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105 Sentences With "fan the flames of"

How to use fan the flames of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fan the flames of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fan the flames of". Mastering all the usages of "fan the flames of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Petty nationalism of this sort will fan the flames of populism.
The idea is to fan the flames of fear, resentment and division.
Democrats risk burning themselves if they fan the flames of Trump impeachment.
These films and popular books have helped fan the flames of vaccine hesitancy.
Mr. Erdogan's solution has been to fan the flames of grievance, nationalism and fear.
President Trump and congressional Republicans fan the flames of controversy by expressing righteous indignation.
They fan the flames of the hatred and division that lead to these horrific events.
These interest groups have reached out to aggrieved communities seeking to fan the flames of discontent.
Many of those protests fan the flames of societal change while simultaneously landing athletes in trouble.
In the Middle East, Iran is ascendant, producing and proliferating weapons that fan the flames of conflict.
The increase could fan the flames of already raging inflation by triggering higher transport and food prices.
If he abstained from endorsing, he could have continued to fan the flames of a citizen-led outrage.
Our places of worship continue to be targeted by those seeking to fan the flames of division and hate.
But today, Bloomberg came out with a new report which might well fan the flames of speculation on Monday.
This one thinks you can fan the flames of hatred, then blame the press for reporting on the burning.
Santorum responded by saying that it was actually Obama who used the presidency to fan the flames of racism.
"They are coming from a country," he began, but then paused, appearing to fan the flames of his own accusation.
But the older Lucy narrating this slim and compassionate book is too wise to fan the flames of these disappointments.
Meanwhile, inflammatory comments from Republican front-runners Donald Trump and Ted Cruz further fan the flames of anti-Muslim hatred.
As the two allies fan the flames of nationalism, Mr Kim has ample peace and quiet to expand his arsenal. ■
We've already seen how well Trump can fan the flames of resentment among people who feel they've been left behind.
Brown worries transgender children will suffer as debates over the legislation fan the flames of the country's bitter culture war.
Donald Trump's shock election victory has enraged Muslim militant groups around the world, and may fan the flames of global terrorism.
"On her competition: "We'll have two fossil fuel-funded candidates who are continuing to fan the flames of the burning planet.
We have a lot of work to do to fan the flames of prosperity and to hold at bay the prosperity killers.
He wrote by email: There is no doubt that Trump continues to fan the flames of racial anxiety for his perceived benefit.
Mr. Trump's foray into the West to fan the flames of his war against the environment could mark a turning point, however.
Iran's leaders were eager to fan the flames of the Arab spring—until it threatened to burn their ally in Syria, Bashar al-Assad.
It wasn't the dream that I had hoped for, and it would have been easier to fan the flames of resentment, disappointment and anger.
Some fear that selling weapons to Gulf nations could fan the flames of tension between the U.S. and Iran, per the New York Times.
Iran said on Tuesday creation of the SDF force would "fan the flames of war", echoing the vehement response of Syria, Turkey and Russia.
But also because it is the least effective way to end a security threat and the best way to fan the flames of insurgency.
The constant discussion about the pros, the cons, and the conspiracy theories help fan the flames of mystique, as does the premium price tag.
We should make sure public health communications don't fan the flames of racism and that recommendations to policymakers balance disease control and other considerations.
This revelation is likely to fan the flames of a long-running conspiracy theory that Facebook is spying on its users through their phones' microphones.
From his deplorable response to the events at Charlottesville to his inflammatory use of Twitter, Trump's actions and words helped fan the flames of bigotry.
He believes that the addition of "pick-up-and-play" games to e-sports will fan the flames of the player versus player, competitive trend.
It's possible the Trump presidency will implode while congressional Republicans fan the flames of public outrage by their handling of healthcare, the budget and taxes.
How do you think this film might spread a more nuanced understanding of the situation, or might it only fan the flames of unnecessary intrigue?
He opted instead to nobly run his campaign on the merits, and not to fan the flames of demagoguery for the sake of political gain.
Mr. McMahan suggested that the charges were made up by "one or two disgruntled employees that started working underground to fan the flames" of discontent.
Whether it's uniting persecuted mutants or appealing to Wakanda's more vengeful elements, they only fan the flames of tribal divisions, which the heroes must rise above.
"This is a transparent and blatantly unconstitutional attempt to sow division and fan the flames of anti-immigrant hatred in the days ahead of the midterms."
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi said earlier on Tuesday that the planned U.S.-backed force inside Syria would "fan the flames of war" and raise tensions.
But the general approach Fox News has taken to covering Trump's attacks on his enemies gives you a sense of how they fan the flames of resentment.
What came out would land him behind bars and ignite a debate over whether he had tried to fan the flames of hatred, in this case literally.
Cantor, McConnell, and others went out and really tried to fan the flames of Tea Party and populist anger, working it to their advantage in midterm contests.
"  The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) called Trump's plan a "blatantly unconstitutional attempt to fan the flames of anti-immigrant hatred in the days ahead of the midterms.
""All of these people — from the technology companies who fan the flames of hate to the lawmakers who fail to hold him accountable — bear responsibility for this crisis.
That Mr. Trump says otherwise shows he sees not a group of fearful people fleeing from terror to freedom, but an opportunity to fan the flames of bigotry.
In legal papers released in unredacted form on Thursday, the Massachusetts attorney general said McKinsey had helped the maker of OxyContin fan the flames of the opioid epidemic.
After PewDiePie playfully addressed being overtaken by T-Series as the biggest channel on YouTube, his fans rallied and ran to their comments to fan the flames of feud.
These anecdotes don't highlight this crisis particularly well and only fan the flames of the anti-medicine, anti-doctor rhetoric that gets in the way of caring for people.
Mr. Trump's administration seems likely to be a deeply divisive one, and he has so far shown more inclination to fan the flames of discord than to ameliorate them.
But the risks are compounded by a coming election in India in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party is using the episode to fan the flames of Hindu nationalism.
"A Presidential pardon clearly states that President Trump is not interested in healing the nation after a deadly white nationalist march, but instead desires to fan the flames of divisiveness."
"After winning the presidency but losing the popular vote, President-elect Trump must try to bring Americans together — not continue to fan the flames of division and bigotry," Pelosi said.
The divide between supporters of independence and unionism in Scotland is providing the Conservative Party with an electoral boost but some warn it could fan the flames of religious rivalry.
But with a black man in the White House and immigration on the rise, the Tea Party and Trump were able to fan the flames of racial and cultural resentment.
Gerry Simpson, associate director of the refugee rights program at Human Rights Watch, said that involuntary returns of Afghans from Europe could "fan the flames" of security disintegration in Afghanistan.
Facebook's response to our campaign, which challenged them to improve their platform and create safe conditions for Black people and other marginalized groups, was to fan the flames of anti-Semitism.
Considering she called her competitors "fossil fuel-funded candidates who are continuing to fan the flames of the burning planet," it seems she has a lot of soul-searching to do.
Mr. Macron promised to lower unemployment to 7 percent by the next presidential election in 2022, and has acknowledged that a failure to do so could fan the flames of populism.
Ms. Mendes brings a sweet perfume of deviltry to her comely Clarice, who's none too pleased about her long engagement to Alcippe, and happy to fan the flames of his jealousy.
Russian propagandists, at home and in China, have taken advantage of the current trade war to fan the flames of conflict and offer their nation as a fellow victim of America's aggression.
" Padilla added, "Questioning the citizenship status of every person in America is unfortunately just a continuation of the president's blatant agenda to fan the flames of anti-immigrant hostility in our nation.
The fallout from the battle between these civil liberties groups and Baltimore police could fan the flames of a fight over privacy legislation that's already been happening in Congress, reports Morning Consult.
The elite media is 95 percent against Trump and doing everything they can to fan the flames of a panic, but the fact is, that I think that this race is a long.
John McCain to turn over the dossier of Trump-Russia allegations to the FBI, pushing back against President Donald Trump's assertions that the Arizona Republican helped fan the flames of the Russia investigation.
"Far right groups are coming to Dover to fan the flames of hatred and xenophobia, often generating a lot of media coverage in the process," Nick Dearden, the director of Global Justice Now said.
"After winning the presidency but losing the popular vote, President-elect Trump must try to bring Americans together - not continue to fan the flames of division and bigotry," said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi.
In July she asserted that electing Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton—probably the choice of most pro-environment voters—would "fan the flames of … right-wing extremism," and be as bad as electing Donald Trump.
"Rather than focusing on fighting the real vulnerabilities facing Americans, the President is using the powers of America's highest office to fan the flames of nativism and xenophobia," Mr. Newsom said in the statement.
Throughout this campaign, Trump has tried to fan the flames of fear and bigotry against Muslims — using rhetoric so destructive to American interests and so dangerous to the safety of American troops that retired Gen.
"The violence depicted in these videos is horrific, but it is abhorrent that President Trump would choose to deliberately fan the flames of hatred and religious bigotry," Democratic U.S. Senator Jack Reed said in a statement.
And clearly Trump wants to fan the flames of that divide, as we saw with his racist tweets Sunday morning, in which he wrote that he wanted AOC and her closest allies in the House -- Rep.
"Facebook's response to our campaign, which challenged them to improve their platform and create safe conditions for Black people and other marginalized groups, was to fan the flames of anti-Semitism," Robinson said in a statement.
That danger will soon become even more palpable if Trump follows through with recommending that people go back to work and pack into churches — and, as a result, fan the flames of the still-spreading virus.
And they have hardly distinguished themselves since leaving office: by milking the system for big money the likes of David Cameron and George Osborne have done as much as Nigel Farage to fan the flames of populism.
"Now, there are some out there who see this as a moment to fan the flames of resentment and division, who want to exploit people's fears, even though it means tearing our nation even further apart," Clinton said.
The apparent spontaneity of his public events, together with his eagerness to fan the flames of controversy, often seems to matter more — at least in terms of the volume of coverage he receives — than any lack of veracity.
The veteran, who won his midterm election last week in Texas' 2nd Congressional District, wrote on Tuesday that he agreed the joke was not acceptable, but felt he didn't have to "fan the flames of outrage" in response.
Michael Dias, whose father died when one of three suicide bombers at the Stade de France detonated an explosive vest, urged the government to combat stigma and division, warning that doing otherwise could fan the flames of hate.
The violence showcased the ability of the Islamic State to graft onto faraway militant movements and fan the flames of local conflicts by striking a high-profile target like a cathedral, the premier church in a Catholic diocese.
She added that "the wave of women" just elected "speak with so much moral clarity in the face of someone who is so willing to lie and bend the truth and fan the flames of hate and fear."
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May's government fought on Monday to defend its Brexit deal by outlining the legal basis for parliament to support its plan to leave the European Union, but instead seemed to fan the flames of rebellion.
As proven by public opinion polling, the American people have come to expect the media to be liberal – but they don't expect the media to so boldly lie to the American public and to fan the flames of racial discord.
To the Editor: Re "Pressure Rises After Failure in Venezuela" (news analysis, front page, May 2): In how many oil-rich regions must the United States pose as the champion of democracy, only to fan the flames of bloody civil war?
When the media misinterprets a picture of famous screenwriter Jo and her assistant Emma, the two women must explore their undeniable chemistry and work out the power imbalance between them, all while trying not to fan the flames of Hollywood gossip.
The Indiana governor who swore off political mudslinging years ago heard Trump call Democratic rival Hillary Clinton "the devil" and watched him fan the flames of a feud with the parents of a Muslim soldier who died saving U.S. troops in Iraq.
Following British accusations that Russia likely stood behind the poisoning of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal in the English town of Salisbury earlier this month, Russian media appeared all too happy to fan the flames of confrontation, despite Russia's denials of involvement.
In an apparent reference to arch-foe Iran, Salman also said Saudi Arabia was working with its allies to confront any "tendency for external interference in the internal affairs and fan the flames of sectarian sedition, and undermine regional security and stability".
Both efforts, it said, were in line with previous Russian efforts to fan the flames of tension around social issues in the U.S. The newly revealed fake Facebook pages created 21625 organic posts on Facebook and one piece of content on Instagram.
As millions of people fall for the siren song of populism-- electing strongmen who fan the flames of fear and division -- and the US retreats from its defense of democracy, Freedom House noted that two other countries are eagerly filling the void.
Jones's YouTube account is one of the biggest of several tied to the InfoWars' brand, with nearly 2.3 million subscribers and millions of views across hundreds of videos — a mix of right-leaning opinion pieces and sensationalised, tabloid-style reports that fan the flames of conservative discontent.
In a sneak peek of this Monday's Ellen, Kardashian stopped by to fan the flames of her hubby's tweet apocalypse, which had him talking about the "dragon energy" he shares with Donald Trump and showing off his signed MAGA hat — losing followers like Rihanna and Drake in the process.
The blunt warning — delivered to about 1003 of the president's most ardent supporters in the evangelical community — was the latest example of Mr. Trump's attempts to use the specter of violence at the hands of his political opponents and to fan the flames of cultural divisions in the country.
Jeffries, an African-American lawmaker, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that Trump's response to the violence in Charlottesville, Va., last month shows how the president is a "racial arsonist" who caters to extremists and "fan the flames of hatred" by protecting the white nationalists who converged on the college town.
"Over Telegram and other messaging services, they [IS supporters] have been encouraging each other to use the November 4 rally to fan the flames of jihad across the country," Sidney Jones, director of the Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict, wrote in a recent note published on think tank The Lowy Institute's website.
There is no shortage of organizations standing ready to fan the flames of their desires, groups that arrange events that entice the hopeful to come and make their pitches, to hone their PowerPoint "decks," to practice catching the investor's interest in the first two sentences, and most of all to fulfill the dream of getting funding.
"Nobody has done more to fan the flames of gun violence than the N.R.A." While the resolution has no practical effect, Ms. Stefani said in an interview on Wednesday, "I firmly believe that words matter, and I think this is a step in fighting the negative impact of the N.R.A." The N.R.A. saw the action as a publicity stunt.
President Donald Trump continues to fan the flames of his culture war, this morning tweeting again about NFL players who kneel during the national anthem and calling for an end to "tax breaks" for the football league: Why is the NFL getting massive tax breaks while at the same time disrespecting our Anthem, Flag and Country?
The trial and eventual acquittal of the man who shot him, George Zimmerman, helped fan the flames of the Black Lives Matter protests, which erupted into full force in 2014 following the police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. By 2015, debates about Confederate flags and monuments were heating up in Southern states including South Carolina, Texas and Louisiana.
Similarly, the 2008 Obama campaign was the first to harness online advertising to reach the right voters with the right message with near-surgical precision, but 10 years later the same techniques are propelling right-wing authoritarians to power in the US, the Philippines, and Brazil, and being used to fan the flames of xenophobia, racial hatred, and even genocide around the world—perhaps most devastatingly in Myanmar.
In the briefings this week, Facebook also said that it had found attempts to manipulate its platform after the elections, including around the time of the Unite The Right white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va., last summer and in regard to the #AbolishICE hashtag, in line with previous Russian efforts to not just influence the election, but fan the flames of tension around social issues in the U.S. We have more here.

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