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41 Sentences With "panics about"

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

Doug and LeAnn are called into the Oval as Team Underwood panics about the dismal polls.
Miniature panics about what photo apps are doing with the personal data they collect happen fairly often.
Occasionally, he goes into deep panics about his work and cancels plans — and not just with me.
These panics about immigration, instead, reflect a long history of sexual panics in the West about nonwhite immigrants.
There had been semiregular panics about Kelly's coming divorce with Trump basically since the moment he took the job.
"If you're an investor who panics about everything, you should not have an allocation that's 90 percent stocks," Ms. Ruhlin said.
Jessica calls one bright pink dildo covered it ridges "really scary" and panics about how to even use her new products.
While Wall Street panics about falling rates, Main Street is benefiting, especially in the housing market, according to housing guru Ivy Zelman.
As moral panics about danger and depravity lost traction, popular tech criticism became nebulous and fretful, concerned with vague themes and forecasts.
And even as she panics about feeling stuck right now, she reminds herself that life takes unexpected turns in all sorts of ways.
Panics about "technological unemployment" struck in the 1960s (when firms first installed computers and robots) and the 1980s (when PCs landed on desks).
This "greening of hate" keys into long-standing Malthusian panics about scarcity and overpopulation as the great threats to civilization and global order.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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?
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
They drink to the new Serena. The next morning, Serena wakes up wondering where she is. Georgina comes in and Serena panics about the SATs. She calls Chuck and asks him to help out and try to keep the doors open for her.
Archie tries to reassure Audrey that she is not losing her marbles. Archie is concerned about Audrey and makes her promise to see a doctor. Audrey discovers that her dress is missing and panics about her "memory loss", confiding in Archie. She later tells him and Rita that she has booked a doctor's appointment.
She panics about what she will do after graduating; following some rejection, she gets a job reporting on the Barack Obama campaign trail. Stars Hollow throws a surprise goodbye party for Rory. When Lorelai finds out that Luke organized it, the pair reconcile with a kiss. Lorelai promises Emily that she will continue attending Friday Night Dinners.
At trial, Spell testifies that Strubing's husband inflicted the bruises through repeated acts of spousal abuse. That night, he went to see Strubing for an advance on his salary, finding a distraught Strubing wanting to have sex with him. Spell consents, and the two have several sexual encounters that night. Then Strubing panics about being found out and being pregnant.
Another day, May arrives at the neighbourhood luncheonette to check out the newest comic books, leaving her skate outside. Little does she know that her "dog" is being interrogated by a real one! The latter runs away with it, and afterwards, May panics about its whereabouts. With her "try, try again" attitude, she is reunited with the skate by finding it nearby.
Stuart, the owner of the guys' favorite comic book store, also moves in. Upon learning that Bernadette is pregnant in season nine, Howard panics about handling the impending baby, particularly earning enough money. With the help of his friends, he designs a new form of guidance system that attracts the attention of the Air Force. In "The Birthday Synchronicity", Bernadette gives birth to a girl named Halley, on Amy's birthday, who screams like Howard's late mother, Debbie Wolowitz.
For most of the centre's history the superintendent was female as was the majority of the staff. From the 1980s onwards, the superintendents of Winlaton were referred to as 'managers' and the residents as 'students'. Due to changes in child welfare legislation and, fundamentally, moral and control panics about juvenile delinquency in the 1950s and 1960s, the number of girls increased throughout the 1950s and 1960s. However, the suitability of new inmates for a maximum security facility declined.
Though Amanda wants to tell Jake about her infidelity, JR tells her not to. However, she soon after begins to feel dizzy and nauseous, and is afraid she might be pregnant with JR's baby. She goes in for a test, which comes back negative, but Cara later tells her there's a chance she might have an STD, worrying Amanda. The subsequent test comes back positive, and Amanda panics about how she's going to tell Jake about her STD.
She agrees that it was fun having him alone. When they return to the beach they almost kiss, but are interrupted when Christopher panics about being recognized. Christopher tells Jessica that no one can know what happened between them that day, telling her that the paparazzi would ruin her life as well as his. Heartbroken and angry, Jessica returns home to Kalamazoo with her family, but not before the paparazzi establish a connection between her and Christopher.
She attempts to understand why prostitutes are labeled by their job rather than by who they really are. She tries to demystify why some women must turn to prostitution in order to support themselves. She also explains that the laws to stop prostitution do not work and mainly come from the moral panic that the media creates (Brock, 1998, p. 138). Her major contribution of feminist criminology is in how moral panics about prostitution create laws that do not work in fixing the problem.
The demon currently does not possess a body, which is why it has been possessing members of the gang. A reversal of the spell will cancel out the creation of the demon, but it can't be done without also reversing Buffy's resurrection. After Dawn panics about the idea of losing Buffy again, Willow discovers that the demon can only survive if Buffy is killed. The demon, which had been housed in Xander's body while Willow shared this information, thanks Willow for the tip and heads for the Slayer.
Former series regulars Steve Carell and B. J. Novak also appear through archival footage. The series—presented as if it were a real documentary—depicts the everyday lives of office employees in the Scranton, Pennsylvania, branch of the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Company. In this episode, everyone in the office is excited when international promos for the documentary surface, but are soon horrified to discover how much candid filming has taken place. While everyone panics about their secrets being revealed, Pam Halpert (Jenna Fischer) reflects upon how much she and Jim (John Krasinski) have changed over the past nine years.
Later they reunite and enjoy a brief relationship, until Val panics about Darren's HIV status and frames Finn for vandalising Darren's car, so that Darren will break up with Finn. When Finn discovers Val was behind the break up of his relationship, he is furious, but after learning that in her own confused way she was trying to protect him, he forgives her and she helps him reunite with Darren. However, they soon break up again when Darren becomes too clingy and time-consuming for Finn. Finn discovers Ross is having an affair with Pete's fiancée Debbie Dingle (Charley Webb).
At the University of Chicago, Robert Park and Herbert Blumer agreed with the speculations of LeBon and other that crowds are indeed emotional. But to them a crowd is capable of any emotion, not only the negative ones of anger and fear. A number of authors modify the common-sense notion of the crowd to include episodes during which the participants are not assembled in one place but are dispersed over a large area. Turner and Killian refer to such episodes as diffuse crowds, examples being Billy Graham's revivals, panics about sexual perils, witch hunts and Red scares.
Bethany gets a new father figure when Sarah begins dating Todd's brother, Jason Grimshaw (Ryan Thomas), soon after their split. Jason becomes very fond of Bethany but she is almost left fatherless once again when Jason panics about the responsibilities of marriage and parenthood and jilts Sarah at the altar. Sarah later forgives Jason and he becomes Bethany's stepfather although David ruins the wedding by deliberately driving into the same part of the canal that Richard had the family into a few years earlier. When an increasingly off-the- rails David hides ecstasy tablets in one of Bethany's dolls, Bethany finds them and swallows one, making David panic.
According to the article, High Tech or High Risks: Moral Panics About Girls Online, it suggests that young girls are more at risks because they are often represented through "products of play" in transgressive poses because they often manipulate other users online by making themselves look older than what they actually appear which can attract sexual predators. Many parents of teenage girls worry about their safety online because of the many manipulations there are online and on social networking sites. Social networking can also be a risk to child safety in another way; parents can get addicted to games and neglect their children. One instance in South Korea resulted in the death of a child from starvation.
Closing the Gate: Race, Politics, and the Chinese Exclusion Act Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1998; p. 111.Wei Tchen, John Kuo, Dylan Yeats Yellow Peril! An Archive of anti-Asian Fear London: Verso, 2014 The Chinese people also were specifically subjected to moralistic panics about their use of opium, and how their use made opium popular among white people. As in the case of Irish-Catholic immigrants, the popular press misrepresented Asian peoples as culturally subversive, whose way of life would diminish republicanism in the U.S.; hence, racist political pressure compelled the U.S. government to legislate the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882), which remained the effective immigration-law until 1943.
It is argued that in the U.S., sex offenders have been selected as the new realization of moral panics about sex, stranger danger, and national paranoia, the new folk devils or boogeymen. People convicted of any sex crime are "transformed into a concept of evil, which is then personified as a group of faceless, terrifying, and predatory devils", who are, contrary to scientific evidence, perceived as a constant threat, habitually waiting for an opportunity to attack. Consequently, sex offenders are brought up by media on Halloween, despite the fact that there has never been a recorded case of abduction or abuse by a registered sex offender on Halloween. Academics, treatment professionals, and law reform groups such as National Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws and Women Against Registry criticize current sex offender laws as based on media-driven moral panic and "public emotion", rather than a real attempt to protect society.

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