Word: profound
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...values? because europe needs russia's gas. Yes, but he has to sell his gas to us just as we need to buy it. He has nothing else to sell us. even after iraq, aren't european leaders still notably reticent about criticizing the U.S.? There's a profound awareness that unless we're careful, we're going to look like grandstand critics rather than players. In order to make ourselves a more effective partner, able occasionally to criticize, we in Europe have to be able to do more on the ground ourselves. But Europe's most effective contribution...
...find alarming signs of warming trends. Many studies document melting polar ice caps, thinning permafrost and rising sea and air temperatures in the Arctic, which threaten the livelihood of people native to the region. Like so many helpless Gulf Coast residents, those people will suffer because of a profound denial of responsibility. Climate change is a global problem that needs a global solution...
...Charlize Theron is hungry for another Oscar, her solid performance as Josie Aimes in Niki Caro’s profound “North Country” just might sate her appetite. But that’s not to say that the film is just a vehicle for Theron’s advancement—she just happens to be the driver of an extremely successful social commentary...
...Good Is Good” begins by telling the listener that “Good is good and bad is bad and you don’t know which one to have.” Wow, that is so profound. You analyze your love problems so well; you don’t know whether to make the bad choice or the good choice...
...chant the litany. "She will not legislate from the bench," he vowed. "I've known her long enough to know she's not going to change," Bush said, a code for "No more Souters." Bush may be right, but Miers got to be her resolute self after undergoing a profound change. Raised a Catholic, she was reborn an Evangelical in 1979, and it was to her spiritual credentials that her surrogates pointed in trying to reassure conservative Christians that she could be trusted. But that was not enough for activists like Janet LaRue, chief counsel for Concerned Women for America...