Word: angered
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...occasionally made side trips through his syntax, he also showed a level of introspection and analysis that surprised even his close aides. Instead of offering platitudes drawn from talking points, he ruminated on the generational experience of war and bluntly warned Americans not to take out their anger by picking on "someone who doesn't look like you." And where he used to talk about "this Administration" or "our Administration" or what "we" plan to do, now he is talking about "my Administration" and what "I" plan...
...make the difficult distinction between the violence of terrorism and the violence of retaliation, we must be willing to apply these terms to Israeli and Palestinian violence as well. Just as it would be horrific to kill a member of the U.S. cabinet over anger about American foreign policy in the Middle East, it is unacceptable and shocking to kill Ze’evi over Israeli actions in the occupied territories...
...sense of total abandonment, OAR must at times resort to casually violent language like, “he hit me across the face with a bat.” The violence of OAR’s revolution appeals to a youthful audience as a cathartic gesture, an expression of anger against the things that hold them inside. Through the music, it is transformed from a destructive urge to tear down walls to an empowering image of freedom and self-expression. Unlike Nirvana, whose anger often manifested itself physically on stage in the form of smashing guitars, OAR keeps its violence...
...difficult for anyone to verify anything they're being told about what's happening on the ground in Afghanistan. As long as there aren't any more terrorist attacks, the public will likely remain satisfied with the course being charted by the administration. But public ire and anger would go off the charts if there were another horrendous attack any time soon. Right now, U.S. public doesn't know any better than the Bush administration how to handle this. So they're keeping their fingers crossed and hoping that their leaders know what they're doing. Hopefully they will remain...
...sense of alienation and the perception that the world is against them that nurture bitterness among those who resort to terrorism. Confusion and anger against the global order and its only superpower have been brought about by the failure of the Muslim world to address two crucial issues: Afghanistan's descent into chaos and anarchy as a result of the Soviet invasion and the subsequent rise of the Taliban, and the suffering inflicted on the Muslim masses in Iraq by its dictator as well as by sanctions imposed on that long-suffering nation...