:: All that being said, the majority of the rise in fuel prices recently, in most jurisdictions, will be due to increasing crude oil prices rather than government rapaciousness.
22.
But the rapaciousness of the former president and his family produced a special anger, expressed in a battle cry in recent student demonstrations : " End corruption, collusion and nepotism !"
23.
At 5 feet 10 inches, 150 pounds, Akers and her teammate April Heinrichs played so fiercely that women from other countries, whose cultures did not applaud such rapaciousness, often appeared intimidated.
24.
Poetry embedded within the saga glorifies the subsequent ravaging of Kintyre, and it is likely that it was this rapaciousness which finally persuaded Aonghus M�r and Murchadh to come into the king's peace.
25.
In the United States and in Europe it is often sympathetic towards conservative or Fundamentalist / Primitive Christianity, seen as a defender against both the moral degeneracy of the poor and the rapaciousness of unbridled capitalism.
26.
His book reflects his love of nature and, in his later years, his rising anger and frustration as he saw what he called the rapaciousness of modern society and the folly of its self-destructive path.
27.
Mamet's plays and films _ such as the recent " The Spanish Prisoner, " starring Campbell Scott and Steve Martin _ use the con man to symbolize the rapaciousness of American life, speakers suggested.
28.
"It is the avarice, the unyielding rapaciousness of the record companies that foments the violation of recording copyrights in Brazil, " said Nehemias Gueiros Jr ., an intellectual property rights lawyer and former record company executive.
29.
Nazruddin after having sold his business to Salim, had first moved to Uganda, left it because of persecution, moved then to Canada, left it because of its capitalistic rapaciousness, and finally landed in London becoming a landlord.
30.
This book reached a broad audience, with its questioning of gender mythologies, whether of women's intrinsic virtues, or men's inevitable rapaciousness, which had been appearing in the work of many popular feminist writers in the 1980s.