There is no question that our communities are safer with individuals like these off our streets.
Wearing a bold print gets harder as you get older. It's safer to stick to subtle prints or block colours. I have always found prints quite tricky. My daughter Carly, who is on the design team at Stella McCartney, is obsessed with them.
We're proposing a new model of housing, to replace 20,000 FEMA trailers in our communities with something akin to the Katrina Cottage. They're more livable and more in keeping with our coastal architecture. They're safer and can be anchored on elevated foundations.
Our cadres fled the camp to safer areas and we have sent in reinforcements to fight the soldiers.
Other treatments have been deemed safer and more effective than a psychoactive burning carcinogen self-induced through one's throat,
Rita is one big question mark that's been removed and it's safer to buy stocks now. Companies that do business in the U.S. are naturally going to be more relieved.
There is little doubt by making it safer to develop in high risk areas by promising to fund people to rebuild through flood insurance, we have made people feel it is safe to move into these areas.
Our leaders should also do more to create a safer and secure environment by not only paying lip service to their policies on gun trading.
Our military is being stretched too thin, to the point of being broken for the foreseeable future. We are asking too much and not giving enough, and we are certainly not any safer than before September 11.
Our nation is neither safer nor more open. We need to take another look at the laws and regulations that guide classification policy, for I believe the current system is out of control.