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100 Sentences With "pay heed to"

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

It would pay heed to EU standards and court rulings.
We would do well to pay heed to these words by Gen.
"The government should pay heed to the combined wisdom of India's conservationists," he said.
Companies pay heed to the political winds when deciding how to spend their lobbying dollars.
Opponents of the president should pay heed to the lesson they missed the first time.
" "I urge people not to pay heed to rumors and take the law into your hands.
Junqueras said if he was elected regional president he would pay heed to voters who opposed independence.
Sure, you might feel better when you pay heed to them, but they're also easy to ignore.
We must pay heed to the words of our 35th president and to the vision of our Founding Fathers.
Mr. Tubman didn't pay heed to Mother Dukuly and allowed doctors in London to operate on him for prostate cancer.
If he forms a right-wing coalition, Mr Netanyahu must pay heed to the demands of at least four other parties.
Granted, we're often far too preoccupied with our own arousal to pay heed to a lot of these little biological quirks.
Since AI talent is scarce, the firm has to pay heed to the principles of its boffins, at least to some extent.
Right now, activists and shareholders are trying to convince the financial world to pay heed to the danger of "stranded carbon," i.e.
Mr Ramaphosa is right to pay heed to intra-party politics and the ANC's union allies—to do otherwise would be naive.
"We cannot pay heed to what VW may have to pay in other countries when we go about setting the fine," he said.
These comments might have bothered me five years ago, but now I just can't be bothered to pay heed to comments like these.
Alluding briefly to the nation's currency woe, the president instructed the crowd not to pay heed to "various campaigns" under way against Turkey.
He believes that precedent is not just a judicial policy, it is constitutionally dictated to pay attention and pay heed to rules of precedent.
A younger generation, without firsthand acquaintance of their country&aposs history of war and instability, are less likely to pay heed to his warnings.
The lessons of Austin Ventures' rise and fall provide a framework that other cities with tech ambitions would be wise to pay heed to.
Cynics might worry that senators care too much about their donors or primary voters to pay heed to general public opposition in their states.
While the study would seem to confirm the worst -- that bigotry is hard-wired -- shouldn't we also pay heed to the students who stated acceptance.
Europe may not be able to persuade Trump to pay heed to common sense but can certainly pressure him with the reality of transatlantic leverage.
So, this election season may be a good time for representatives of black districts to pay heed to the legacy of the Pan-African project.
But many of today's politicians expect others to pay heed to the greater good while they themselves pursue their own interests – especially when growth is flagging.
But if we pay heed to the words of leaders like John McCain, we'll come out of all this stronger and better than we were before.
And all would-be leaders will have to pay heed to the large bloc of progressive young voters that the Sanders campaign has helped to usher in.
Hours before revived U.S. sanctions were due to kick in, White House national security adviser John Bolton said Iran should pay heed to Trump's willingness to negotiate.
Britain's now defunct Financial Services Authority had a requirement to pay heed to competitiveness, which led to criticism that "lite touch" regulation fomented the 2007-09 financial crisis.
We were bathed in a comforting dark as I snaked my way down her taut torso, stopping briefly to pay heed to the birthmark just below her breast.
The now defunct Financial Services Authority had a requirement to pay heed to competitiveness - which led to criticism that "lite touch" regulation fomented the 2007-09 financial crisis.
"Acceleration can be a game changer in terms of impacts and planning, so we really need to pay heed to these patterns," VIMS emeritus professor John Boon said.
It was then revealed that the man had immediately confided in a couple of patrolling officers who declined to pay heed to his pleas and file an official complaint.
Europe's other motorway misers—Britain, Belgium and Austria, all of which invest substantially less in their roads than their quality ratings would predict—should pay heed to Italy's example.
Policymakers should pay heed to the gender gap's complexity and the interplay of factors that impact how much men and women are paid before deciding how best to proceed.
The PRI in 2017 adopted tougher rules aimed at making fund managers deliver on pledges to pay heed to ESG issues, and said it would start delisting stragglers next year.
"Trump had better pay heed to the despicable plight of his country, the dark empire of evils under worldwide criticism, before poking his nose into others' things," the piece read.
The Republicans were due for a major image makeover in 1992, and in 2008 and in 2012, but they failed to pay heed to the warning signs of those elections.
He argues that investors failed to pay heed to Carney's explicit condition for the withdrawal of stimulus being a continuing shrinkage of the trade-off between lower activity and higher inflation.
Now, as Lesotho's story is being retold in many of the 17 other African nations suffering drought, the Trump administration in particular should pay heed to what Lesotho can teach us.
In addition to tackling vitamin K hesitancy and refusal head-on, we must pay heed to the upstream factors that make phenomena like vitamin K and vaccine refusal not only possible but popular.
As Hillary Clinton summers with a staggering, fortyfold advantage in campaign cash over Donald Trump, top strategists from Barack Obama's 2012 campaign are encouraging her to pay heed to their success four years ago.
They pay heed to that while also trying to determine how potent an agent of social mobility a school is and how broadly and deeply its students subscribe to an ethos of community service.
He knew that if there were children in the studio audience, he wouldn't focus on Winfrey's questions, he wouldn't pay heed to her legion of viewers, and he wouldn't convey the great importance of his work.
The marvelous thing about all of this is that I'm aware of how this happens—that the danger module knows something it can't get through the funnel of awareness, and so I should pay heed to it.
By doing so, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, Raymond Santana, Korey Wise and Yusef Salaam emerge as the heroes of their own story — and if we pay heed to the series' urgent message about criminal justice reform, ours too.
Change in Syria and Iran is within reach, but the West should pay heed to cries for freedom in the both countries by the Iranians and Syrians and say goodbye to tyrants that rule in Tehran and Damascus.
"We must pay heed to its work and its results, and to WADA's demands, because we need to acknowledge that there are established and identified cases of doping here, and this is a totally unacceptable situation," he said.
But the House bill is unlikely to be taken up in the Senate, where Republicans have a 52-48 seat majority and they need to pay heed to moderates within their own ranks as well as Democrats, lobbyists and analysts said.
But before Trump gets too high on the success of his speech Tuesday night and the projection of power he will use as his backdrop, he might do well to pay heed to the pitfalls that could await him as well.
All of that seems clear in retrospect, and Mr. Macron insists he has absorbed the message of the Yellow Vests and will pay heed to the ordinary citizens whose tax-eaten income barely stretches to the end of the month.
An influential financier warned investors in a letter to pay heed to growing risks and social tensions — and the message is already resonating at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Andrew writes in his column.
Pete Wilson of California, a Republican who made the initiative a centerpiece of his 20163 re-election campaign, described it as "the two-by-four we need" to get Washington to pay heed to the flow of undocumented newcomers into the country.
What Reagan wouldn't even whisper, the city shouted, with protesters imploring the country to pay heed to their legions of friends who were falling ill, and legitimizing a subculture that had largely kept to the shadows but would never be hidden again.
Yet, throughout his campaign, Hugin spent millions of dollars of his own money on ads that not only hammered Menendez for ethics charges, but also cast the former Celgene CEO as an independent-minded candidate who would not pay heed to party when making decisions.
But many analysts expect core consumer inflation, now at 0.8 percent, to slow next year unless firms pay heed to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's calls to hike wages by 3 percent — no easy task given how wary they have been about raising salaries so far.
As a result, Mr. McConnell needed to pay heed to their wishes as they pushed for reconvening the hearings to allow Ms. Blasey Ford to testify, and later to reopen the background check of Judge Kavanaugh to pursue new material that surfaced about his conduct.
"We must pay heed to what this independent commission says, despite the shortcomings in its work," he said, referring to a team led by the Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren that concluded in December that 1,000 Russian athletes were involved in a state-sponsored doping program.
"As Governor he dealt with many storm preparations, and given the gravity of this storm, he encourages residents along the East Coast to pay heed to the warnings and declarations of state and county emergency operation teams," Sanford's team said in a news release, according to the newspaper.
These costs include bankers' and lawyers' fees, the risk of class-action litigation, the need to reveal commercially sensitive information that could benefit rivals, and the prospect of fights with corporate raiders who want juicier returns for shareholders and social activists who want executives to pay heed to their values.
Against this backdrop, all would do well to pay heed to Abraham Lincoln's Electric Cord Speech of 1858 in which he simultaneously paid homage to America's Anglo-American populace and tradition, but also made clear that being American was not restricted to only those the descendants of the Bay Colony, Jamestown, and New Amsterdam.
Narsing understands that Mahi's family is in serious trouble. He warns Mahi to move away from that house immediately, repeatedly. But Mahi, raised as an atheist, doesn't pay heed to his words. The ghosts continue to haunt and kill the family members one after the other.
Apollo finds Commodus fighting Josephine, Calypso, Lit, and Thalia while holding Leo, Hemithea, and Georgina hostage. Apollo feels a surge of strength inside him and warns Commodus to stand down. He does not pay heed to Apollo's words. Apollo announces he is going to reveal his godly form, blinding Commodus.
According to the sections of Prohibition Act – 1950, promoting liquor is a crime. My argument was based on that but he didn't pay heed to it. Even the reports in international media like BBC and CNN could not prevent him from doing that ad, says Eby. Eby wrote to Mohanlal's parents and wife requesting them to correct their beloved.
But then, Hildebrand had an idea: "Pay heed to the motion of the grass – then you will see where the dwarf is standing!" As Dietrich did this, he was able to see where Laurin was standing, so he ran to him, grabbed him around the middle, and broke his belt. Laurin thereupon fell to the ground, and Hildebrand was able to capture him.
Sheehy had been having a poor game, unable to detach himself from the attention of Mick Fitzgerald. Offaly goalkeeper Martin Furlong, playing his 56th championship match for his county, yelled at the Offaly backs to pay heed to a possible rebound. Furlong met Sheehy's strike, a ball hit about four feet high, with the palm of his hand. Pat Fitzgerald collected the rebound.
Raut Mali arrogantly refused to pay heed to Kamlaji's word and ordered the field to be tilled. This angered the lord and within a trice the 12 bulls and 4 sons of Kamlaji fell dead on the ground. One of the son who manage to escape screamed and gathered the villagers. Soon the Police was summoned to investigate the matter.
It is called "Sing Art," which he learns from an international Chinese criminal, Sing Hee. Imran calls him Uncle Sing (Chacha Sing) and in return, Sing Hee refers him as nephew. His another old time foe is T3B, Theresia Bumble-Bee of Bohemia. Theresia has a great crush on him but Imran hardly pay heed to her rather jeer at her sentiments.
But Hari Narayan Singh didn't pay heed to their warning and moved forward with his companions. When they were in the middle of the jungle suddenly they heard the roar of lion. Mall babu told his Purohit and Nayee to climb on trees immediately and he started waiting for man-eater with a wrestler's prudence. Suddenly lion jumped on him and injured his shoulder ripping his flesh.
In the absence of a father, she has to endure a bitter societal attitude. However, she does not pay heed to it acting upon her mother’s advice. Meanwhile, Awais becomes a victim of the growing repentance and comes to meet his daughter in the university. After that, Aiman reveals the truth to distraught Aisha about her father. Rashid’s children; Murad and Nimra are young, too.
In 2011 the Auckland City Council voted to protect the Women's Suffrage Memorial in Khartoum Place in perpetuity. Lower Khartoum Place was renamed Te Hā o Hine Suffrage Place in July 2016 following a decision by the Waitematā Local Board. Te Hā o Hine comes from the whakatauki (proverb) ‘Me aro koe ki te hā o Hine ahu one’ which means ‘pay heed to the dignity of women’.
After hearing all this, Arjun feels guilty and sad that he could not identify her. He tries to stop her, but Amala does not pay heed to any of his pleas. Amala feels that Arjun no longer loves her and leaves Parvathi's body. After gaining consciousness, Parvathi is unable to recognize Arjun, and at this point of time, Parvathi's uncle (Raja Ravindra) comes there and beats up Arjun.
Plans for the village of Watermead were first drawn up in the 1980s. The idea was to create a self-contained executive area that would bring new sports facilities and a better quality of housing to the town. Bandstand with ducks The village is built on green belt land. At the planning stage the designers were required to pay heed to the ecology of the local area to help protect the environment.
Then the cat fixes his nose back to normal. When the ship arrives at its destination, (a Caribbean island), Tom manages to make amends with the female cat for Jerry caused him to provoke her. A local cat, Calypso Musician cat, who is playing the steel drum spots the female cat and falls in love with her. Tom is jealous when the female cat appears to pay heed to Calypso Cat's affections.
The Second Vatican Council, though reform-minded, was reluctant to embrace Liberation theology, and as a result did not embrace social and economic struggles. The Católicos pressured the Church to pay heed to its members' material needs, as well as their spiritual needs. They also fought Anglo-American domination of the diocese, and pressured the Church to provide more scholarships. Because of their criticisms of the Church, they were regarded as a radical organization.
One day, Divya breaks up with Krishna, citing a reason that she is going to marry someone else. Krishna gets heartbroken and depressed, so he consults a psychiatrist named Muthu Vinayagam (Thambi Ramaiah) for counsel. Muthu listens to Krishna's story and advises him to get in touch with his friends whenever he feels depressed. As a result, Krishna reaches out to his three friends, who turn out to be busy with their personal lives and do not pay heed to his words.
The story then turns to Sanjana Dhanraj (Bipasha Basu) and Aditya Dhanraj (Dino Morea) in Mumbai in a business party, where Aditya seems too busy to pay heed to the fact that his wife is longing to talk to him. She snatches the car keys from Aditya's pocket and leaves the party to return home. On her frantic drive home, she hears a voice in her head and loses control of the car. However, miraculously, she escapes the accident unscathed.
He also tells them that he had stayed there many days before he bought the bungalow, all alone. The three agree to stay with Thomas Kutty in the bungalow and bring their wives along. In the middle of the journey they see Father Dominic, who warns that the foursome are in the path of bad things. They do not pay heed to his words, but then the housekeepers employed by Thomas Kutty leave on the pretext of the house being haunted.
The story then turns to Sanjana Dhanraj (Bipasha Basu) and Aditya Dhanraj (Dino Morea) in Mumbai in a business party, where Aditya seems too busy to pay heed to the fact that his wife is longing to talk to him. She snatches the car keys from Aditya's pocket and leaves the party to return home. On her frantic drive home, she hears a voice in her head and loses control of the car. However, miraculously, she escapes the accident unscathed.
Namita Waikar is a novelist, entrepreneur and journalist from Pune, India. Waikar is the managing editor and co-founder of the People's Archive of Rural India. In her debut novel, "The Long March", Waikar tells the story of an urban elite being forced to pay heed to the plight of the Indian farmers by a large march of rural farmers into the cities of the country. Written in 2012, this novel foresaw the long marches of farmers that captured the country's headlines in 2018.
Rivadavia wrote that although Rabid Death's Curse "suggested that Watain were, at best, content to produce intentionally crude facsimiles of inspirational forefathers ranging from Bathory to Mayhem and, at worst, unable to do anything else", "the Swedes were really just finding their feet" and the album "fulfills an important function in Watain's career arc, one that the casual listener need never pay heed to, but which loyal fans will likely want to explore at some point in order to better comprehend all that followed".
Clitophon wishes to learn what is followed by these speeches by comparing justice, as if an art, to improve the soul as medicine improves health (408c4). He asks if the companions of Socrates are now able to pursue virtue further or if they are merely only able to exhort others (408d3-e2). He compares the care of the body and soul to the care of agriculture. One should not care only for the products of agriculture, but also pay heed to that which improves the body more permanently; therefore one should pay heed to the soul and virtue and seek a device able to secure such virtue (408e5-e10). Clitophon asks the companions what art improves the soul; they respond "justice" (409a2-a6) Clitophon is not satisfied, for with justice as an art, like medicine and carpentry, it must have two effects (409a7-b1). Medicine results in more physicians and health; carpentry results in more carpenters and buildings (409b2-b6). With one result being the perpetuation of the art, justice results in just men (409b6-b8). He then asks for the second result of justice (409b8-b4).
Unfortunately, the new earl did not pay heed to the warning, and was surprised and burned to death in the bishop's house on 29 January 1069.Stenton Anglo- Saxon England p. 602 When King William marched north in retaliation on the scorched earth campaign generally known as the Harrying of the North, Æthelwine tried to flee with many Northumbrian treasures (including the body of Saint Cuthbert) to Lindisfarne,Fletcher Bloodfeud p. 180 but he was caught, outlawed, imprisoned, and later died in confinement in the winter of 1071–1072;Stenton Anglo-Saxon England p.
Yao's article was initially only published in select local newspapers. Peng forbade its publication in the nationally-distributed People's Daily and other major newspapers under his control, instructing them to write exclusively about "academic discussion," and not pay heed to Yao's petty politics.MacFarquhar and Schoenhals. pp. 14–19. While the "literary battle" against Peng raged, Mao fired Yang Shangkun—director of the Party's General Office, an organ that controlled internal communications—on a series of unsubstantiated charges, installing in his stead staunch loyalist Wang Dongxing, head of Mao's security detail.
Abd al- Malik contacted Mus'ab's commanders and won over most of them with promises of money and governorships. Ibrahim ibn al-Ashtar, who also had been contacted by Abd al-Malik, reported the matter to Mus'ab, suggesting that commanders in correspondence with Abd al-Malik should be executed. Fearing that executing influential tribal nobles would cause revolt in his ranks, Mus'ab did not pay heed to the warning and kept his commanders in their posts. With the death of Ibn al-Ashtar early in the battle, Mus'ab's fate was sealed.
Rinku Singh Rahi has been fighting corruption in his own department and state-run schemes since 2009. He was denied access to information on his own department. Instead, an attempt on his life was made allegedly at the behest of Principal Secretary Navtej Singh, and other department officials during the Mayawati government. He started a hunger strike in Lucknow hoping the Akhilesh Yadav government would pay heed to his demands for a reply on his pending RTI application; a criminal investigationinto the corruptions charges; and act against miscreants but instead was admitted to a psychiatric ward.
An Iraqi TV channel also reported that ISIL "started a large-scale operation" to capture the areas around Ramadi, and tried to seize the highway leading to Ramadi "to cut off supplies". The Pentagon officers did not pay heed to the "warnings" that the group were "poised to seize" the city. The day before, the Iraqi Anbar Governor Anbar Suhaib al-Rawi survived an assassination attempt by ISIL in the city of Ramadi. On 15 April, it was reported that ISIL had executed 300 more Sunni tribesmen in Anbar over the past few days, as it captured three villages to the east of Ramadi.
The document proposes an absolutist theory of monarchy, by which a king may impose new laws by royal prerogative but must also pay heed to tradition and to God, who would "stirre up such scourges as pleaseth him, for punishment of wicked kings".Croft, pp 131–133. Basilikon Doron, written as a book of instruction for the four-year-old Prince Henry, provides a more practical guide to kingship.Willson, p 133. Despite banalities and sanctimonious advice,A king, James advised, should not look like "a deboshed waster" (Croft, p135) and should avoid the company of women, "which are no other thing else but irritamenta libidinis" (Willson, p 135).
Statue of Fray Luis de León in Salamanca, Spain Fray Luis continued to teach at the university, being awarded a special chair at the end of 1576, shortly after his acquittal. In 1578 he obtained, for life, the chair of Moral Philosophy, and in 1579 was elected to the most significant chair in the university, the Chair of Holy Scripture (sometimes known as the chair of Biblical Studies or the Bible Chair). He went on to earn a Master of the Arts degree from the University of Sahagún. Fray Luis did not pay heed to the cautionary admonishments of the Inquisitorial committee after his earlier imprisonment.
In Jonah 1:6, the Masoretic Text (MT) reads, "...perhaps God will pay heed to us...." Targum Jonah translates this passage as: "...perhaps there will be mercy from the Lord upon us...." The captain's proposal is no longer an attempt to change the divine will; it is an attempt to appeal to divine mercy. Furthermore, in Jonah 3:9, the MT reads, "Who knows, God may turn and relent [lit. repent]?" Targum Jonah translates this as, "Whoever knows that there are sins on his conscience let him repent of them and we will be pitied before the Lord." God does not change His mind; He shows pity.
Sir William ordered Gilbert to conduct the service immediately and when he refused Coffin ordered the mourners to bury the priest alive in the newly dug grave. They seized Gilbert and bundled him into the hole and set to filling it with their shovels. When only his head was visible above the soil did they pay heed to the terrified Gilbert's shrieks for mercy and his promise that he would bury the old man without taking his fee.Duncan Fiedler, A History of Bideford, Phillimore & Co Ltd (1985) ] On the church's south wall can be seen the funerary bust of John Strange, a local merchant and a benefactor of the town and church.
Julia's behavior seems to be extremely aberrant; she seems to pay heed to nothing except trying to entice Jack and kissing him, even when Charley is found dead in the locked communications room with a swarm flying around him and the communication links cut. Jack cannot understand how the swarm got inside the rigorously protected airtight building, why Charley would have disabled the facility's communications, or why Julia and Ricky seem to be coming up with various out-of-character ways of how he died. Mae discovers security footage of when they were in the desert. To Jack's horror, the video not only reveals that Julia and Ricky had an affair but also shows how Charley engaged in a vicious fight with Ricky and Vince.
Title 2 of the Swiss Federal Constitution of 18 April 1999, entitled "Fundamental Rights, Civil Rights and Social Goals", contains a comprehensive and directly enforceable bill of rights, as well as a set of social goals which the state authorities are to pay heed to. A few rights, notably political ones, are explicitly reserved to Swiss citizens, while all others apply to all persons in Switzerland, including (insofar as possible) legal entities such as corporations. While the 1874 constitution enumerated only a few civil rights, the 1999 constitution explicitly codifies the fundamental rights recognised in the case law of the Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights. It also incorporates the fundamental rights guaranteed in the European Convention on Human Rights, which Switzerland has ratified.
The actors on this stage were three parties; the Colonial powers of British and the Dutch; the nobles who made agreement with the Dutch namely Raja Jaafar, Yam Tuan Muda of Riau and Temenggong Abdul Rahman, of Johore and Singapore ; the palace namely the Sultan, and the Bendahara who claimed he was not aware of any treaty signed with their knowledge. Because the treaties are not ratified by the Sultan or the Bendahara, the Malays tried not to pay heed to any action of the Colonial powers. The Yam Tuan Muda has been accused of committing treachery by "selling" the sovereignty of Johore, however the counter argument is that neither the Sultan nor the Bendahara were parties to the treaty. The treaty was signed in secret and details were only known in 1855.
The old man reveals that twenty years ago he had arrived there from the city since his wife had undergone labour pains and it was necessary for her to deliver the baby and hence he ended up at the mansion for help. However he was repeatedly warned by a nun to go away and not let the delivery happen there because according to her, there was something extremely inhuman and unholy lurking within the mansion and if the delivery took place then that would eventually lead to the birth of Evil. Owing to the adverse condition of his wife, the man did not pay heed to the nun and his wife gave birth to their baby. However he was shocked when he realized that his wife gave birth to the devil and she died herself in the process and the nun was right.
Regarded as the "security chief" of the country, Luo implemented the "strike hard" anti-crime campaign, increasing the harshness of sentences; some suggest that this policy led to increased executions; it was said that Luo had personally directed the suppression of illegal organisations and protests such as that at the Pubugou Dam protest in 2004. Luo's term as Zhengfawei chief was also characterized by proponents of the Weiquan movement as having further solidified party control over legal and judicial affairs, and thus impeding progress on human rights and legal freedoms. During his tenure, Luo was seen to have warned party officials to rein in judicial independence and but also pay heed to the international implications of legal activities in China, while also expanding "rule by law". Luo retired from public life at the age of 72, after the 17th Party Congress in October 2007.
Shomrei Masoret perceive the preservation of the Jewish tradition, minhagim, and family customs, as an educational and a family value. The tradition, minhagim, and family customs is also relevant in terms of the Jewish denomination of origin affiliation, and thus the percentage of Shomrei Masoret is especially high among the Mizrahi denomination of origin affiliation. Many of them (and their offspring) define themselves as Shomer Masoret (or Masorati), even if some or part of their lifestyle's customs are generally accounted as secular (Hiloni), still, they pay heed to preserving and keeping the Jewish Tradition heritage as it was observed in their or their parents' country of origin. In that conjunction, one should mention the political party of Shas (a religious-Orthodox Mizrahi-denomination political party), who raised the banner of "" (Restore Past Glory), a slogan that swept many non-religious-Orthodox Mizrahi-denomination voters, who, nevertheless, see the importance of preserving their Jewish Tradition denomination.
A particularly clear expression of this world view, currently dominant among conventional physicians, is evidence-based medicine. Within conventional medicine, most physicians still pay heed to their ancient traditions: > The critical sense and sceptical attitude of the citation of medicine from > the shackles of priestcraft and of caste; secondly, the conception of > medicine as an art based on accurate observation, and as a science, an > integral part of the science of man and of nature; thirdly, the high moral > ideals, expressed in that most "memorable of human documents" (Gomperz), the > Hippocratic oath; and fourthly, the conception and realization of medicine > as the profession of a cultivated gentleman. > — Sir William Osler, Chauvanism in Medicine (1902) In this Western tradition, physicians are considered to be members of a learned profession, and enjoy high social status, often combined with expectations of a high and stable income and job security. However, medical practitioners often work long and inflexible hours, with shifts at unsociable times.
Secretary for Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Erick Tsang stated in an interview with Oriental Daily News that the organizer of the primaries and the candidates may be in breach of National Security Law articles 20, 22, and 29. Whereas Hong Kong Basic Law article 26 guarantees citizens and permanent residents of Hong Kong “the right to vote and the right to stand for election in accordance with [the Basic] law,” Tsang warned citizens to pay heed to the potential violations of the “Prevention and Control of Disease (Requirement and Directions) (Business and Premises) Regulation (Cap. 599F), commonly known as social-distance regulation, to avoid citations and arrests. Pro-democracy legislators historically constituted less than half of the Legislative Council. In the wake of the year-long pro-democracy movement and after the record turnout and the landslide win in November’s District Council election, pro-democracy candidates began to emerge and vowed to take over more than half of the 70-seat Legislative Council election in September.

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