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378 Sentences With "panics"

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

No. The use case is still there, but in the short term, panics are panics.
These panics about immigration, instead, reflect a long history of sexual panics in the West about nonwhite immigrants.
You don&apost want anything to impede a rescue effort where someone panics and then a child panics and could drag somebody under.
It makes sense to buy Bitcoin during the panics, and I'm expecting a few panics over the next few months as things resolve themselves.
And sure there have been moral panics in the past about kids watching hours and hours of TV. There are in fact very often moral panics associated with new technologies.
As she shakes and panics, he smiles before embracing her.
These panics have directly caused repressive policies and ruined lives.
Back to the Pit, where the panics are crushing you.
An attempted terrorist attack panics commuters in New York City.
When she panics, her eyebrows move into another time zone.
It seems what exactly triggers the kernel panics is still unknown.
If a swimmer panics, that can restrict breathing and turn deadly.
Hasn&apost anyone noticed a pattern in these phony panics yet?
The driver of the car then "panics and retreats," she says.
Rebecca finds herself on the outside, looking in — and she panics.
Such concerns feel more credible than prior panics, for two reasons.
These two factors make this year's "panic" distinct from past panics.
Moral panics feature implausible or bizarre allegations and enormous, coordinated conspiracies.
Kelly panics in large crowds and can't listen to loud music.
We will have panics but not an exact repeat of Oct.
Or say: big money, lawsuits, lice panics and monstrous little pyromaniacs.
If he panics, he does it silently, then makes a joke.
If an expediter panics and breaks down, so does that harmony.
Moral panics usually arise in the midst of greater social unease.
As her due date approaches, Rebecca panics and completely forget's Jack's birthday.
All panics begin with a rational fear that quickly turns dangerously irrational.
There are little panics, like stores being cleaned out of toilet paper.
Throughout history, we've had moral panics around things manipulating our kids' brains.
And Davetta panics, because her daughter is running in that same crowd.
The boy panics, and leaves her in the lurch, as she sighs.
It may appear that moral panics are back, but something has changed.
I feel like so many of the moral panics we have regarding technology, social media and sort of like dating and sex in particular, are actually moral panics about things that exist in human nature and exist offline.
They reformed economic management so economic cycles could be smoothed and panics contained.
Everyone panics, but Usher quickly buys off Walker with a fancy chancellorship gig.
Entire federal bureaucracies owe their reach and power to long-dead conspiracy panics.
Bank panics led thousands of them to fail, wiping out their customers' savings.
The same things that inspire conspiracies today likely fueled these early occult panics.
The currency is often compared unfavorably to the greatest financial panics in history.
Another woman panics because her farm's animals have vanished while rats are everywhere.
He's patient, he never panics, he's got a lot of confidence in himself.
He can make any play wants, he never panics, he never gets rattled.
This is a shifting one, and there's a variety of proxy panics going on.
"These sorts of panics tend to surface when there's underlying social anxiety," Radford says.
He sees one and panics, but it's just his mind playing tricks on him.
Doomsday prepping is an American invention, born from the nuclear panics of the 1950s.
That certainly didn′t prevent inflation and financial panics, which the ancient Greeks suffered.
Zachary, panics profusely at the prospect of improvising a speech, but Shitstain trusts him.
This is also characteristic: Most moral panics are ultimately undone by their own excesses.
Totally mortified, Olivia panics: Ben does not materialize, so that meltdown is another bust.
There's no way to get the answer "right" and so she sort of panics.
That provision is intended to prevent banks from triggering financial panics upon sudden failure.
Dreamily happy, he looks at his watch and panics: only two hours have passed!
The Federal Reserve system was enshrined in 1913 following a series of bank panics.
The music traces her racing thoughts as she panics, then tries to calm down.
When at 17 she sees that man again, unchanged despite the years, Alice panics.
And trade wars and government shutdowns have caused some glaring panics in the past.
He can make any play he wants, he never panics, he never gets rattled.
When Charlotte loses her best friend Harriet's daughter at a school fair, she panics.
Already in the 19th century the Bank was intervening in order to quell banking panics.
At least then you could pretend to feel smugly superior as everyone around you panics.
And the English still succumb to newspaper-led moral panics, just as their forebears did.
Stock market bubbles and panics are now largely viewed through the lens of behavioral economics.
But ultimately sexting "addiction," like most sex tech panics, is something of an overblown idea.
But these panics are no longer sweeping up entire regions or recruiting serious media figures.
Their buying, in turn, helped stabilize prices, snuffing out slumps before they morphed into panics.
"It's funny how everyone panics here," he said of a recent dusting in the area.
Global markets shudder when panics start, which is why bets on potential crises are risky.
Without a domestic central bank, the Italian treasuries market is prone to self-fulfilling panics.
In theory, gig work is tailor-made for virus panics, or any broad economic swing.
Even as she silently panics, you can feel a plan forming in Offred's resourceful mind.
He panics if she so much as double parks, worried it will attract the police.
This simple show provides a canvas on which to project national neuroses and minor moral panics.
"An agoraphobic panics because she cannot estimate where she is in space and time," Frank writes.
He was unable to work for six months and still panics when he hears loud noises.
They also kept banking panics from spreading, which would have amplified the pain of the downturn.
If moral panics themselves follow a relatively consistent pattern, so do the criticisms levied against them.
Doug and LeAnn are called into the Oval as Team Underwood panics about the dismal polls.
This may be why occult inflected pedophile panics don't seem to strike there as often now.
Tuca ruins her first date with someone she likes because she panics and pushes him away.
The woman of faith opens her husband's laptop, discovers that he has been unfaithful and panics.
Saban, who some of our readers say never panics, has to be a bit puckered now.
That's the main thing that panics fiscal conservatives, because that costs the government more each year.
"The people who study panic ... find that actual panics are rare," he said in the podcast.
Then you have the moment of him waking up on the moving train and he panics.
Miniature panics about what photo apps are doing with the personal data they collect happen fairly often.
After the many panics of "Night Moves," Frances Dufresne is actually ready to live her own life.
His sexual practices are of the dangerous and kinky kind that exemplified moral panics towards gay people.
That is all coming and at that point the market will harden itself against panics and booms.
Disapproving finger-pointers penned whiny moral panics and sermons about how it encouraged crime and provoked danger.
Ed Yardeni, an independent stock market strategist, has identified 58 of these small market panics since 2009.
Occasionally, he goes into deep panics about his work and cancels plans — and not just with me.
Disappointing data and earnings updates could ignite periodic panics over the threat of recession, even if remote.
As establishment business money panics at the potential of a Trump presidency, Clinton should see an opportunity.
Having people you think are like you have the same opinion is how fads, bubbles, and panics start.
That could help him weather panics in the market and even potentially buy assets at fire-sale prices.
History shows that oil price spikes — not financial panics — are the leading cause of recessions in modern America.
Moreover, the years ahead will occasionally deliver major market declines – even panics – that will affect virtually all stocks.
The roving moral panics that Pokémon has always magnetically attracted are not necessarily all unreasonable or totally unfounded.
And panics, for their part, don't always have to transform into official moves to persecute and banish scapegoats.
When the ferris wheel stalls, leaving them stuck hundreds of feet in the air, neither of them panics.
I have no relationship with Carole whatsoever," Frankel panics over the phone in "Guess Who's Arguing at Dinner?
The roving moral panics that Pokémon has always magnetically attracted are not necessarily all unreasonable or totally unfounded.
And panics, for their part, don't always have to transform into official moves to persecute and banish scapegoats.
The first iteration of this wasn't the Satanic panics of the 80s, but hundreds of years previously, right?
Moral panics are a recognized historical phenomenon, with common features that appear consistently across different times and places.
After hearing about an explosion on the rig that her ex-lover Hollywood is working on, Violet panics.
In fact, however, our drug prohibitions were created after a series of moral panics over race and immigration.
He panics at the possibility of losing his job, being deported and failing as a husband and father.
The distraught young woman panics at the sight of Alex, and screams for the whole house to hear.
She still shakes when she thinks about it, and panics whenever a car comes up her driveway unannounced.
Congress created the SPR in 1975, after the Arab oil embargo spiked oil prices and spurred shortage panics.
I called Christian Day, a professor at Syracuse University law school who has written about bubbles and panics.
Though he didn't mention financial panics, Cain might have noted that, although the gold-standard era was pock-marked with them, there were actually more panics during the two decades after the Fed's establishment (and the end of the classical gold standard era) than there'd been during the previous two decades.
It would avoid panics and ensure that any flight to safety would benefit all euro countries, not just Germany.
Capitalism has always been plagued by financial panics in which lenders lose confidence in the creditworthiness of private banks.
There had been semiregular panics about Kelly's coming divorce with Trump basically since the moment he took the job.
Macbeth is momentarily disturbed by MacDuff's knocking at the gate, and he panics that his crime might be discovered.
"Glass Eyes" is a narrative about a man who panics on commute into a city his nerves can't handle.
"Boom Bust Boom" explores the economic collapse of 2008 and uses it to investigate past financial panics and depressions.
It is a culture of oversensitivity, overreaction and frequent moral panics, during which everybody feels compelled to go along.
Prince's politics (and the panics surrounding them) have catalyzed our abilities not to need to adhere to steadfast identities.
I am concerned about your boyfriend's "deep panics" and doubtful that our civilian assistance will be a big help.
Kimmel's cousin Micki, who panics every time she discovers the figure lurking in the kitchen or the writers' room.
But revisiting the "copypasta" panics of the past, and the confident, defiant corrections they inspired, makes for strange reading.
But revisiting the "copypasta" panics of the past, and the confident, defiant corrections they inspired, makes for strange reading.
To cast our recurring panics as technophobic reruns is to misidentify what animates them most: Not fear, but helplessness.
Their funds are usually deployed for decades, making them far less vulnerable to panics than banks and many hedge funds.
But before anyone panics, there's no need to get on the next plane — unless you really want to, of course.
Usually, black swans in financial markets are meant to refer to big, bad panics characterized by massive waves of selling.
"We should ask questions of why young music fans are the focus of these kinds of panics," Hill tells me.
Grocery stores are already struggling to keep up with demand for some items as everyone panics and buys too much.
"I think we're going to look back and see this as one of the great panics of civilization," he said.
"I think we're going to look back and see this as one of the great panics of civilization," Novogratz said.
There is, in fact, a long history of clown sightings and subsequent clown panics in the US, stretching back decades.
And if we've learned anything from Twitter, it's that Wall Street really panics when it looks like growth is slowing down.
Investors have said the relatively slow speed of the latest sell-off, when compared with recent panics, has kept hedging subdued.
One of the lessons of the crisis is that panics can be caused by things hidden until it is too late.
The covert blackout operation seems tacked-on and barely related, a throwback to more traditional government takeover panics like Jade Helm.
People think he's strong, but Henry panics if he isn't the only two-legged man in a room full of cripples.
Bonn notes that there are two types of moral panics: those led by grass roots activists and those spurred by elites.
Do you think this is one of those moral panics that parents freak out over—and that actually teenagers are fine?
Bouts of turmoil, including debt woes that threatened the eurozone and financial panics in some emerging markets, added to the gloom.
Relying more on bonds now means a less opaque system that may be a little less prone to sudden financial panics.
"If you're an investor who panics about everything, you should not have an allocation that's 90 percent stocks," Ms. Ruhlin said.
Even so, pestilential panics like Covid-21 come along every so often, and they sometimes become full-blown levellers of humanity.
Karla panics during a call to her lawyer — her ex has a girlfriend and a business, and she's only a waitress.
Jessica calls one bright pink dildo covered it ridges "really scary" and panics about how to even use her new products.
The bullet hits one man, and then fires again and hits another as the congregation panics and screams from the chaos.
National panics have broken out in the past decade after consumers discovered high heavy-metal content in rice grown near smelters.
If someone panics, Kat must talk them down, and do it in a way that doesn't overwhelm everyone else in the room.
Sonny Draftday panics, sending three first-round picks to Seattle in order to get the franchise player and championship Cleveland desperately wants.
Just as Jess is about to say she'll marry Sam, she panics and shrieks "TRUE AMERICAN!" summoning the gang for a game.
The impact of moral panics might not seem directly relevant to the kind of intensity Nichols is talking about in his piece.
It was a classic case in accordance with criminologist Stanley Cohen's framework, popularized by his 113 study, Folk Devils and Moral Panics.
Soon, money market funds with no known Lehman exposure were having panics; in one week, investors in such funds withdrew $349 billion.
Their moral panics make more sense in this light, explaining why laws against gross indecency (in effect, homosexuality) were passed in 1885.
But when Will admits to Ken that he's the target, Ken panics and runs for reassurance to Jay, who loops in Zeke.
And of course, your digestive system panics and tries to push everything through as fast as it can — not a fun experience.
It was a classic case in accordance with criminologist Stanley Cohen's framework, popularized by his 113 study, Folk Devils and Moral Panics.
I had seen my share of modest panics, but I still believed that investors were fundamentally rational in their economic decision-making.
Insurers, after all, make long-term investments, and are not normally subject to the sorts of panics and runs that afflict banks.
While Wall Street panics about falling rates, Main Street is benefiting, especially in the housing market, according to housing guru Ivy Zelman.
On the other hand, as Lehman showed, financial panics cause mass financial destruction, even when we engage in some degree of bailouts.
As moral panics about danger and depravity lost traction, popular tech criticism became nebulous and fretful, concerned with vague themes and forecasts.
He throws epic tantrums to avoid bathing, wakes up screaming at night and panics at the idea of being left with a babysitter.
She panics when a goomba slowly shambles toward her, and is terrified of falling down into pits (especially if they're filled with spikes).
And even as she panics about feeling stuck right now, she reminds herself that life takes unexpected turns in all sorts of ways.
Check out the vid ... Molly panics when the shark approaches, and next thing you know she's screaming as she clutches her bloody foot.
In fact, all of the characteristic critiques of moral panics have been used by the people I quoted earlier against the #MeToo phenomenon.
Panics about "technological unemployment" struck in the 1960s (when firms first installed computers and robots) and the 1980s (when PCs landed on desks).
Unfamiliar with the details of earlier European panics, most Americans approached increasingly wild claims with an unnerving degree of credulous naivete, said Sjöberg.
We're having these super aggressive panics that a missile's flying midair towards our heads, and maybe we should get text updates on that.
He slips away but panics when he sees police officers checking the papers of passers-by; he starts to run and is killed.
Many big events in the news — Brexit, the November election — set off panics but turn out to be fine for the stock market.
This "greening of hate" keys into long-standing Malthusian panics about scarcity and overpopulation as the great threats to civilization and global order.
In cities like London, they survive by foraging in trash cans or chasing prey in parks and backyards, which occasionally causes social panics.
A good Nak Muay is like a Greek Phalanx fighting the horde, implacable until the opponent panics and breaks, and then it's all over.
"Before the era of Anonymous, most news stories about hacking were panics of one sort or another," Best told Motherboard in an online chat.
Perhaps that's why nobody panics when no one can figure out how to work the large-screen TV at the front of the room.
His sensibility suited a generation convinced that it had invented sex, in the sixties, and the pleasures and panics of narcissism, in the seventies.
European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure said there was a growing prevalence of poor quality data which risks fuelling economic manias and panics.
It helps ensure that the United States can afford to finance wars, and it gives the government greater ability to fight recessions and panics.
Similar panics bounced around Europe well into the late 1800s, Sjöberg notes, often in "naïve" communities that had not yet dealt with them before.
"After seeing how the public panics over coronavirus, I can see why the government would never tell us about Aliens," reads one shared post.
Not only does the idea that technology "hijacks" our brains smack of the same moral panics leveled at previous pastimes—Novels corrupt women's minds!
How Lucy's father, who returned from the Second World War with post-traumatic stress disorder, flew into unstoppable panics and brutally humiliated Lucy's brother.
Kim Jong Un calls Trump a dotard, Trump retaliates with something insane, and everyone VERY REASONABLY panics for a month about the nuclear holocaust.
In this way, these new moral panics do have something in common with Luddism, though not as it is now popularly and mistakenly understood.
Noelle goes on a mission to find her brother, who is next in line to be Santa, after he panics and leaves the North Pole.
Authoritarians of both sorts benefit from spreading falsehoods about their opponents, ginning up panics about minority groups, and undermining people's trust in the independent media.
Peter Mallouk, president and chief investment officer of Creative Planning, told CNBC that patience was the key to weathering short-term panics, such as Brexit.
Now, the man breaking in sees this obviously panics and takes a tumble out of the window that would make a silent film star jealous.
"These kinds of market panics are usually short-lived and investing is a long-term pursuit," says RBC Global Asset Management's Chief Economist Eric Lascelles.
Moral panics have assailed everything from comic books to Dungeons & Dragons, and this particular one is no more legitimate because it's happening again to games.
Eventually three men dressed in black appear and begin to dance; the goat panics as they get closer and closer, its cries becoming increasingly shrill.
Milner and I explore this difficulty in our chapter about the satanic panics of the 1980s and '90s, as well as its Trump-era reboot.
The original disaster sparked panics in China and on the United States West Coast, where radioactive isotopes have been detected in the California wine crop.
In his recent book, "Market Madness: A Century of Oil Panics, Crises and Crashes," Blake Clayton catalogues four eras when the world panicked about "peak oil".
An expert previously told PEOPLE that the clown panics trace back decades, to the '80s and reports of "phantom clowns" trying to lure or abduct children.
On the other hand, he notes, grassroots moral panics may be amplified by social media, "which could be the basis for disseminating falsehoods and hysteria"—a.k.a.
But even if (when?) this does happen, it will not make #MeToo a moral panic, because moral panics require more than a couple of false allegations.
That, combined with frequent moral panics over drugs, gambling and technology, means we need to carefully consider whether adding a new diagnosis is a good idea.
AND IT IS REALLY TRAGIC BECAUSE IT IS A FAMILY THEN AN AVALANCHE COMES AND THE DAD PANICS AND RUNS AWAY, LEAVING THE FAMILY TO DIE.
Scarcity concerns became prominent again in the 1940s, the 1970/80s and the 2000s ("Market madness: a century of oil panics, crises and crashes", Clayton, 2015).
When it's not due to rising rents, panics over "the drugs menace" or noise complaints, it's to make way for another gleaming set of pricey flats.
"If the whole market panics going into Britain's vote on whether to leave the European Union next week, I would buy some Smucker into weakness," Cramer said.
The Federal Reserve's most recent financial stability report, in November 2019, warns there were two specific episodes of liquidity panics in equity options markets in 85033 alone.
Often these laws are fast-tracked through legislatures in response to specific events or media panics, without the scrutiny that would typically accompany such far-reaching laws.
From Kodak To Google, How Privacy Panics Distort Policy Most Americans expect the Fourth Amendment — which protects individuals from illegal searches — to extend to their digital lives.
But even though naive societies are more prone to these panics, Sjöberg stressed, this doesn't mean one experience inoculates a community against experiencing variations of them again.
The fantastical adventures on the Woman's journey soon come to a crisis point, when, alone in the garden, she panics, realizing that beauty fades, including her own.
Suddenly, everyone panics, and that manifests in the mass buying of toilet paper, which leads to a shortage, which leads to more panic, and the cycle repeats.
You usually get about a week's warning, and everyone panics and clears the store shelves, and businesses start to close and events get canceled, and then... nothing.
Afraid that they will force her to marry Solmes and manipulated by a less than wholly truthful Lovelace, she panics and runs off with her dashing admirer.
A series of anti-fake news or hate speech bills have been fast-tracked through legislatures around the world in response to specific events or media panics.
Overwhelmed, the candidate panics and kicks the instructor in the stomach ... after he is sent out of the pool he decides to drop out of the course.
And any deviations from "normal" monogamous heterosexuality — often a husband lacking in devotion, or having affairs — inevitably become the cause for sensationalist mini-panics and media tut-tutting.
"The structure of the market was massively expanded by various panics," Mark Westrom, the former owner and CEO of Armalite, which manufacturers the AR-15, told the Journal.
"Actions by economic agents could become less anchored to actual activity and more prone to manias and panics, with obvious implications for economic and financial stability," he added.
She visits the beachside hospital, bearing welcome, "useless" jokes, but when an extra bed appears for her to stay the night, she panics and decides to go home.
When the recipient's phone started processing it for preview, the device would start doing all sorts of weird things — from freezing, to home screen crashes, to kernel panics.
The seeds of the panic were sown over decades, as the American financial system outgrew the protections against panics that were put in place after the Great Depression.
She panics less for her own self than for the safety of her love, Alifair, who binds his chest and is prettier than any other boy in town.
It can be argued that these moral panics emerged at a moment when a narrative of the country's social prosperity and stability was emerging under the Reagan administration.
Though these early Illuminati panics fizzled out, they gave the group a patina of legitimacy that, later on, would help make a centuries-long conspiracy seem more plausible.
With capitalism afflicted by an unresolvable structural crisis, fresh populist consent had to be mobilised – often through moral panics about immigrants – for the imposition of harsh neoliberal policies.
This may be one reason why, according to Anna Sparrman, a professor of child studies at Linkoping University in Sweden, Scandinavian countries have not really seen premature-sexualisation panics.
In the end, she kisses him, deepening the embrace, pulling him closer until he panics and springs back, leaving her amid the covers, quizzical and full of self-doubt.
Indeed, there are echoes today of the panics stirred up by Suharto, which typically involved attacks on religious figures and institutions and sometimes a communist scare to discredit politicians.
As spotted by Steve Troughton-Smith and a report from Digital Trends, there are several threads pointing to kernel panics: on Apple's community discussion forums, MacRumors forums, and elsewhere.
Of the progress in human rights and technology, and the new moral panics that emerged in the 20th century: divorce, drug culture, terrorism, binge drinking, easy credit, and materialism?
In a country that teaches the dangers of moral panics in its public school curricula, from the Salem witch trials to the Red Scare, this is a resonant critique.
But to use such a loaded, powerful term without paying careful attention to the specific histories of the country's very real moral panics is an act of intellectual irresponsibility.
These tales of Satanic child abuse and sacrifices in secret tunnels marked by occult symbols, while pegged clearly to that era's culture and fears, harkened back to older panics.
Pizzagate and QAnon, may have strayed from older panics' primary focus on Satanism, but they carry forward similar language, structure, and certain motifs, all of which are still potent.
"Gold continues to suffer from risk-off panics in the market, trading back below $1,260 level," said Tai Wong, head of base and precious metals derivatives trading at BMO.
"In an environment where 30% swings over a weekend are reality, forecasting pricing during panics and hysteria is an exercise in futility," he wrote in a note to clients.
Though flickering dimly at times, that light has endured a civil war, great depressions, financial panics, and global confrontations to emerge on the other side with a brighter glow.
Hopes were building that euro zone finance ministers may be able to agree a new aid plan for Athens later without the last-minute panics that have typified previous discussions.
But the real problems at the root of these panics are complicated and full of unsexy little contradictions and compromises and resolutions that are far off from actually becoming reality.
Greek yields hovered at six-month lows on hopes that euro zone finance ministers may be able to agree a new aid plan for Athens without any last minute panics.
I let her know where things stand, and she slightly panics and says they're not ready to be alone yet and desperately need the support as they continue to grieve.
But historically, the banking industry is associated with periodic "panics" and catastrophes because the business of borrowing short and lending long is inherently prone to collapsing whenever sentiment turns negative.
But the real problems at the root of these panics are complicated and full of unsexy little contradictions and compromises and resolutions that are far off from actually becoming reality.
Among believers an atheist, among atheists a skeptic, among skeptics an agnostic, among agnostics all emphatic on the apophatic, I laughed in my beard at market panics, fanaticism, Beyoncé worship.
The takes have emerged like cicadas from the uneasy earth: inevitable, predictable, the same droning noise about misandry and sex panics and feminism going too far for its own good.
These accusations led, over the course of numerous panics across Europe, to the imprisonment, torture, coercion of confessions, and eventual execution of tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of individuals.
Nor is the fact that unlike earlier occult panics, which depended on the (dubious) testimonies of "actual" child victims as anchors, these theories just make claims without identifying clear victims.
It means, for instance, if and when the next AR/VR hit finally arrives, we should all be better able to distinguish between silly moral panics and truly worrying consequences.
A timeline on one wall elides world history: We move swiftly from "Jesus Christ is crucified" to witch panics in 16th-century Scotland, with an implicit link between the two.
"There is usually a set of moral panics that emerge around technologies when they come into being," said Isra Ali, a New York University professor of media, culture and communication.
I knew from a young age that I didn&apost want to be the cause of one of these post-death panics that send loved ones into a frantic scramble.
He said that after major panics, conspiracy theories can flourish, and elevate extreme politicians who seek to paint their political opponents as the root of the pain felt by voters.
Would-be dog owners are often concerned about unknown health issues and separation anxiety, which is when a dog panics at the owner's departure and stays panicked until they return.
If either the Republican or Democratic rank-and-file panics, it becomes very hard for the leadership to continue to hold out for their wish lists to end the shutdown.
"The reason you know you have tapeworms is you look in your stool and you find bits of tapeworm floating in the water -- and that usually panics you enormously," Schaffner said.
EU regulators have also found themselves dealing with a huge influx of GDPR "rumors," or large-scale panics spreading across social media, misinterpreting how the law applies to everyday life events.
Pokémon came on the scene in the middle of a spate of panics involving violent crime and youth delinquency, but a few years before the focus on mass shooters or terrorism.
Many also argue that the risks of lending and borrowing among investment banks in the capital markets — so-called "shadow banking" — carry the potential to produce panics, runs, and other crises.
Though atrocities like Duterte's are obviously extreme even in the context of the global drug war, they show what can happen when moral panics about drugs get way out of hand.
As Charles Kindleberger explained in his book "Manias, Panics and Crashes", enthusiasm for new markets or technologies frequently results in excessive optimism, which ultimately collides with reality in a spectacular crash.
Abbi finds a gray hair and panics immediately about getting old, a fear barely assuaged when she has a lot in common with an elderly woman selling art outside the Met.
Pokémon came on the scene in the middle of a spate of panics involving violent crime and youth delinquency, but a few years before the focus on mass shooters or terrorism.
This makes it sensitive to panics resulting from disruptions in the Brexit talks (such as one side walking out in a huff) or, worse, from Britain crashing out without a deal.
Without his handler, Buck panics at the microphone and begins to tell what he thinks of as surefire jokes: One is racist; another (in Key West, mind) is jaw-droppingly homophobic.
If the books in Grace's tiny apartment are any indication, her specialty is law, while her son's is contravening it, a lifestyle that tempts Eze, who panics without his American privilege.
He panics, and I panic for him and because it reminds me that I have outstanding court fines: for heroin possession, for possession of a spoon, for not wearing a seatbelt.
In particular, we need to understand how exaggerated fears and false moral panics, stoked by ambitious politicians and yellow journalism, can lead to irrational policy responses that should never be repeated.
These so-called algorithms might then choose to buy and sell the same securities at the same time, potentially amplifying swings in asset prices and worsening liquidity shortages during market panics.
The film itself is a disconcerting look at nuclear tests and missteps, plunging the viewer into old footage and warnings from Cold War-era panics right up to the present day.
Many of the police departments appear to simply be hearing about the alleged viral phenomenon via other police departments in other states, and the internet often fuels panics over exaggerated criminal incidents.
These include witch hunts for communists, fear of Asian immigrants, all sorts of fun moral panics about sex: between races, in public bathhouses, and, most recently, something about bathrooms and transgender individuals.
But in recent decades, focus on capital appreciation and other ways of rewarding shareholders have mostly kept equity yields underneath those of corporate bonds, except during market panics such as in 2008.
They were published in HuffPo once — ONCE — and all of a sudden they're a bigshot writer with a lot of opinions about "sex panics" and oh man, here comes the Medium post.
The basic narrative has not changed since the first oil well was drilled in 1859, with periods of oversupply (1900s, 19903s, 1950s and 1990s) alternating with panics about shortages (1910s, 21970s, 251s).
Mary deYoung, a social psychologist and expert on moral panics, says the roots are often anxieties about social change or strains, and especially the potential loss of power by an in-group.
" At the same time, a Young Living Essential Oils distributor in Australia named Nat Mann also posted on Facebook, "As the world panics with Corona...sales for Thieves (Essential oil) are skyrocketing!!!...
Our present panics tend to arrive just as new parts of our economy, culture and politics are reconstituted within platform marketplaces — shifts that have turned out to be bigger than anyone anticipated.
She shadows a high school student named Olivia (Emily Robinson) through an entire school day and panics over what to wear when she's invited to go to the mall with Olivia's friends.
Some owners of Apple's latest MacBook Pro laptop are reporting their devices are being hit with multiple kernel panics, some as often as two times a day, according to a new 9to5Mac report.
"People do get nervous about liquidity panics, and if you look at the holders of bitcoin there are whole bunch of people who bought in at the wrong time in December," he said.
But as Clinton's remarks show, the newly identified phenomenon of "fake news" has become a way to focus larger concerns about disinformation, online rumor-panics, and the role of social media in newsmaking.
Valentine's Day is only a week away, and we would never recommend that anyone panics, but if you haven't got your gift sorted, you should maybe kind of panic (just a little bit!).
But thinking through the problems and complexities of #MeToo, which is in many ways an unprecedented event in US history, will require something more than reanimating the ghosts of our past moral panics.
Fearing the police's inquiry, Danny panics and takes off running, accompanied by a dog named Einstein, and spends a long time searching around town for Robert's daughter, to tell her what has happened.
He refers to the most widespread form of the phenomena as "clown panics" and says they trace back decades, to the '80s and reports of "phantom clowns" trying to lure or abduct children.
"The ensuing moral panics not only legitimize the efforts of moral entrepreneurs who push political and policy agendas," Joy Kadowaki, a sociologist and lawyer, said about the type of campaign Berenson has created.
And during these panics, the people who suffer most tend to be the racial minorities that politicians associate with the drugs, and the people who nonetheless became addicted, as well as their families.
She said that's all show business was: "transitioning panics," from losing a job to having more work than you can handle; from being afraid your dreams won't come true to realizing they've changed.
For example, as the world panics about the new coronavirus, which results in the disease known as COVID-19, how do you think the fictional paper people in Scranton, Pennsylvania, would be coping?
The nature of life insurers' business cycle, with its long-term promise to their customers, allows them to ride out broader financial panics without being forced to sell into a downward spiraling market.
And over that time the country had been through a revolution, civil war, two world wars, the Great Depression, the nuclear arms race… plus dozens of other wars, financial panics, and economic crises.
The strongest case for holding back panic in American politics is that some of our most notable panics have tended to be directed not at strong presidential power but at minorities in our midst.
Fox News panics about the menace of "leftist antifa thugs," local news networks worry about the prospect of anarchist invaders, and think piece after think piece warns that antifa's tactics are going too far.
Also, marijuana panics are much easier to stir up when there isn't another demon drug vying for public attention—and at the moment, given the tremendous overdose death rate, opioids are in the spotlight.
When Bertie panics over a big presentation at her job at Condé Nest, her devoted boyfriend Speckle (voiced by Steven Yeun) pantomimes lightly massaging her with a "worry vacuum" to suck her anxiety away.
When he commits murder, however accidental (if you consider murder a spoiler, do you know this show at all?), his voiceover panics and repeats "This isn't me" — but we all know that it is.
These things do tend to follow a prescribed sequence of events, one that financial experts Charles P. Kindleberger and Robert Z. Aliber described in their book Manias, Panics and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises.
Undoubtedly, American drug prohibition has been driven by factors other than racism and immigration panics as well—but what has not been taken into account by our laws is the harm these policies themselves do.
The 36-year-old reality star panics when she learns they were spotted by paparazzi during a walk along the water and her assistant Stephanie Shepherd shows her the unflattering bikini shots on her phone.
But another chapter appears to have given the meme new life: Mr. Green issued an update through The Nib, called This Is Not Fine, in which the dog wakes up from his stupor and panics.
The girl panics, freezes, thinks the guy will hurt her if she yells at him, starts making horrible calculations of futility: anyone who hears this story will think it's her fault for inviting him in.
Rick panics when Eik Nordstrom, her professional colleague and live-in lover, turns up in an English jail after crashing an investigation into the murder of Sofie Bygmann, a woman he once loved and lost.
This makes sense not only in terms of how urban legends and folkloric tropes are passed down through generations but also in terms of the cyclical social anxieties that trigger these kinds of mass panics.
But when Jay stumbles into the control room and sees that there are four new cameras trained on Darius and Ruby's private time, he panics and tells Quinn that they can't use any of that footage.
This only compounds problems of access and platform equality, however, and caving into the moral panics of a few angry users only serves as a distraction from the larger problems facing social media and streaming sites.
She panics and invites Jonathan Cheban, who says he will fly through the night with 40 burgers in his stomach to be there (of freakin' course he will...) even though he is part of neither family.
Bankers talk about "governance", ways to ensure private banks and central bankers make sound decisions—so they create just enough money make commerce easier, but not so much that the system collapses through inflation or panics.
These moral panics feature a number of characteristics, including implausible allegations, exaggerated victimization, excessive punishment, and especially, in my view, the fear that dark forces are conspiring in secret against a society's health and well-being.
When his father Robert (Kevin Kline, playing reasonable and kind) decides to sell the family house and move on, Dean responds exactly like Tina Fey and Amy Poehler in the recent Sisters: he panics and stalls.
Indeed, the history of world drug policy is a sad story of panics over particular drugs followed by crackdowns, which, at best, shift production from one country to another while failing to affect long-term supply.
While Trump tweets and panics, Conway looks on in disgust — and in the rare instances that she gets a punchline, it's to express regret that she ever got involved with Trump's campaign in the first place.
But there were panics about the ability of those groups to "assimilate" in the past as well, back when they weren't considered to fall into the same ethnoracial categories as native-born white Anglo-Saxon Protestants.
At first, I thought she was confused about which locker room she was in — something that occasionally happens when someone sees me in the women's restroom and briefly panics, thinking that they've walked into the men's room.
So the Satanic Panics were certainly [related] to white, middle-class women entering the work force in mass numbers and leaving their children entrusted to child care, and it had that certain kind of tension to it.
Folklorist and author Benjamin Radford previously told PEOPLE the clown sightings are likely to die down within a few weeks and says such sightings are nothing new, with so-called "clown panics" dating back to the 1980s.
Rich people are OK but need to be aware of their role in causing global financial panics, and the suffering in pockets of the world left behind by the so-called End of History and neoliberal revolution.
After she realizes how little she could get elsewhere in Manhattan for what she was spending on her rent-stabilized studio, she panics and tries to raise about $13,000 for a down payment any way she can.
Moreover, today's global market and the connectivity of various stock markets and bond issues, in which massive sell-offs can be accomplished in seconds, amplify financial panics into losses that were unimaginable only a few decades ago.
Playing around with the national debt, which Trump at one point suggested he'd like to restructure before walking the remark back, could create investor panics that make the 2011 fight over increasing the debt limit look tame.
This week on the Popcast, Mr. Caramanica discussed hip-hop's current generation-gap struggles, and its history of aesthetic panics, with Minya Oh, better known as Miss Info, the proprietor of the hip-hop news website MissInfo.
And that power remains with opinion leaders who are, at this point, skilled hands at distending their own cultural anxieties into panics that—time and time and time again—smother history, fact, and common sense into irrelevance.
It would be a mistake to give credence to every noisy critique of a platform, and some of the inevitable panics about Facebook, Google and Twitter — not to mention Amazon — will be bolstered by sheer reactionary traditionalism.
He says that so many generations have been raised on bird flu, swine flu, Y2K, Ebola, housing collapse, ozone holes, and peak oil panics that we wouldn't know how to live if we weren't constantly expecting our annihilation.
One of the lessons of the financial crisis is that it's possible for the risks associated with traditional banking — panics, bank runs, and cascading failures of institutions — to be present in activities and institutions that aren't traditional banks.
Foreign investors earn "exceptionally low returns" on their Treasury investments partly because their currencies decline during panics and because they tend to buy the bonds at times when they are in high demand, according to Krishnamurthy and Lustig.
Henriques gives us a gripping, almost minute-by-minute account of the weeks that followed, including the posturings, the denials and the panics, as well as the "web of trust, pluck and improvisation" that pulled the markets through.
In other ways, it was a message that stretched back much further, tied up in the history of American financial panics — and the secretive cabals accused of inciting them — going back to the 17th century, according to historians.
"Gold continues to suffer from risk-off panics in the market, trading back below $22009,500 level as S&P futures gave up stimulus driven gains," said Tai Wong, head of base and precious metals derivatives trading at BMO.
The financial sector is much safer, with much more capital to absorb banking losses, much less of the risky overnight funding that fuels panics, and much broader regulation of Wall Street institutions that once operated in the shadows.
Former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen told a New York audience she fears there could be another financial crisis because banking regulators have seen reductions in their authority to address panics and because of the current push to deregulate.
One that has begun cropping is the possibility that the T2 chip that enables things like secure boot, better encrypted storage, and "Hey Siri" support on the iMac Pro and the new MacBook Pros could be causing kernel panics.
Her body thrashes, panics, claws, makes noises, the backwards noises are just as unbearable, she stops making those noises, she raises up onto her knees, breathes raggedly, breathes, she loosens the noose, removes the noose, stands, unknots the noose.
As America endured stock-market scandals, economic panics, race riots and ballot-box stuffing, as its boys were sent off to die on foreign fields, baseball came to be seen as the last bastion of fair play and decency.
Even if the stock market slide doesn't hold through the week or the month, Trump can prove he's at least not tone deaf to potential panics and that's he big enough to at least acknowledge a stock market drop.
But in more cases, these panics will reveal themselves as concrete complaints, addressed to people and companies whose responsibility for the networks that connect us — for better and for worse — will finally start to catch up with their power.
In each book, Radford places the history of bad clowns within a larger context of moral panics throughout recent history — from the infamous "satanic panic" of the '80s to the panic over kids playing Pokémon in the late '90s.
As Digital Trends notes in its report on the story, some iMac Pro users have also been reporting kernel panics, which cast suspicion on the T2 chip, which is only found in Apple's latest MacBook Pro and the iMac Pro.
"As people employ this technology in sexual ways, the combination leads, inevitably, to these modern kinds of moral panics," with all the attendant scare pieces employing lines about dopamine rushes to make us fear for our ability to control our behavior.
In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president.
At first, there were panics and uprisings, food riots and rebellions, and a spike in witch trials—because, in a pre-scientific world, the idea that witches were responsible for failing harvests made as much sense as any other explanation.
And there is a further lesson, one that the history of market bubbles and financial panics — as well as mideclipse shark attacks — will confirm: We will almost certainly be looking in the wrong direction when the next attack comes around.
Then he used it like an instigator, tweeting his birther conspiracies before he would talk about them on Fox News, road-testing his call for a border wall during the cable-news fueled Ebola and border panics of the 16 midterms.
By our panics and hyperbole, not only are we in effect encouraging him to consider more adventures, we are giving him greater global clout than the leader of a declining, impoverished, underpopulated country stuck between a prosperous Europe and a rising China deserves.
And active management tends to come back in favor during bear markets or panics, when owning a full complement of stocks according to their weight in an index can come to seem like a penny-wise/pound-foolish approach for a while.
The SPR, established in the early 1970s after the Arab oil embargo caused widespread fuel supply panics, contains 679 million barrels of oil, enough to meet total U.S. needs for 33 days, in heavily guarded underground caverns on the Texas and Louisiana coasts.
Salem looms over our conception of the moral panic to such an extent that it can be easy to assume that nearly all such panics are the product of irrational religious fanaticism (and anti-communism had quasi-religious fanatical aspects of its own).
Outside the door, a comically dysfunctional family cajoles, threatens and panics, ultimately summoning a psychologist from a 24/7 emergency service called "Regretful Brides"; when the bride remains silent, the family musters a ladder truck to lift the psychologist to her window.
And there is a further lesson, one that both the history of market bubbles and financial panics - as well as mid-eclipse shark attacks - will confirm: we will almost certainly be looking in the wrong direction when the next attack comes round.
He preferred, like Trump, to get crucial information from TV pundits and eschew the experts in his own circle who might have told him that selling during panics is not wise and that having one stock in an undiversified portfolio is not smart.
This past weekend's strikes on critical infrastructure at Saudi Arabia's second largest oil field at Khurais and its vital crude oil stabilization center at Abqaiq virtually eliminated the cushion of spare oil field capacity that typically prevents market panics during large supply disruptions.
The move, reported by The Information, would be a significant shift for the company, which until now has relied on the cloud for much if its AI processing (also why Alexa panics when she loses her connection, announcing "I'm having trouble connecting to the internet").
Moral panics involve several critical players: so-called folk devils who are alleged to be the source of the threat; "moral entrepreneurs" who promote themselves and their solutions as salvation while hyping the threat; the media, which buys into it; and politicians, who react.
Before anyone panics and checks out the window for mutated monstrosities, it should be said right away that this isn't a nightmare scenario by any means: the tool can still be used in many ways safely, and the clinical repercussions of the damage are unexplored.
Yellen, whose term ends in February, warned that "for some" memories of the 2007-2009 financial crisis may be fading, and she said that only "modest" adjustments could be made to regulations meant to protect the economy from runs on banks and other financial panics.
One recurring presence in the report, weaving through a crowd of potential panics and crises that, according to its assessment, he has made more probable, is a figure who is planning to elbow his way through the halls of Davos itself: President Donald Trump.
Then the stock market crashed and the Great Depression sank its talons into the economy, bringing bank panics and closings, unemployment of 45 percent in the city, winding food lines, bulging public-relief rolls, and wage cuts for those lucky enough to still be working.
The anger that Mishra details seems based not on any acute experience of inequality or injustice but on deep racial and ethnic and cultural panics that repeatedly rise and fall in human affairs, largely indifferent to the circumstances of the time in which they summit.
He adds that the history of the Satanic Panic of the 80s and 90s—when sensational child-abuse allegations, many since debunked, rocked America—will also be featured in an exhibition at the headquarters, a reminder that moral panics are never too far in the rearview mirror.
She delves into the history of American religion in the 20th century (the proliferation of Ten Commandments monuments apparently came courtesy of Cecil B. DeMille) and the legacy of Satanic panics of the 1980s and '90s, when many of the featured interviewees — including Greaves — were growing up.
Naz panics when he sees the body, and the viewer cringes as we watch him do exactly the wrong things—we're trained from decades of cop shows to know the amateur mistakes he's making, how easy he's making it for the police to pin the crime on him.
In "Home Alone," a 1990 John Hughes movie that The Times said might be the "first Christmas black comedy for children," Mr. Heard's character, Peter McCallister, panics as he realizes that he has forgotten his son Kevin in the rush to get to the airport for a family trip to France.
As others have noted, the flourishes of these theories—Satanic rituals performed on child victims by depraved cabals, cryptic symbols signaling dark intent or links to the occult, and secret tunnels under ordinary businesses used to abet villainy—actually connect them to a discrete, centuries-old lineage of satanic, or occultic, panics.
Stepping back a bit from the necessarily loaded symbolism of military shooters, it's easy to trace the history of gun violence in games to a supposedly simpler time—one whose "violent video game" moral panics focused on the over-the-top, B-movie gore of games like Splatterhouse, Mortal Kombat, and DOOM.
"Although many prosecutors support Good Samaritan laws, there is a real conflict when someone actually recklessly caused death of another person and then panics and calls 911," says Josh Marquis, who has been the district attorney for Clatsop County, Oregon, since 1994, and is a spokesperson for the National District Attorney's Association.
The myth that birthright citizenship is a major driver of unauthorized migration conjures the idea of Latinos as sneaky welfare cheats — and while "birth tourism" by legal immigrants genuinely does exist, the occasional panics over it often fall into stereotypes about Asians being irreducibly foreign and permanently loyal to their ancestral homeland.
But, what makes La Casa special is how it manages to turn the soapy mechanisms of yore modern, in much the same way Jane Villenueva (Gina Rodriguez) & Co. have managed to do on the CW. Prodigal daughter Elena (Aislinn Derbez) panics about bringing her Black, American, English-speaking boyfriend (Sawandi Wilson) home to her family.
Marijuana panics also require public ignorance: the most significant of them occurred in the 30s, 50s, and 80s, when alternative perspectives were much harder to find and scientific data far more difficult to access, according to historian Emily Dufton, author of the forthcoming Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Marijuana in America.
Caroline: I'd argue that the characters already wish they'd never met each other from the second this season opens, as everyone panics over the enormous question of what to do with a dead and bleeding corpse (classic) and slowly realizes that the only people they can ever talk to about what happened are each other.
In "To All the Boys I've Loved Before," based on the first novel in Jenny Han's best-selling young adult series, 16-year-old Lara Jean Covey panics when every love letter she's ever written — personal chronicles, meant for her eyes only, of her emotions for five boys — is sent to their unwitting recipients.
AND WHETHER IT'S THE ELECTION OF DONALD TRUMP, OR BREXIT, THE ELITES HAVE REALIZED THAT THE PEOPLE HAVE STOPPED LISTENING TO THEM, THAT THE PEOPLE WANT TO DETERMINE THEIR FUTURES AND IN A PERFECTLY DEMOCRATIC FRAMEWORK, REGAIN CONTROL OF THEIR DESTINY, AND THAT PANICS THEM, BECAUSE THEY ARE LOSING THE POWER THAT THEY HAD GIVEN THEMSELVES.
Early this year, former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson helped kickstart a new fit of pot skepticism when he published a buzzy tome called Tell Your Children, consciously referring to Reefer Madness-style anti-weed panics of the past to make the case that the drug has major, under-appreciated health risks and social implications.
She panics and collapses while addressing Parliament, when attending a ball she can only stand to be there for a few minutes before demanding to be taken back to her room, and she doesn't even make it to meet with the Russian ambassador; Sarah informs her that her dramatic eye makeup makes her "look like a badger," and Anne retreats to her room.
Its rules dictate that rather than thrashing around in bed, not sleeping, the insomniac whose mind is polluted by looping dark thoughts and sudden lurching panics (the pesticides of wakefulness) should instead get up, switch rooms, attempt to read, make lists, make tea, listen to sleep tapes, meditate but not medicate, put on fresh sleepwear and experiment with soft lighting.
" If, for example, "a 45-year-old man who's been married for 20 years, who has a fling and panics and gets tested, and is told that he should try PrEP, he's going to be asked to be prescribed Truvada," Rand said, and that in this scenario, doctors would be "condemning a person who should not be taking it to forever having to take this pill.
He reads from his own, so while the media panics over Trump&aposs refusal to play the lead in their movie, he stars in his own, building up the military, demanding NATO pay for their defense, toying with Putin&aposs pipeline, Army Ukraine, it&aposs like Sergeant Rock versus The Three Stooges, but if Trump is Putin&aposs stooge, he&aposs doing a total Curly to their Moe.
"Sadly, anyone submitting their information to this scam will have more to worry about than a fictional declined payment, and may well wander into the land of multiple actual not-declined-at-all payments instead," writes Boyd, noting that despite how obvious this scam appears to people accustomed to being targeted by phishing scams, there will "always be someone who panics" and starts coughing up their personal and financial data.
A film that arguably represents the exact moment that the late, legendary storyteller and lifelong Chicagoan John Hughes's talents started to fade, Home Alone is a mean-spirited and outlandish (even for movies) tale of a family who hates their child just enough to forget to take him on vacation, and a child that spends time in solitude and increasingly panics without bothering to directly contact the authorities until the end of the film.

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