Yet there are plenty of people of other countries, many Mexicans for example, would gladly pay 33% in taxes on their wages if they could live in the U.S. and get everything else most of us in the U.S. take for granted as part of the infrastructure.
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This would turn the majority of that country's squatters into legal property owners, who would have the rights and protections that we in the U.S. and other Western nations take for granted.
Customers who would once have come to Sainsbury for occasional exotic fare and decent quality now take those things for granted.
Joe Carter, a former Marine and an editor for the online evangelical magazine The Gospel Coalition, says nobody can take religious freedom for granted.
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The unfailingly consistent excellence of the Irish Rep is no less easy to take for granted.
So that the disabled have access to facilities the rest of us take for granted.
To be part of a team like this, we do not take it for granted.
The initial deterrent effect has largely disappeared because people just take it for granted.
Confidence in a banking system is something we, here in America, take for granted.
But we most certainly, as Rothkopf says, cannot afford to take it for granted.
It is a time to stop, look around, and think of all we take for granted.
An abundance of food at reasonable prices is something most Americans take for granted.
They often need our support navigating everyday civilian challenges that many nonmilitary folks take for granted.
On the evidence of this week in Brighton, he cannot take it for granted.
Left in private hands, industry strives to create the abundance we often take for granted.
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Their life's work is our security, and the freedom that we all too often take for granted.
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But with the weather being unpredictable, the firm said it was asking customers not to take water for granted.
Light is actually a very basic need that we often take for granted.
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The universe being comprehensible at all, presumably, is just one of those things humans are supposed to take for granted.
So yes, it's peaceful out here, but I take nothing for granted.
We may well be cockroach-ish, but we shouldn't take that for granted.
Think about it and you realize that most of these words are generic descriptors that any employer would likely take for granted.
Londoners do seem to have a close connection with the Underground - but most of the time they take it for granted.
Following the shootings, Burton said students should not take things for granted.
Here in the United States we are so blessed with so many freedoms that it becomes almost easy to take it for granted.
After encountering hurricanes, flight delays, canceled reservations, wildfires and after crisscrossing the country dozens of times, he's learned to take nothing for granted.
Critically, we need the team to recognise what it took to put ourselves in that position and not to take that for granted.
Because when you watch a movie, you are so unaware of what's been going on behind the scenes, that you take it for granted.
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But Julian Castro, the young Latino and Democratic mayor of San Antonio, which is 60% Hispanic, says Democrats should not take Latinos for granted.
Hurricanes and blizzards have been forcing millions to go without electric power, making utility customers more appreciative of the services they often take for granted.
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