Wesley Clark said that the Iraq War has actually put America more at risk.
Employees in large plants find their jobs more at risk than do employees at small ones.
Previous studies had suggested those of lower employment grades may be more at risk.
Interestingly, but maybe not surprisingly, mothers seem to be more at risk than fathers.
FORBES: The 'Better' Mother? How Intense Parenting Leads To Depression
Meanwhile, director compensation is more at risk than ever amid stock ownership thresholds and holding requirements.
FORBES: Pay Hikes for Directors Should Trigger Clear, Confident Communications
In fact, American children are more at risk from firearms than any other industrialized country.
FORBES: Newtown's New Reality: Using Liability Insurance to Reduce Gun Deaths
Older patients, who are more at risk, knew even less about stroke symptoms than young patients.
They also found that very thin children who became fat adults were more at risk of serious health problems.
Who would have thought you'd be more at risk of getting food poisoning from spinach than from ground beef?
If the courts permit the closures, Sweden will be poorer and dirtier and may be more at risk from nuclear accidents.
Dr Steegers said the discovery could lead to new screening tests to identify women more at risk of the condition.
Hence, innovative companies have more at risk, and often settle even when they are confident that they would win in court.
None of this, however, explains why young Americans are more at risk of suicide these days than they were in 1950.
ECONOMIST: Why do so many young Americans end their own lives?
Your parents are all the more at risk when they trust the familiar person, who can use trust to exploit them.
While the younger worker seemed to be more at risk, the findings were the same regardless of the status of the worker.
But scientists fear air travellers could be more at risk because of the lack of opportunity to move about on a plane.
Young mothers, and those bringing up the baby on their own appeared to be more at risk of suffering a cot death.
In England and Wales, figures show that children are much more at risk of being murdered by a parent than by a stranger.
In fact people are much more at risk from changes in, say, the price of their house, inflation, technological change and so forth.
The study had to run 18 months before it became clear that patients on Vioxx were more at risk than those taking a placebo.
Some analysts have suggested that the 2p - the third largest sized coin in the currency - might be more at risk of withdrawal.
More at risk for lingering psychological effects are people who've previously been exposed to trauma, whether from the battlefield, a car crash or a hurricane.
Students are notoriously hard on housing and they are known to hop from property to property, leaving older properties more at risk of occupancy declines.
If business travelers are more at risk than the average traveler, it is because they are less likely to take the necessary precautions, Kozarsky says.
Yet bizarrely, the Bank of Japan seems to think its credibility is more at risk from reignited inflation than from the stigma of mild deflation.
In contrast, net FDI might finance less than one-third of India's deficit and only one-sixth of South Africa's, implying that their currencies are more at risk.
Adults under the age of 65 with an underlying health condition -- such as asthma -- are also considered to be more at risk from the H1N1 virus.
You are lashed to the mast, which means you are more at risk than you would be with a bond which you can sell pretty much at will.
What is also important for the American people to understand is that if we were to leave before the job is done, the country becomes more at risk.
应用推荐