Search Agenda Signals
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Across Topics (100 results)
Current housing market conditions are portrayed as unjust and lacking legitimacy
Housing is framed as a source of danger and insecurity
Disadvantaged applicants framed as excluded due to systemic complexity
Framing public health as being in crisis due to liver disease
Living conditions in town camp implied to be part of a systemic crisis
Project portrayed as陷入 perpetual crisis with no resolution in sight
Public health policy is framed as highly effective in preventing disease and saving costs
Framing PTSD as a severe, unmanaged threat to veterans' well-being
The current permitting system is portrayed as a broken, failing bureaucracy holding back American potential
Environmental regulation and activists are framed as hostile forces obstructing national progress
Residents of Old Timers Camp are framed as marginalized and living in neglect
Housing system portrayed as in urgent need of reform
People with disability are framed as excluded from adequate support
Housing is portrayed as under threat due to income loss
framing housing policy through the lens of supply-side solutions as gaining traction, despite lack of outcome data
Framing children with special needs as unsafe in schools due to systemic neglect
The disability community is framed as vulnerable and under threat from policy changes
Promotes the health benefits of using whole vegetables and reducing food waste
Nursing home residents are framed as vulnerable and unsafe in institutional care
Undermines legitimacy of mental illness as a contextual factor by mentioning it passively without integrating it into legal or moral framing
Hospital project framed as posing safety risks to patients due to unresolved defects
Project portrayed as陷入 ongoing crisis with repeated delays and unresolved issues
lack of housing framed as harmful systemic failure enabling continued detention
Access to housing is framed as increasingly unattain游戏副本 (truncated in original text, but contextually clear)
Questioning the validity of how 'attached' status is defined and counted
Slight positive framing of progress in primary care attachment
Housing system portrayed as under strain and failing
Mental health portrayed as a dangerous crisis threatening child safety and stability
Framed as failing to protect community from long-term carcinogenic exposure
Framed as endangered by RFK Jr.'s vaccine skepticism
Mental health claims portrayed as suspect and manipulative
residents of Northern Labrador are framed as marginalized and neglected by provincial leadership
Mental health struggles framed as insufficient excuse and socially excluded
Mental health system portrayed as failing to prevent harm
Mental health concerns framed as an illegitimate excuse to avoid consequences
Cuban population portrayed as economically vulnerable and under pressure
Campers portrayed as vulnerable victims of preventable disaster
Current public health efforts are implied to be insufficient in addressing the rise in early-onset cancers
Framing Indigenous communities as included and prioritized in national policy
Housing crisis portrayed as endangering vulnerable populations
Undermines trust in mental health professionals' ability to assess risk and manage rehabilitation
Undermines trust in mental health professionals' risk assessments
Public health portrayed as under threat from unlabelled carcinogenic risk in common consumer products
Experimental drugs are framed as safe and urgently needed, despite unproven status
Mental health crisis portrayed as leading to personal failure and loss of control
Framing housing platforms like Airbnb as sites of instability and danger
Mental health treatment system portrayed as ineffective and disconnected
Indigenous child and community framed as excluded from care decisions and cultural continuity
Public health policy is portrayed as innovative and effective
Urban development framed as escalating crisis threatening historic character
Framed as historically wronged and deserving of protection from nuclear harm
SVP framed as adversarial to mainstream institutions and international cooperation
Public health conditions in the facility are framed as being in crisis due to systemic neglect
Local community and businesses portrayed as endangered by infrastructure failure
portrays public health institutions as compromised during a crisis
Younger generation framed as excluded from home ownership
Housing is portrayed as under threat due to short-term rentals
Public health protections framed as failing to safeguard prenatal and child development
Framing flood-affected social housing tenants as emotionally and psychologically neglected
Framing urban housing, especially social housing, as unsafe and under systemic threat from environmental risks
Emphasis on psychological harm to victims of deepfakes
Housing is framed as unstable and tenants as vulnerable to displacement
Disabled badge users are portrayed as vulnerable and under threat from public aggression
Disabled individuals are framed as marginalized and othered in public spaces
Disabled people are being socially excluded and targeted due to suspicion over blue badge use
Society framed as collapsing under pandemic policies
Public health measures portrayed as grossly excessive and mismanaged
policy response framed as harmful or disruptive due to political infighting
Housing stability is portrayed as under threat due to confusion and misapplication of new rental rules
Public ownership and new programs framed as beneficial for patient outcomes
Hospital portrayed as previously unsafe due to private management
Indigenous Peoples framed as excluded from full legal recognition or protection
Civilian infrastructure in Lebanon portrayed as compromised and unsafe
framing public health institutions as compromised and endangering transparency
Mental health is portrayed as a vulnerable condition under threat from unsympathetic institutional responses
Rent freeze policy framed as harmful to housing supply and market health
The situation is framed as an urgent public health crisis requiring immediate action
Public health is framed as under severe threat from modern lifestyle factors
Housing development is framed as proceeding despite cultural conflict, implying urgency or pressure to build
regulatory approval is being granted despite insufficient health risk data
portrayed as unsafe due to systemic failures in healthcare access
Hospice care system portrayed as vulnerable to abuse
Framed as institutionally corrupt, advancing ideological agendas
Framed as part of an ongoing crisis of accountability during the pandemic
Public ownership framed as beneficial for patient outcomes and system integrity
Indigenous commemorative efforts are framed as adversarial to national traditions
Indigenous cultural expression is portrayed as unwelcome or under scrutiny
Portraying public health institutions as fundamentally untrustworthy and deceptive
Indigenous cultural practices are portrayed as needing protection from mockery
Housing portrayed as vulnerable to hidden dangers affecting safety and value
Implied instability in rural community resilience due to water insecurity
Public health in rural areas is portrayed as under threat due to systemic access barriers
Public funding of college sports framed as harmful misallocation compared to public needs
public health framed as threatened by antibiotic resistance
Framing mental health struggles as inherently dangerous
framed as ineffective and creating dangerous legal uncertainty for doctors and patients
Mental health care system framed as in crisis due to inter-agency gaps
Mental health response system portrayed as endangering vulnerable individuals
Excluding Māori perspectives on state-owned land and assets despite relevance
Public safety institutions and progress are framed as effective, particularly in reducing crime and drug dependency