thought the state of Colorado, which said the baker had to make cakes for everyone, should be more tolerant of his religious freedom.
The widening gap between the lives of lesbian, gay and transgender people in more tolerant places and in the rest of the world is not sustainable.
Daniel Raymond, deputy director of planning and policy at the Harm Reduction Coalition, took issue with Sessions' premise that society is more tolerant of drug use.
Under President Obama, the military was required to be more tolerant of gender and sexual minorities, following the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" in 2010.
They also tend to be more tolerant of losses for tech companies, especially if they're growing quickly and can promise a big payoff down the road.
Earlier today, Commissioner Goodell told Colin "Dougie" Cowherd that the NFL is open to considering a more tolerant marijuana policy in the next collective bargaining agreement.
"The Governor believes that ensuring students learn about diverse histories will help build more tolerant communities and strengthen educational outcomes," Murphy's office said in a statement.
The Vatican rejected the notion that individuals can choose their own sexual identity, a blow to L.G.B.T.Q. advocates who had hoped for a more tolerant message.
Antitrust approval has become an interesting question in the Trump administration, which bankers and lawyers had thought would be more tolerant of consolidation than its predecessor.
Sharing narratives gets around that: The persuasion happens because in talking about themselves, the voters realize a more tolerant attitude is consistent with their self-image.
I would like to reassure you that Ireland is still the same country today as it was before, just a little more tolerant, open and respectful.
"This growing tolerance is largely confined to Democrats and Democratic leaning Independents," Tesler wrote, adding that Democrats have grown more tolerant as a backlash against Trumpism.
As the prime minister had been jailed himself for four months after reciting a subversive poem, the hope was that Turkey would become more tolerant of dissent.
Indeed, even though millennials are the most racially diverse generation in American history, and generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors (ahem, Clint), racism continues.
It's not a totally implausible theory, that the country becomes more tolerant during economic booms and that white Americans become more racially prejudiced during recessions or stagnation.
But consumers in the West may hesitate to use self-driving cars that have been trained in a laxer safety environment that is more tolerant of accidents.
The quiet response to the show reveals a culture that's gradually growing more tolerant and accepting of artists and lifestyles that were, not too long ago, taboo.
For his part, Saudi Arabia's ambitious heir wants to show that "shock" reforms have made his country a better place to invest and a more tolerant society.
The industry's most prominent evangelists—near deities in our own world—say they are enriching the human experience, making us more connected, more tolerant, and more satisfied.
One of the biggest impacts of methamphetamine is increasing the permeability of the BBB—or, making the bouncer far more tolerant about who gets into the club.
Allison Harell of the University of Quebec found that voters are more tolerant of immigration if they feel that their country is in control of its borders.
During the panel MbS touted Saudi Arabia's success in its efforts to transform its oil-dependent economy and make the deeply conservative kingdom a more tolerant society.
In the 1970s, he had what he called a "conversion experience," which he said made him a more committed Christian and more tolerant of other people's opinions.
Prince Mohammed has also sought to promote a more tolerant form of Islam and crack down on extremism, a cause Mansour said would be furthered by films.
Hungary's once virulently anti-Semitic Jobbik party also tried to show a more tolerant face by sending greetings to local Jews for their Hanukkah holiday last month.
In rereading my diary this time, I became more tolerant of my youthful writing and allowed myself to remember the sadness and the loneliness that motivated it.
But for most American Jews, it is now accepted as a tenet of their religion: building a better, more equal, more tolerant world now, where they live.
Li Huaining, deputy dean of the hospital explained that RoBoHoN is more tolerant than most humans of the hyperactivity and repetition shown by many children with autism.
The survey affirms what polling has found over the last several years: Americans are becoming more tolerant and inclusive, with support for equal rights continuing to grow.
Deutsche Bank, which was eager to gain a foothold in the lucrative American market and more tolerant of risk than many of its rivals, filled the void.
In order to survive, I'm forced to be more tolerant of those privileged within both of my communities — even when they often harbor misplaced animosity toward me.
A 21st century version of Jim Crow voter manipulation could threaten all the decades of voting reforms that have helped create a more tolerant – and more democratic – America.
They're targeted at neurotypical kids, and designed to encourage them to change, by becoming more tolerant of kids who might hang out and play differently than they do.
But is purposefully wielding a false narrative, even with the goal of building "a more empathetic world and a more tolerant future," any different than straight-up manipulation?
In this version of history, Saudi society was once more tolerant; religious conservatives were interlopers who went too far in purging its diversity and imposing a doctrinaire vision.
But growers say they have only limited tools to lessen the impact of unexpected torrential rain, with a switch to more tolerant varieties the only option for many.
We saw higher peaks during earlier periods, but the rate right now is actually relatively low, and correspondingly American views on immigration are considerably more tolerant and liberal.
"It is the religiously conservative who are more tolerant of Kavanaugh possibly committing sexual assault and would still be willing to have him on the Court," Burden said.
Lenovo imagines the product will work best for super mobile business types, road warriors, and most importantly, tech enthusiasts who may be more tolerant of first-gen awkwardness.
The government appears to have become more tolerant of and even responsive to online activity since Miguel Diaz-Canel last April replaced Raul Castro as president last April.
"The more that people are exposed to people who are not just like them, the more tolerant and respectful we become as a society," the NYCLU's Lieberman said.
Even those whom Mr Sardo describes as "more tolerant of human weakness and less hypocritical about the relationship between sex and politics" were indignant about Mr Berlusconi's affairs.
Meanwhile, Democrats are going after that more tolerant sector with a progressive populism initially and charismatically championed by Bernie Sanders but increasingly advocated by Hillary Clinton as well.
Most people, however, would rather spare pedestrians over passengers, as well as lawful people over jaywalkers—except in poorer countries, where drivers are generally more tolerant of jaywalking.
Coaches undergo sensitivity training before working with clients, covering topics like preferred pronouns, asking for permission to touch another's body, and tweaking gendered terminology to be more tolerant.
Furthermore, the FDA mainly has jurisdiction over commerce between states, meaning products developed and sold locally in states that have more tolerant laws for hemp products is legal.
He is still allowed to teach foreign legal history and comparative law at Peking University, which he said is more tolerant of mavericks than many other Chinese campuses.
She made the world a safer, healthier and more tolerant place -- but there is more work for us to do to end the stigma and find a cure.
When people have direct contact with members of a particular ethnic or national group, studies find, they tend to become more tolerant of the group as a whole.
But even as cities across Mexico become more tolerant — with big gay and lesbian communities emerging in Mexico City and Oaxaca — transgender women are still treated with derision.
But it makes us much more tolerant of not correcting these major problems that have played a huge role in driving shark populations way down across the planet.
They're going to Tesla and SpaceX staff, who are likely to be more tolerant of any early manufacturing bugs and can easily bring their new rides in for inspection.
Heidi Rabben, senior curator at the CJM, posits that showcasing historic examples of interfaith coexistence can prompt reflections on how to create a more tolerant society in the present.
Kasich, who was far more tolerant of Trump on the campaign trail than were his other GOP rivals, wondered what his daughters would say should he now support him.
The mentor would help her see that there are other, authentic and more tolerant interpretations of Islam she can follow, if she still wants to follow an Islamic faith.
Although Belarus still has the death penalty and harasses the opposition, Mr Lukashenko has become more tolerant of civil society, even allowing a measure of public criticism and debate.
The more tolerant your character is, the more control you have over him and the less likely you are to get into trouble just because you are not reasonable.
And watch those that come after us only be able to be bigger, stronger, more tolerant, and [more] loving; have a greater reach; and do more because of it.
Another draw is the perception that the authorities are more tolerant, particularly after considering the danger and expense likely to be involved in a journey to the United States.
"I always knew there was a chance they would go off the deep end, but I was really hoping they would be more tolerant of my decision," she said.
"It's a double-edged sword," said Fan Lei, economist at Sealand Securities, who said the moves implied regulators were becoming more tolerant toward market speculation, often dubbed "stir frying".
"It's a double-edged sword," said Fan Lei, economist at Sealand Securities, who said the moves implied regulators were becoming more tolerant toward market speculation, often dubbed "stir frying".
That said, we should all be more tolerant of each other and empathetic of the fact that we all have so many digital demands on our time these days.
As my own cohort of baby boomers (who helped elect Trump) dies off and is replaced by millennials (who rejected him in droves), the world will become more tolerant.
Some people withstand jet lag better than others — possibly because they may be more sensitive to light, they're simply better at falling asleep, or they're just more tolerant of discomfort.
This response, which is part of a process called habituation, can result in individual bears becoming more tolerant of people, if they take risks being around people without negative consequences.
With public opinion growing ever more tolerant towards gay Americans, partisans on right and left are making the once-obscure field of transgender rights a place for culture-war battles.
After meaningful conversations with trans canvassers, residents' transphobia dropped substantially, and they remained more tolerant three months later The punchline is simple: Hatred of outsiders is ancient but not inevitable.
"We know that people become more mentally flexible with age, are more tolerant of other people, and thrive better emotionally themselves," study author Dion Sommer said in a press release.
What they shared, however, was a fundamental desire to remind Americans of our common humanity, to look to the future as a more optimistic, more tolerant and, yes, better place.
It's no coincidence that he raised the economic aspect of pursuing a more tolerant Islam as he delivered his remarks at the investment conference in the Saudi capital on Tuesday.
Under Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Hungary has become more tolerant of anti-Semitism, and Ms. Shaul said the foundation had seen an increase in episodes targeting survivors across the country.
You know what, the problem is in our country — in our country, we need to learn to respect each other and be a little bit more tolerant for one another.
Transformation complete, the makeover subject unveils his new style and more tolerant value system to the woman in their life—whether that's their wife, mom, stepmom, ex, or love interest.
One answer may be that despite the eruptions of racism and anti-Semitism under Trump, America is on the whole a far more tolerant country than it used to be.
Despite Pope Francis' occasional attempts to set a more tolerant tone toward L.G.B.T.Q. people inside the Catholic Church, the Holy See remains a powerful force driving opposition to L.G.B.T.Q. rights.
Well, in his book "The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth," Benjamin Friedman argues that in prosperous times voters are more tolerant of diversity, more committed to fairness and expanding opportunity.
She recounts her grandmother's life growing up in the South during the Ku Klux Klan's heyday, and her escape from that virulently racist world to a more tolerant Los Angeles.
In the era of #MeToo, where institutions are supposed to be moving toward making campuses more tolerant, Indiana University looks like a stodgy and calcified institution uninterested in egalitarian reform.
Deah means "light" in Arabic, and The Light House now serves as a center for youth, a gathering place Farris hopes will further Deah's dreams for a more tolerant America.
Thanks to Obama, and the sudden societal shift towards trans acceptance, I believed I would be transitioning into a more tolerant world than the one tread by my trans predecessors.
Because it was a counterculture movement, it was people that were different, it was a more tolerant community, essentially, allowing differences, but it seems to have morphed into something else.
"In environments that are perceived as more tolerant or permissive of sexual harassment, women are more likely to have been directly harassed and to witness harassment of others," the authors wrote.
The new wording may indicate that Beijing will be more tolerant of yuan exchange rate moves against the dollar and gradually reduce its intervention in the foreign exchange market this year.
Why it matters: These technological changes mark an end to the psychology of oil scarcity that made Western democracies more tolerant of erratic actions by OPEC and other oil-producing states.
Sana Yasir, an intersex educator and physician, said Pakistan was becoming more tolerant of transgender people but acceptance was not yet widespread with many people confusing gender identity with sexual orientation.
But it does show how they lived on in Plymouth's more tolerant attitude during the infamous witch frenzy which gripped much of the rest of New England late in the century.
The post ends up arguing that outing Thiel is actually good for Thiel and other gays trying to succeed in Silicon Valley, since it would make the tech industry more tolerant.
Within the Fed, governors and regional presidents are sometimes at odds over interest rate policy and some academics have argued governors tend to be more tolerant of inflation than regional presidents.
The East African country has a reputation for being more tolerant toward LGBTI people than its neighbor Uganda but recent comments attacking the group have sparked fears and condemnation from activists.
But jokes are not harmless: studies provide some evidence that hearing sexist jokes does make men more tolerant of rape, which 5 to 10 percent of college men admit to committing.
Even if this signals Chinese policymakers are more tolerant of companies being pushed into bankruptcy, analysts say it also suggests they are moving slowly so as not to destabilize the economy.
Conjuring a "freer, more tolerant, more rational society" in its pages under the guidance of founding editor Herbert Croly, The New Republic was instrumental to liberalism's ascension in the twentieth century.
The attitude at the time was that black bodies were more tolerant of pain and hard labor, and experts of the time invoked or invented biological explanations to explain disease disparities.
The East African country has a reputation for being more tolerant towards LGBT people than its neighbor Uganda but recent comments attacking the group have sparked fears and condemnation from activists.
"When I saw the level of hostility I was really surprised, and I felt ashamed, because the Georgia that I knew was much more tolerant and open than that," he said.
Patrick Poon, a researcher at Amnesty International in Hong Kong, said the crackdown would provide "another bad image" for China's leaders, noting that they once seemed more tolerant of labor activism.
I'd say we no longer gather in coliseums to watch people get eaten by lions because clergy members, philosophers and artists have made us less tolerant of cruelty, not more tolerant.
But attitudes toward Stalin and his terror have become far more tolerant, not least because the Kremlin has recast his time as head of the Soviet Union with a certain nostalgia.
Around that time, in 1945, Ms. Smith gave a radio address cited by The Philadelphia Inquirer in which she deplored racism and bigotry and called on listeners to be more tolerant.
But it also makes sense as a kind of redemption arc for Isabella, who has gone from someone who rejoices in her brother's impending death to someone more tolerant of human frailty.
"Just as we become more accepting of people in terms of their sexual orientation, or we become more racially tolerant, we're becoming more tolerant of people's different bodies, as well," she says.
But a third generation of Muslims now seems set to become a permanent part of a more diverse, more tolerant Western society—as long as that society continues to nurture those virtues.
For example, helping farmers in coastal areas shift to crops that are more tolerant of drought or salty floodwater might not work longer term if their land is submerged entirely, she said.
The style associated with Black Art began to seem angry and sloganeering in a way that just didn't fit with a world that appeared to be becoming more tolerant, diverse, and open.
That the old America — the one before black presidents and same-sex marriage and political correctness — was the real America, and the new more tolerant and more open America is inauthentically American.
This progressive turn is simultaneously a product of and a response to the changing mores of the urban middle class, which has developed a more tolerant view than other segments of society.
This aircraft type is more tolerant of extreme cold than other more modern aircraft, and two of them had to be flown all the way down from Calgary for the rescue flight.
Each recognizes that creating a new federal program and fund to help educators access resources and training for high quality Holocaust education will help make every community more tolerant, cohesive and peaceful.
Instead, he believes Americans have become more tolerant, not less, of religious freedom, pointing to the protests that sprang up opposing President Trump's travel ban targeting visitors and immigrants from Muslim nations.
But even if Americans are more tolerant of gay Americans than voters think they are, more are prejudiced against gay Americans than they were against black Americans in 2007 or women in 2014.
While the film, in spite of its title, concentrates on the transformation of a racist, White man into a better, more tolerant human being, that was not the aim of Victor Green's guide.
A few years ago it looked as if the United States — long more tolerant of immigration, with a more fluid sense of national identity that readily allowed for hyphenation — could avoid this turn.
All of the varieties tested, including cabernet sauvignon and merlot, were found to be more or less equally resistant to drought, contrary to previous research that said some were more tolerant than others.
Larger firms, in particular, which you can think of as wildly successful businesses and thus embodiments of the logic of business, tend to be more tolerant of employee personal tastes than smaller firms.
The platform is more tolerant toward facial recognition, and a plugin called FindFace is already taking advantage of that license, allowing users to compare static photos against nearly 1 billion stored profile pics.
There's power in nostalgia, but the fact is the world is wealthier, healthier, better educated, less violent, more tolerant, more socially conscious and more attentive to the vulnerable than it has ever been.
The thinking here goes that once the going gets tough, the Americans get going and, in a real crisis, the Japanese public will be more tolerant of highly sensitive weapons in their midst.
Plus, her general friendliness towards human divers could also have made her more tolerant to other species, so it's possible that another female kidnapped the newborn, and then this specific mother accepted it.
Only the elderly remain robust — none more guiltily than Yoshiro, who is raising his great-grandson, the impossibly, almost unbearably sweet Mumei, who grows kinder and more tolerant as his body wastes away.
In a recent study published in The Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, scientists found that city acorn ants were more tolerant of heat, and less tolerant of cold, than their rural counterparts.
In response to the Ponzi scheme accusation, Sun Hongbin, chairman of Sunac China, who poured in 15 billion yuan to bail out Jia's LeEco, urged the public to be more tolerant towards "failure".
While top scorer Canada was given an overall mark of 66%, other parts of the study found there was still much work to be done to make its workplaces more tolerant and welcoming.
The laws of war are much more tolerant of government secrecy and coercion, censorship, surveillance, and detention than ordinary law, which is much more focused on individual life and on restraining government power.
Related: Why NYC Is the Perfect Place for Creative Map-Making True Stories from an Unseen Archive of 90s NYC Skateboarding A Boys' Club No More: Reinventing the Salon for More Tolerant Times
Hopes for a more tolerant future blossomed as Iraqi forces launched an offensive October 17 to oust ISIS from Nineveh province and Mosul, the city the Sunni militants made the seat of their caliphate.
Gaslighters will often rightly assume that if you allude to the things in this list, you are more likely both to get hooked on them and to be more tolerant of their bad behavior.
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Paris Lees became the first openly transgender woman to feature in British Vogue fashion magazine on Friday, marking a step towards a "more tolerant society", said the broadcaster and model.
Although gay sex is punishable with up to 14 years in jail in Kenya, the law is rarely enforced and the east African nation is seen as more tolerant than neighbouring Uganda and Tanzania.
"I think because I am a mix -- my dad is from Algeria and my mom is from Norway -- I have a more tolerant way of thinking not just people but also music," she said.
Likewise George Osborne, whose suspicion of the EU when he became chancellor in 2010 has, according to allies, evolved into a more tolerant position over the course of his stewardship of Britain's economic interests.
"The intention is so that religious teachings can make students more tolerant and appreciate others who are different from them," said Kamaruddin Amin, director general for Islamic Education at the Ministry of Religious Affairs.
Widely viewed as a consensus builder, Powell is expected to be more tolerant of a stronger growth profile and more rapid inflation relative to Chair Yellen, who has consistently targeted a "moderate" growth rate.
Fantasy played a central role in the Leave campaign, of course, and as the years since the 2016 referendum have dragged on, the country has become ever more tolerant of it from all sides.
One 2018 paper even found that several strains of bacteria were becoming "more tolerant" of alcohol-based hand sanitizers — and could one day be resistant to them, the way superbugs are resistant to antibiotics.
Prince Mohammed's visit, part of his first foreign tour as heir apparent, is aimed at persuading Britain that his reforms have made his country a better place to invest and a more tolerant society.
The Taliban banned games such as cricket and football in the early years of their austere rule because they believed they kept men away from prayers, but they later became more tolerant of cricket.
Where we found differences, they weren't the ones Maher and others would lead you to expect — supposedly "fragile" younger women, for instance, were actually more tolerant of flirtation in the workplace than their elders.
We see it in this younger generation that is smarter, more tolerant, more innovative, more creative, more entrepreneurial, would not even think about, you know, discriminating somebody against, for example, because of their sexual orientation.
Whether it's advocating for your girl Carol Danvers in a "Who's the best Avenger?" thread or debating social justice issues with friends over drinks, you're a staunch advocate for a more tolerant and accepting world.
But it reinforces the notion that the center of the contemporary queer experience is undeniably urban, and privilege of a certain kind comes with living in a community that's often more tolerant, affirming and supportive.
We see it in this younger generation that is smarter, more tolerant, more innovative, more creative, more entrepreneurial, would not even think about, you know, discriminating somebody against for example because of their sexual orientation.
"Instead of upholding its promise of a more tolerant Saudi Arabia, the government has again shattered any notion that it is genuinely committed to upholding equality and human rights," said Amnesty International in a statement.
And now an entire generation has grown up in a world that by most measures has gotten steadily freer and healthier and wealthier and less violent and more tolerant during the course of their lifetimes.
Despite their blind spots, the men's influence eventually led to a healthier, more diverse, more tolerant musical life — a culture that, for better or for worse, is notable for its lack of real aesthetic controversies.
And now an entire generation has grown up in a world that by most measures has gotten steadily freer and healthier and wealthier and less violent and more tolerant during the course of their lifetimes.
The survey found that Asian respondents were more tolerant than their Western counterparts at HKU of undesirable leadership characteristics such as authoritarianism and asociality (each group disliked such traits, but western respondents disliked them more).
Despite the recent rise of the nativist far-right Alternative for Germany party and the neo-Nazi tone conveyed by some of its leaders, Germany is still regarded as one of Europe's more tolerant societies.
Mr. Huang also expressed optimism that the new government of Xi Jinping would be more tolerant of his work because of its avowed goals of promoting a transparent legal system and cracking down on corruption.
" The Americans learned only that, "as a condition for return, he agreed that he would renounce his former association and embark on a message of denouncing terrorism and preaching a more tolerant and pacifist message.
The survey found that Asian respondents were more tolerant than their Western counterparts at HKU of undesirable leadership characteristics such as authoritarianism and asociality (each group disliked such traits, but Western respondents disliked them more).
The longest end of the yield curve came under strongest pressure on growing perception that the Bank of Japan is more tolerant of rises in yields on those maturities than it is on shorter yields.
In honor of International Women's Day, here are 10 leaders who discuss the power feminism and gender equality can have in not only creating more tolerant, safe workplaces, but in advancing society as a whole.
But since Facebook has no effective competition, we can look forward only to being lectured on being more tolerant of "ideas" we don't like, and to smug talk of the false equivalency of "both sides."
There's a lot of patriotism, enthusiasm for being able to participate fully in politics and business, and appreciation for the ways the US is better and safer and more tolerant than where they came from.
New Labour pushed the Labour Party toward a pro-EU consensus: Instead of seeing the EU as a neoliberal plot, Labour leaders saw it as a vehicle for building a more tolerant and peaceful Europe.
" The Rock concedes it's a good thing today's society is much more tolerant, accepting and progressive, but believes the whining ways of "generation snowflake or, whatever you want to call them, are actually putting us backwards.
Adapted from iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood—and What That Means for the Rest of Us by Jean M. Twenge, PhD.
When people are part of organizations and face situations where they have to make difficult decisions, or even engage with people with different worldviews, they can become more tolerant and feel higher levels of political efficacy.
Last year, she published her book, iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood, which discussed the current study's findings prior to its publication.
Other surveys have found that Americans are becoming more tolerant of trans people, and most of them oppose bathroom bills (attitudes may have shifted on the latter point since 2016, when North Carolina passed its law).
Traders said the health ministry decree will now make it harder for GASC, a long time proponent of the more tolerant 0.05 standard, to ease the rules should it continue to face low turnout at tenders.
While the U.S. continues to be more tolerant of offensive speech than the rest of the world, with 71 percent of Americans believing they should be allowed to say what they want, there are generational differences.
On Thursday, he sounded positive notes, saying that many statue supporters seemed to come from outside the city, and that inside the city limits, a new, more tolerant generation was helping steer Memphis in new directions.
Though more tolerant of foreign workers, the younger generation is also wary of letting them become citizens, lest they dilute the nation's identity — an attitude that seems to have stiffened during the country's prolonged economic slump.
The prince has promised that he will use his power to move Saudi Arabia toward a more tolerant form of Islam than its religious establishment has promoted in the kingdom and around the world for decades.
That would suggest that France is the reverse of the United States, where the elderly tend to favor xenophobic candidates like Donald Trump and the youth tend to vote for more tolerant ones like Hillary Clinton.
The trip comes amid concern that Saudi-funded seminaries expounding exclusivist, Salafi Islam are steadily eroding the more tolerant interpretation of the faith traditionally practised in Indonesia—a diverse archipelago with large Buddhist, Christian and Hindu minorities.
One possible explanation she points to is the that increased US troops on the ground could make commanders more tolerant of civilian casualties as they make decisions designed to protect growing numbers of embedded US military personnel.
Millennials may be the most racially diverse generation in American history, and generally more tolerant of racial differences than their predecessors, but that doesn't make it any easier for them to grapple with race and racism today.
Their moral values, stories, and political institutions flow more directly from the liberty and fairness foundations — well suited to a culture based on exchange and production — and are therefore much more tolerant and open to ethnic diversity.
I think that one of the things that's changing in this country is that young people are more tolerant, they're more aware, they're more -- they feel more rooted in the world, and not just in their own lives.
Under his successor Shavkat Mirziyoyev, who took office at the end of 2016, the authorities have started to signal a more tolerant approach, and there are hopes that economic reforms will begin to free up the command economy.
Thus altered (or, as the study put it: "damaged"), said pleasure centers become more "tolerant" to explicit erotic stimuli, rendering the addicts dependent upon greater and more deviant stimulation to trigger the now distorted dopamine release (read: cum).
All kinds of data—YouTube videos of epic fails, an e-mail to your boss, or that winning move in Overwatch—travel over the internet, but some kinds of data are more tolerant of delays or temporary congestion.
There have also been sweeping movements within the last decade promoting more tolerant views and wider acceptance such as the gay rights movement, as well as campaigns against violence and systemic racism through groups like Black Lives Matter.
Even though Britain is more tolerant, LGBTi asylum seekers still face discrimination, threats and even violent attacks, said Sebastian Rocca, chief executive of Micro Rainbow International (MRI), a charity working to eliminate discrimination and poverty among LGBTi people.
Dr. Deborah Carr, a sociology professor at Rutgers, said that while society may have become more tolerant of some aspects of sexuality, like same-sex relationships and premarital sex, views on sexual affairs by spouses remain essentially unchanged.
People like to say that we live in a more tolerant, open, and accepting society, but I'm forced to beg to differ when a difference of opinion — and appearance — prompts unfettered hatred and anger to erupt in 2016.
Flying elevates the bat's metabolism and body temperature — similar to a fever in humans and other mammals — and scientists say this, on an evolutionary scale, could boost a bat's immune system and make it more tolerant of viruses.
And yet, to the extent that this resistance to certainty and conclusion constitutes a flaw, it is one I can't help but admire, because it makes Scott more tolerant and more thoughtful without rendering him an opinionless pushover.
But when reading ability is so often drawn on class and income lines, we must cast the net wider to be more tolerant of, and helpful to, people who find it hard to utilize words for their benefit.
This story is adapted from iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood—and What That Means for the Rest of Us by Jean M. Twenge, PhD.
At a high level, he's doing all this because, he argues, Twitter and YouTube and Facebook are de facto public spaces with capricious private overlords, and there are legal reasons that they should be more tolerant of extreme speech.
In a country where Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front made it to the run-off in the next presidential election, Mr Zidane—the son of an Algerian warehouseman—became the face of a more tolerant France.
Previous research conducted by the same researchers showed that swearing makes people more tolerant to pain, a result attributed the stimulation of the body's sympathetic nervous system—the same system that triggers our so-called fight-or-flight response.
Afterward, he dug deeper into the history of the district and realized that what he had seen was state-sanctioned dissident art, to give the illusion that the government was more tolerant of free speech than it actually was.
" His subsequent elegy for Lincoln is a genuinely lovely piece of writing: "Difficulties, instead of irritating him as they do most men, only increased his reliance on patience; opposition, instead of ulcerating, only made him more tolerant and determined.
The fervour with which he has pursued his goals occasionally yields impressive oratorical results, as when he wowed an assembled crowd of western dignitaries at the 2017 Future Investment Initiative by harking back to a more tolerant Saudi society.
It was the result of countless individuals making the choice to stand up, to demand recognition, to refuse to rest until they knew that their children were inheriting a nation that was more tolerant, more inclusive and more equal.
While still often described as Europe's last dictatorship, Belarus "is not North Korea" and has grown somewhat more tolerant of dissenting voices, said Pavel Belavus, the owner of a shop in Minsk that sells Belarus-themed clothing and literature.
"It shows we can predict areas in the world where there are corals that are more likely to be more tolerant to future climate scenarios," said Lupita Ruiz-Jones, a co-author of Wednesday's study and a lecturer at Stanford.
And when we add the intelligence of the internet to that kind of shared, democratic experience, we just might be able to reveal the true potential of the internet — to connect humans and make us more tolerant, understanding and empathetic.
If you have doubts about the scope of each problem, consider this: a non-partisan study found that students today are more tolerant of offensive speech than older generations and support for free speech on college campuses is on the rise.
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe police on Tuesday blocked a street protest for the third time in five days, as the main opposition party said hopes were vanishing that the government might become more tolerant of dissent than the one it replaced.
But remembering that his grandparents suffered during World War Two, he hopes that it will be an era without war, that Japan will keep up economically with China and India and that it will grow into a "mature," more tolerant place.
Yeah, I know there were some smaller cultures and some outliers who were more tolerant of differences, it's very true, but pretty much and the so-called democracies, great democracies where women and slaves were excluded pretty much through our history.
A Pew poll in 36 countries found the young to be more tolerant than the old in 30 of them, often dramatically so: 18-29-year-old South Koreans were four times likelier to be gay-friendly than those over 50.
In the speech, the Ohio governor cast himself as a nuts-and-bolts choice who is more tolerant, more compassionate, and, as a successful state governor and a budget hawk while in Congress, more adept at handling the nation's economy.
The Taliban had banned games such as cricket and football in the early years of their austere rule because they believed they kept men away from prayers, according to former national cricketer Hasti Gul, but later became more tolerant of cricket.
By truly understanding that our humanity binds us together, regardless of our differences, we can learn to build stronger communities, despite those who seek to divide us, and work proactively as individuals and institutions to build more tolerant, humane societies.
But, in Riyadh, images of the 32-year old Saudi meeting the Christian cross-wearing head of the Anglican church on Thursday dominated newspapers, with headlines citing it as an example of the conservative kingdom's more tolerant approach to religion.
RIYADH/LONDON (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's crown prince wants to persuade his British and U.S. allies that "shock" reforms have made his country a better place to invest and a more tolerant society on his first foreign tour as heir apparent.
Eight out of 10 members of Gen Z support #BlackLivesMatter, 74% are in favor of transgender rights, and 63% support feminism – so they might be right in suggesting that they are more tolerant than the high schoolers who came before them.
More than half a century ago, Burt Bacharach penned the melody for "What the World Needs Now," a plea for global peace that has provided solace in times of tragedy and a rallying cry for those who want a more tolerant future.
In a recent op-ed for the New York Times, a pair of political scientists argued that while Trump did better in 2016 among "anti-immigration whites," his hardline stance likely inspired a "liberal backlash" and drew more tolerant voters to Hillary Clinton.
Nick Statt: I think I'm slightly more tolerant of Negan than you, Bryan, but that's because I know what happens in the comics and am rather senselessly holding onto faith that The Walking Dead can make its big, bad villain a worthwhile character.
Pranav Jandhyala, a member of the College Republicans and one of the Patriot's editors, said the students don't necessarily agree with Yiannopoulos and his cohorts, but their goal is to foster an environment on campus that is more tolerant of divergent views.
That might be having serious effects, especially on young girls, according to the study's author, Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State University and author of "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy".
I think they worry about innovation being squelched, and innovative cultures are looser, they're more tolerant, they're ... But they're also, the best ones are also tight, because they're able to come up with great ideas, and in a sense it's a sequencing.
And when given the Balloon Analogue Risk Task — a test developed by psychologists in 2002 to measure respondents' tolerance for risk — participants who said they felt awe during the show were much more tolerant of risk than the rest of the group.
"Brands need to embrace this more tolerant, more open, and less prescriptive approach when it comes to marketing to kids and their increasingly diverse and equality-minded parents," said Carli Gernot, manager of trends for North America at Mintel, in a statement.
As mega-corporations like Google occupy an ever more intimate role in our lives, the space for individual freedom must be strengthened, whether it is through labor protections, the fostering of a more tolerant corporate culture, or some combination of the two.
Another draw is the perception that the authorities are more tolerant, particularly after considering the danger and expense likely to be involved in a journey to the U.S. For those traveling outside migrant caravans, that trip can cost as much as $25,000.
The other, "Identity: The Evil Genius of Christianity," by the lawyer and blogger Erwan Le Morhedec, adheres to a more tolerant Christian-Democrat line and warns Catholics against the temptation of finding solace in extremism and an aggressive assertion of national identity.
Talks with faith leaders in Britain including the Archbishop of Canterbury, the senior bishop and principal leader of the Church of England, offer Prince Mohammed an opportunity to project a more tolerant image of Saudi Arabia, sources close to the trip told Reuters.
" Kristin M. of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, whose husband has end-stage kidney disease, opined: "I don't feel that the airlines do enough training on being a bit more tolerant of people with medical equipment that are not coming to the gate in wheel chairs.
In the leaked video, Google's head of HR, Eileen Naughton, says that she had heard from conservative employees that they hadn't felt comfortable expressing their beliefs at work, and calls for Google's "largely liberal-democratic" workforce to be more tolerant and inclusive.
Wall Street investors might have been "more tolerant" of these red flags if WeWork's IPO wasn't coming after a series of lackluster public market debuts this year, according to Kathleen Smith, principal at Renaissance Capital, which manages IPO-focused exchange-traded funds.
With Trump signaling a more tolerant approach toward the much-maligned settlement movement, Israel's nationalist right now believes it has an ally in the White House, and Israeli hard-line leaders make no secret they will push for aggressive action in the occupied West Bank.
The second, iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy – and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood – and What That Means for the Rest of Us, by San Diego State University psychologist Jean Twenge, hit stores five months later.
The state is more tolerant of religious diversity than many European countries, argues Amanda van Eck, director of Inform, a research group that studies religious movements at the London School of Economics; in France, for instance, sects may be prosecuted for crimes including manipulation mentale.
If traffic estimates do roll out, they could make users more tolerant of longer ETAs and less likely to check a competing app since they'll know their driver might take longer to pick them up because congestion is to blame rather than Uber's algorithm.
Thomas Friedman got the ball rolling in The New York Times last November, praising bin Salam as the Middle East's great hope, a tireless reformer leading an "Arab Spring, Saudi style" which would modernize the oil-rich autocracy and promote a more tolerant Islam.
Given that Trump and Sessions both support a "tough on crime" approach to criminal justice, that could mean that the Justice Department will now take a more tolerant approach to police abuses and a less tolerant view of police reforms than the Obama administration did.
There's now a rift within the working class between mostly older people who are self disciplined, respectable and, often, bigoted, and parts of a younger cohort that are more disordered, less industrious, more celebrity-obsessed, but also more tolerant and open to the world.
But the current pope's more tolerant and inclusive language — preaching a welcoming message to gays and refugees, for instance, and opening a way for divorced Catholics to receive the sacraments — is sometimes at odds with the way the faith is taught and understood in Poland.
" In the spring of 2000, an article in Wired announced that the internet had already healed a divided America: "We are, as a nation, better educated, more tolerant, and more connected because of — not in spite of — the convergence of the internet and public life.
Professor of psychology, San Diego State University; author of "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy — and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood" Not that long ago, the biggest distractions for college students were alcohol, sex, and parties.
The basic rights enjoyed by its citizens — equality before the law, freedom of association, of expression and to cultivate their own languages — meant that the monarchy was less repressive than tsarist Russia and more tolerant than imperial Germany in its management of national diversity.
While in their respective television worlds, Arya Stark probably wouldn't give good girl Nancy Wheeler the time of day — she might be more tolerant of Jonathan Byers since he's a little bit twisted — Maisie Williams seems to have a found fun IRL friends in Dyer and Heaton.
There's some debate among scholars about whether American Muslims' increasing liberalism on issues like homosexuality is the result of recent immigrants' assimilation to mainstream American values or the rise of native-born millennials, who, like their non-Muslim peers, are more tolerant of the LGBT community.
The Trevor Project: This $6 million organization exists to support LGBT youth in crisis, operates a safe social network, supports research into decreasing the burden of suicide and depression in this population and advocates to help the nation continue to become more tolerant of its diversity.
Saudi Arabia has witnessed a series of radical political changes over the past year under the king's son, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has spearheaded reforms to transform the economy, open the country culturally, and impose a more tolerant form of Islam in the deeply conservative kingdom.
Though Madison Square Garden Company, who produces the Rockettes, later clarified that the dancers would not be required to perform, the company's executive chairman, James Dolan, recently spoke to concerned dancers and encouraged them to be more "tolerant," according to an exclusive published by Marie Claire.
In time, they caught up with the positive feedback loop of such representation—an entertainment and media industry that imagined a more tolerant world into existence, one that invited queer people into America's living rooms and brought us to where we are now: finally, miraculously, commonplace.
Either way, "American History X" is a combustible and ever-relevant drama, starring Norton as a neo-Nazi leader who serves three years for manslaughter and comes out of prison a changed man, eager to steer his younger brother (Edward Furlong) down a more tolerant path.
As a result, the Chinese government has generally been somewhat more tolerant of labor activity at factories belonging to multinationals, and to some extent at factories in their supply chains, while taking a very strict stance toward any hint of independent labor actions at purely domestic companies.
After centuries of what many people justifiably see as oppression, they think it's time the country has an open conversation about what has been going wrong all this time and how the country can move forward to be more tolerant and accepting of a diverse population.
Just as the rush to find gold transformed Ballarat from a small sheep station into a major mining settlement, the new willingness to speak out about the abuse scandal has turned Ballarat from a closed, conservative former mining town and industrial city into a more tolerant and inclusive community.
"But I think there's definitely a lot more progress being made, I think people of our generation and the next generation are definitely the more tolerant and more understanding of this," Pink Dot hopes that the increase of local participation sends a message — that Singaporean society has changed.
From the time France reluctantly ended its mandate in 1943, and particularly in the decades between the close of World War II and the disaster that tore Lebanon apart in the 1970s, Beirut was more cosmopolitan, more tolerant and, perhaps above all, more self-indulgent than any Arab city.
By George Gresham, president of 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers East, the largest healthcare union in America I'm honored to have the opportunity to contribute to this forum because I believe strongly that the younger generation will lead us to a more tolerant, progressive, compassionate, inclusive, and economically just society.
Several days ago, Thomas Friedman of the New York Times, who until recently has been far more tolerant of Trump's behavior on Russia than I have, issued his own dire warning and call to action on the most important security issue facing the United States; better late than never.
And according to data from the Policy Agendas Project, an academic research group, the public also holds views that are more tolerant than ever on social issues like same-sex marriage; worries more about the environment; and is more enthusiastic about immigration and giving a helping hand to African-Americans.
That's OK for now — "Central banks are more tolerant of running the economy a bit hotter for a period," he said — and inflation overall can be a good thing, because it means we're not in a period of deflation, which was a big concern for many over the last few years.
As patients are transported by chunky VR goggles into a three-dimensional world of Japanese zen gardens or snowy hillsides, they become more tolerant of minor but painful procedures such as having a cut stitched, a burn treated, a urinary catheter inserted or a dislocated shoulder pushed back into place.
There is also a distinction to be drawn between Al Jazeera's English-language service (started with the help of many staff poached from the BBC) and its Arabic version, which is more biased in support of political Islam, more tolerant of extremism and closer to being a mouthpiece for the Qatari government.
The fate of liberal democracy may now hinge on whether we are able to formulate a reformist, forward-looking vision for a better politics—one that unites citizens in pursuit of a more tolerant and prosperous future, rather than pitting groups against one another or concluding that our political system is beyond remedy.
At one extreme, Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at San Diego State University, says it all with the title of her recent book, "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids are Growing up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood—and What That Means for the Rest of Us".
But over all, what I've seen as president in traveling around the country is, particularly, the next generation, young people, their appreciation of people who are different than them, come from different places, have different backgrounds, my daughter's generation, they're far more sophisticated about race, far more tolerant and embracing of diversity.
Much like with antibiotics, bacteria might be surviving and becoming more tolerant if they're being exposed to diluted levels of disinfectants, either because doctors aren't rubbing their hands long enough or because of the type of solution itself—foam or gel-based rubs, the authors noted, might be less effective than typical liquid ones.
"Both human subjects and animals could profit from this treatment because allergic cat owners would reduce their risk of developing chronic diseases, such as asthma, and become more tolerant of their cats, which therefore could stay in the households and not need to be relinquished to animal shelters," the researcher write in the paper.
The plan, if approved at the church's worldwide conference in Minneapolis in May, would divide the third-largest U.S. Christian denomination into two branches: a traditionalist branch that opposes gay marriage and the ordination of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender clergy, and a more tolerant branch that will allow same-sex marriage and LGBT clergy.
The political scientist Scott Althaus has calculated that a voter with more knowledge of politics will, on balance, be less eager to go to war, less punitive about crime, more tolerant on social issues, less accepting of government control of the economy, and more willing to accept taxes in order to reduce the federal deficit.
The economy is mired in its worst crisis in a decade, and security forces have in the past week snuffed out five attempts by the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) to hold street demonstrations, dashing hopes that the government might live up to promises of becoming more tolerant of dissent than the one it replaced.
No reason has given for Drake's real estate maneuvers but consider this: if you're a Canadian citizen who can, at a moment's notice, head back to socialized medicine, a (marginally) more tolerant society, and less gung-ho patriotism cum white supremacy, wouldn't you hightail it out of America's hellfire and back to the slightly sizzling frying pan of Canada?
"IGen has a different flavor," said Dr. Twenge of San Diego State University and author of "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy — and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood — and What That Means for the Rest of Us." It is tricky to define a large part of the population.
JAKARTA — The sight of tens of thousands of Islamists marching through the Indonesian capital this month, demanding that its Christian governor be jailed for blasphemy — some even calling for his death — brought back recurrent fears of "creeping Islamization" in the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation, where a more tolerant brand of Islam has been the norm.
While I have a greater appreciation for cold weather than some people, as heat is the enemy of fashion, I am by no means more tolerant of the chill—I always carry an extra layer in my purse because I don't like being cold, whether I'm on the air-conditioned subway in late July or walking down Prince Street on New Year's Eve.
What they found was that on social tolerance questions and statements — like should women "take care of running their homes and leave running the country up to men?" and "White people have a right to keep Africans Americans out of their neighborhoods if they want to, and African Americans should respect that right" — older generations grew more tolerant compared with their responses in an earlier era.
They are more likely to be comfortable with the idea of socialism and more tolerant of what the Daily Mail called Sanders's "very 1960s love life," of the content of Sanders's early writings and of his son born outside of marriage — matters, for better or worse, that are of concern to socially moderate and more conservative voters on whom much is riding in this election.
"The Decline in Adult Activities Among U.S. Adolescents, 173–2016," and its accompanying book by one of the same authors, iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood, are both the result of an ocean of data that serves to prove just what their titles suggest, and what Wright had come to learn anecdotally: Teens are different now.
Mr. Vucic, he said, was betting that Western leaders would watch the throngs of people cheering as he embraced the Russian leader in a European capital and "become even more tolerant toward his autocratic behavior, in the hope that he doesn't drop Serbia's formal commitment to join the E.U." That has opened an opportunity for Russia, which sees Serbia as a potentially fruitful investment target, especially to supply natural gas.
But many, especially those who have fought for L.G.B.T. equality for decades and have seen society grow more tolerant but not entirely accepting, say that Mr. Buttigieg's contribution to history will be misunderstood and diminished if the main takeaway is that the first openly gay man to have a serious shot at the presidency elicited a collective shrug from a country, as if the country had moved on from its homophobic past.
My fellow Americans would be so much more tolerant if we all had the time and money to hit the road with our families and truly understand what makes this country great: the diverse natural beauty, the kind and caring people of all stripes in every region (including the despised "coastal elites," whoever they are) and a rich history that has helped us learn from our mistakes, where we care to dig deeper and understand.
These include research by psychologist and San Diego State University professor Jean Twenge, the author of "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy-and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood-and What That Means for the Rest of Us," that found American teens who spend three or more hours a day on electronic devices are more likely to have a risk factor for suicide than their peers who use them for less than an hour a day.

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