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If we fail to do this, we will have lost the greatest possibility to have emerged from this catastrophe, and there will not be recourse to amend our mistake.
With the ballot box available, why should there be recourse to the street?" It is an important question, and the answer, I believe, is the convergence of three phenomena.
The Bush team filed suit with the Supreme Court in Washington knowing that the Supreme Court in Florida would "always be a problem and that there had to be recourse," as one Bushie put it.
"If you're saying to a person, 'No, you can't leave the plane,' and there's no food and water, the air is turning sour, the toilets are overflowing and you're basically strapping them down, there ought to be recourse," said Gutheinz, who's now a Houston defense attorney.
When bilateral means of resolving such conflicts proved insufficient, there could be recourse to either the precedent of convoking an apostolic council (Acts 15) or to what Irenaeus had already called "the preeminent authority of this church [of Rome], with which, as a matter of necessity, every church should agree".
Air defence sites and command centres might also be hit as a warning of Western capabilities should there need to be recourse to military action again in the future.
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There's recourse.
Moreover, mortgage loans in Spain are recourse.
All that remains is recourse to the supreme court.
But there is recourse, and the cliff can still be avoided.
And it's recourse in such trying times a prickly chauvinism would surely be felt beyond China's borders.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com