That was a politically motivated jack-up a couple of weeks before an election. |
|
This was an unmitigated good, and one that is politically above the reproach of critical interrogation. |
|
I know, it's not politically correct, but I want an authentic pair of mukluks and the natives did not make mukluks out of fake fur. |
|
He is very smart and politically skillful, and his time as prime minister was very productive. |
|
Anti-war movements are often sentimental, muddle-headed and politically naive. This one merely requests an explanation. |
|
The clear distinction between right and wrong has been lost in sociological mumbo-jumbo and politically correct nonsense. |
|
For the first time there is an uncomplicated simple way for people to politically express their racism. |
|
The most obvious reason I avoid the movement is because MRAs are some of the least politically savvy people on the Internet. |
|
The free movement of capital and labour have to be politically defined and legally regulated. |
|
The fact we are politically attuned to the region means Europeans can regard us as a friend at court. |
|
The environment minister is being condemned for mouthing politically correct platitudes. |
|
As the Stasi crimes remain largely unatoned in legal terms, they believe it is time to rehabilitate them politically as well. |
|
His dramatic Pentagon briefings caught the mood of the American public with his unashamed politically incorrect language. |
|
But you have to ask yourself, if it actually comes to blows politically, internally, is the United States going to stand by and watch that? |
|
It was probably the most politically incorrect remark that's ever been made in my hearing. |
|
A lot of Bresson's work has been read to have spiritual transcendence, yet also can be read existentially, politically and morally. |
|
How neurological the problem is, or how politically expedient, is a moot point. |
|
Explicit priority setting, however, is likely to move very slowly because it is politically explosive. |
|
And although the recent cooperation has yielded important results, it promises to be politically explosive. |
|
Authorities have arrested high-profile editors, closed publications, and imposed news blackouts on politically sensitive events. |
|
|
Up to six million people are expected to log on during the month-long project to see how the politically monikered pen-mates get on. |
|
It seems unlikely that such operations could be militarily important, but they could be politically important and must be guarded against. |
|
Since then he has done everything possible to politically destroy his opponent and blacken his name through a series of trumped up charges. |
|
Democracy, political rights, and civil liberties are politically modifiable variables that seem to be associated with health status. |
|
But most of all, the politically correct do not like being publicly mocked and revealed as ridiculous. |
|
The Trotskyist extreme left had an historic occasion to weigh in politically. |
|
Perky, painless and politically correct, this frothy little farce benefits from a remarkably trim running time. |
|
After the military coup of 1980, however, a new tribalism or politically strategic ethnicity began to emerge. |
|
A stomach full of bile with lashings of politically incorrect humour, Burns is back. |
|
He's been politically committed and has taken big cuts in his salary to make these kinds of films. |
|
Will other political parties follow suit, in seeking out their own politically symbolic transports of delight? |
|
The notion of particularity serves both politically and epistemologically to blur the transmutation of socialism back into capitalism. |
|
By the time the sheeple wake up and attempt to politically change things, it will be far to late. |
|
New alliances are emerging that neither politically nor militarily may be benign to the United States. |
|
I fell in with a group of politically correct activists who I soon discovered treated me differently than their Canadian or American peers. |
|
Primarily farmers and tradesmen, the Totonac communities are well organized and politically active to ensure their rights. |
|
In general, consciousness of sexism in language is a younger-generation, urban, and politically liberal concern. |
|
I accept that MRSA is an urgent issue, but attempts to make microbiology a political issue are the arguments of the politically desperate. |
|
They liked irreverence, taking the mickey, politically incorrect humour, mockery, satire. |
|
What they have got going for them is that our maladroitness politically and diplomatically has put us in a real bind. |
|
|
The enclave remained politically and sentimentally attached to Portuguese Timor, but not geographically. |
|
Many arrests proved doubtful with large numbers of detainees held on flimsy evidence after politically motivated tip-offs by local rivals. |
|
Powerless though the Serlians may be politically, they are honest merchants and prolific traders. |
|
You always said that you were politically naive, that you were a non-political person. |
|
He was a bluff, domineering character who exuded confidence though politically he often showed signs of naivety. |
|
Although increasingly stranded politically by the ebbing tide of socialism, he has refused to tone down his rabble-rousing rhetoric. |
|
It is the mask that the politically covetous wear to hide their self-seeking agenda. |
|
He had the women, he had the gadgets and he was thumbing his nose at what was considered politically correct at the time. |
|
As I've said before, politically this would only be possible if it was an issue driven by the Basotho themselves. |
|
To some it's the home of an oppressive thought police bent on turning workers into politically correct dullards. |
|
We have allowed a bureaucratic monster to emerge from the maws of politically appointed health boards and vested interests. |
|
They are presently in a very weak position, morally and politically, on the issue of Third World debt. |
|
As quota critics have long maintained, heavy-handed quota schemes don't promote true racial diversity, only politically correct tokenism. |
|
These are mostly 10th graders with some 12 th graders, but they are very politically aware and astute. |
|
The museum in Indonesia's politically fraught Aceh province was shaken by the seaquake that triggered off the tsunami. |
|
It seemed to me that rather than displaying panic, it was a master stroke, politically speaking. |
|
In truth, he was politically bankrupt after 2000, and he is not all that much stronger today. |
|
But, today, to become politically marketable a party needs to be open to new ideas and new members. |
|
Privately, kin groups are important, but politically and economically, they play a marginal role. |
|
While this glad-handing was politically motivated, we now also know that they are not above schmoozing with conmen for real-estate discounts. |
|
|
Worse still, the government has often backtracked on its reform commitments or reversed measures deemed to be politically or socially unfeasible. |
|
He was allegedly being used to fight him politically, depicting him as a man of straw who could not pay rent. |
|
He was politically and economically arch-conservative, an ardent Malthusian and opponent of immigration. |
|
Encouraging additional malinvestment into green energy or other politically correct machinations won't stimulate recovery. |
|
During the general elections, at least half of Malay voters, the country's politically strongest ethnic group, supported the opposition. |
|
The baby boomer generation were flexing their collective muscles both politically and musically. |
|
This time round he seems far more politically aware, and I am a big fan of his, sad but true! |
|
That is no natural phenomenon but the result of centuries of politically directed ethnocide. |
|
As a salutary side effect, reform may also be society's greatest protection against politically motivated violence. |
|
Members were attuned to the political environment and sought what was politically possible. |
|
The 1930s thrillers seem more politically aware and attuned to their times. |
|
Vietnam War, sadly, is another example of conflict won militarily but lost politically. |
|
An immediate promise to continue funding the service is both the fair and politically astute thing to do. |
|
All three are politically astute and have been following the election in the media. |
|
Despite being politically inactive, he was accused of being a Russophile and was even framed for organising a plot against the prime minister. |
|
Scientists are all over the lot on the question, and the issue is so hot politically that it's difficult to trust the science. |
|
Only great men could afford, economically and politically, to wear the royal purple. |
|
Given that the very gathering of such intelligence is at the heart of the dispute, how could such information be rendered politically neutral? |
|
It wouldn't be politically wise for the ambitious local marshal to be associated with a roughneck like Horn. |
|
Spending increases are becoming ingrained and it will be politically very difficult to roll them back. |
|
|
I worry about incremental reforms that take so many people off the tax rolls in order to make them politically palatable. |
|
My parents were not politically active, although they considered themselves rock-ribbed Reagan Republicans. |
|
When they aren't rocking out, the band do what they can to encourage their fans to become politically aware and get out to the voting polls. |
|
The paper seems to have lurched politically rightward in its news coverage lately. |
|
Culturally integrated but politically separate, the United States Territory of Guam lies thirty miles farther south at the bottom of the chain. |
|
With so much potentially at stake, this politically charged issue is fanning a fiercely emotional debate. |
|
The anti-capitalist movement marks the emergence of a new generation of politically thinking youth. |
|
It should come as no surprise that his approach is deemed politically retrograde and unacceptable. |
|
As well being politically aware, their music is awash with anthemic, post-punk rhythmic bursts. |
|
How did the police come to be accepted as legitimate authority figures rather than politically controversial bearers of power? |
|
Not all annotations and marginal notes were politically motivated or denominationally influenced. |
|
The word is that while this guy is no angel, the arrest is politically motivated, one group of thugs trying to take over the assets of others. |
|
In a largely politically correct town the candidate for mayor is leading with his chin. |
|
Not quite a Marxist art historian himself, he is politically left of center, a position he makes clear. |
|
Throughout the spring politically motivated lawlessness mounted around the city. |
|
He apparently is smart enough to know an anachronistic and politically inaccurate comparison when he sees one. |
|
It is also a politically safe position for the narrator who must negotiate his way through a repressive political system. |
|
Can no longer function except to distribute billions of taxpayer largesse to politically connected corporations? |
|
It is not an offence for anyone to hold a view contrary to your own, however politically correct you may consider yourselves to be. |
|
The term is an antiquated yoke of oppression, politically, culturally and socially. |
|
|
The volunteer forces, especially the yeomanry, had been politically dependable. |
|
Operationally the landings in November were a complete success, politically a disaster. |
|
Progress towards democracy and towards freedom of press are the standard Western yardsticks to judge how China is developing politically. |
|
Even more than corporate logos and trademarks, the symbolism embedded in flag design is emotionally, philosophically, and politically charged. |
|
This country's southern states have always been more culturally and politically conservative than other regions. |
|
They are wrong-headed and politically driven obsessions, not compassionate advisements intended to relieve human suffering. |
|
His poetry continued as it began, very alert to Art as politically acquiescent, complicit or compromised. |
|
And the majority, in an effort to prove its multiracial credentials, must always kowtow to them in today's politically correct world. |
|
It is always a different world order that we are looking for be it politically, socially or economically. |
|
The communist regime considers stylized reenactment of ancient stories to be a politically subversive intellectual entertainment for the rich. |
|
Public policy topics will expand our knowledge base in the legislative and regulatory arenas and inspire attendees to become politically active. |
|
Reductionist science is considered bad science with politically oppressive implications. |
|
This kind of reductionism is not very useful, and it is also politically paralysing. |
|
Having wonky analytical arguments may be good for policy but politically it's disastrous. |
|
He has consistently distanced himself from his documentarian brethren, both aesthetically and politically. |
|
According to this view, international law is but one tool in the diplomatic kitbag that can be utilized to justify politically motivated actions. |
|
This is a wise and prudent course, but it will be politically difficult to achieve. |
|
This is not a win-win situation as it was sold politically, but a lose-lose situation. |
|
There is a politically correct hostility against streaming students and against grade acceleration. |
|
The reborn union handed out contracts to politically connected businesses and politically powerful, mobbed-up unions. |
|
|
Kerry's aides have said they do not believe the timing was politically motivated. |
|
I've become very agnostic politically anyway, but it's based on a sheer lack of respect for the political classes. |
|
Surely a more rational, equitable and plain simpler system is imaginable and politically realisable? |
|
As an afterword to the book makes clear, the author, now in his late eighties, remains politically active today. |
|
We want that Mr. Right to come in our lives on a white knight as much as that's not politically correct nowadays. |
|
Without a break from generators, a bailout wouldn't fly politically, since ratepayers would foot the bill. |
|
Yet he does see politically engaged art as a partial corrective to the bankrupt aestheticism of much mainstream art. |
|
These politically inconsequential, but stylish and aesthetically delightful, films were lapped up by the critics. |
|
The air force was supported by the new and politically influential aerospace industry. |
|
I had not realized that advocacy of human nature was still so politically incorrect. |
|
And I did want him to meet them because they're smart, complicated, politically aware, well-read, funny people. |
|
It suited these people too well personally and politically to do anything else. |
|
He became politically active as a student and was a founder member of the Congress of Democrats. |
|
For the rest, the theology is rationalistic, individualistic, and politically somewhere between extreme libertarian and nonviolent anarchist. |
|
The order has a large urban base, and its educated members are particularly politically active. |
|
In fact, it is precisely times like these that encourage students to become politically active. |
|
I don't reject friends because they politically aren't like me, or they are racist, gay or whatever. |
|
Originally quiescent politically, the majority of Deobandis opposed the partition of India and saw Pakistan as the creation of Western forces. |
|
Perhaps the politically correct parents that forbid their children to even fire a water pistol had the right idea. |
|
That, in part, is why the west has always provided a politically expedient cover for warmongering. |
|
|
A vast army of censors police Weibo for objectionable content, often deleting posts deemed politically sensitive or too salacious. |
|
It's politically imprudent to stir up such controversy during an election year. |
|
But what political price is there to pay for en masse targeting of politically unempowered minority groups? |
|
However, Abbott is not about to let cold hard facts get in the way of a little politically motivated demagoguery. |
|
Her personal feelings about religion do not affect how she behaves legally, politically, or socially. |
|
Ortega has dismissed the allegations of autocracy and fraud that have afflicted his presidency as politically motivated. |
|
Second, the Nobel Prize for economics went to Jean Tirole, who studies how to regulate politically powerful companies. |
|
Christie, an archetypal tough guy happy warrior, at first dismissed accusations that the traffic jam was politically motivated. |
|
Being politically astute, even in her dotage, baroness Thatcher was aware what contention that could create. |
|
The politically correct company goes to great lengths to reduce its carbon footprint and support other liberal causes. |
|
So a textualist could, in principle and within limits, allow both a politically liberal and a politically conservative reading of the Constitution's text. |
|
There could be as much bitter and acrimonious political argument and debate as they liked, but from now on all problems had to be resolved politically. |
|
I would like to think such is not the case either, as I have been politically active and have engaged with my community in many ways outside of my university life. |
|
These pastors also are politically active and engaged in civil rights. |
|
However politically accommodating the radicals are prepared to be, any talk of defending workers interests is enough to send the union leaders into a frenzy. |
|
The threat comes not from some Whitehall johnny-come-lately, nor some politically correct illiterate chair of a focus group, seeking his day in the Sun. |
|
While he is not contesting the Jan. 22 election, Olmert remains politically active. |
|
It was designed to financially and politically promote already advantaged middle-class layers and business interests among the Maori and Pacific Island communities. |
|
He had just interviewed the Prime Minister and had come away from Number 10 Downing Street convinced that the Labour leader was just about kaput politically. |
|
Despite his tendency to speak frankly on political issues, he insists that neither he nor his group are politically active. |
|
|
She would always be very decent to you, and would keep in with all the right people politically, but you always ended up wondering how much you could trust her. |
|
The interpretation of the Tiananmen crackdown remains a charged issue in China, both politically and emotionally. |
|
As these centres became politically agglomerated in the 16th century, variations on what soon became virtually an artistic canon became more solely individual than regional. |
|
This is both constitutionally mandated and politically wise. |
|
They say you're not supposed to say it, it's not politically wise. |
|
Conversely, the Bridgegate story now clearly and decisively is a real politically motivated scandal. |
|
On the most politically charged issues, like crime and welfare reform, hacks thought wonks were from Pluto and wonks thought hacks were from Uranus. |
|
Dalton sees the handwriting on the wall and wants to put the town on alert for possible evacuation, but the request is refused by his politically conscious superior. |
|
Super PACs, unlike politically active nonprofits, must disclose their donors to the FEC in regular filings. |
|
Are these the sort of people you wish to ally yourself with politically? |
|
Medieval Europe was politically fragmented and religiously divided. |
|
The government is to discuss a general amnesty for prisoners convicted of crimes that might be politically motivated, a senior official said yesterday. |
|
Globalization processes create academically uncomfortable and sometimes politically reprehensible forms of hybrid histories, all shadowed by commodifications of various sorts. |
|
You know, they could have shot him up, but it would have damaged forever the shrine, and that was an untenable situation politically in the world. |
|
The Committee draws to the attention of the house any issue that it considers politically or legally important or that gives rise to issues of public policy. |
|
The lines of cleavage between Pablo's revisionism and orthodox Trotskyism are so deep that no compromise is possible either politically or organizationally. |
|
To fight Stalinism and Castroism is to politically destroy revisionism. |
|
As unyielding as any of the cold war communist regimes, it is neither economically liberal nor politically democratic, but has ruled for all but one of the past 46 years. |
|
Yet the IMF rode herd on countries such as Indonesia, which found it politically impossible to fulfill the more than 100 conditions attached to its 1998 bailout. |
|
Both father and son share a passion for politics and strong beliefs in the importance of family values, although they have not always been of a like mind politically. |
|
|
Navarro worries that may mean the politically powerful flores family will mete out their own brand of justice. |
|
And if you go to the website you'll see that they've already compiled an impressive and very politically and religiously diverse least of signers. |
|
Tough, frighteningly ambitious, politically savvy, and willing to take outsize risks. |
|
Obesity has become a politically live issue in recent years. |
|
From gaffe prone state legislators to politically astute Capitol Hill power players, here are 10 of them. |
|
With those seven simple words, once politically fatal for a Republican leader to utter, the gauntlet was thrown. |
|
The second form of electoral corruption, on the other hand, would seem to thrive in a more rudimentarily organised and generally less politically aware society. |
|
When things are going well for them politically, they are unbearably arrogant, shoving it in everyone's faces, ungraciously lording it over all concerned. |
|
The breakdown of the politically correct liberal open-mindedness into frenzied intolerance of criticism and the taboo of peace was dramatic and instantaneous. |
|
The Calvinists also thought the Lutherans were too docile politically, and the Lutherans accused the Calvinists of resisting the legitimate Prince. |
|
Whereas the former was a Machiavellian autocrat with a fascist background, the latter is a straightforward, consensus-driven and politically moderate. |
|
Ironically, the private-sector unions have also suffered politically from the SINS of the public sector. |
|
But technocracy is intellectually dead and politically exhausted. |
|
He has since been considered increasingly politically vulnerable after Cruz attacked him as insufficiently conservative. |
|
So when Vitter got into trouble, he was a known quantity who had shown himself to be politically formidable. |
|
Moreover, any truly effective coordination would be politically controversial, logistically problematic, and hard to sustain. |
|
Both politically and meteorologically, it was not a clear day. |
|
Mandela came of age politically in a mass movement based in the dusty streets of South Africa's townships, before finding himself forced underground and eventually jailed. |
|
They are even catering to the trendies by giving away their used coffee grounds for fertiliser, and promoting various other politically correct causes. |
|
But as with any show that was created in the 1940s, some of its tropes could be deemed politically incorrect or offensive today. |
|
|
The imperial court was a secluded world of its own, politically powerless, but well equipped with funds by the governing shoguns to dedicate themselves to fine arts. |
|
But at the same time, the Vietnam War showed that the military side of the military-industrial complex was politically vulnerable. |
|
We all know people who are politically conservative but sexually libertine, or politically liberal and as chaste as mother teresa. |
|
The unsentimental path is to focus on Asia, which is safer politically and historically, the bigger prize. |
|
If and when prosecutions arise, the effect could be politically explosive! |
|
I would just say, musically, you just outgrow bands philosophically and politically. |
|
Its most far-reaching elements have proved unconstitutional, unworkable, or politically unsustainable. |
|
That would be typical of the politically correct party that he represents. |
|
Typically, the Manics are releasing their most personal and least polemical album as the world teeters on its most politically charged precipice for decades. |
|
American security is founded on liberty, and a politically freer planet, a planet freed from the grip of tyrants and the threat of terrorists, is a far safer world. |
|
Born in London to Sindhi parents, the young actress who spent two years in Bombay as a child, says the film has made her much more politically aware than she used to be. |
|
Jayne appears to feel that the issue of Sport Pilot is way too politically sensitive with other forces in other ultralight associations battling our interests. |
|
I agree that this is ridiculously politically slanted in one direction. |
|
From around 1830 large segments of the population began to identify with either German or Danish nationality and mobilized politically. |
|
From about the year 780 onwards, Europe saw the last of the barbarian invasions and became more socially and politically organized. |
|
Dean Simonton has developed several historiometric measures that are reliable and valid and politically nonpartisan. |
|
Although Hutus encompass the majority of the population, historically Tutsis have been politically and economically dominant. |
|
The Prime Minister could seek dissolution at a time politically advantageous to his or her party. |
|
Used here, the term typographically, linguistically and politically links Behan's prison experience to the Irish colonial experience. |
|
The generally agreed upon language border is, in other words, politically shaped. |
|
|
The Kingdom of Ireland was politically separate from Great Britain and subordinate to it. |
|
However, it appears Philip never intended to disown his politically and militarily trained son. |
|
There is nothing new or progressive in the politically corrected vocabularies that now amuse the prejudiced. |
|
However, it appears the Government's actions against the group were probably politically, not religiously, motivated. |
|
Libel laws and concerns for national security have been used to suppress criticism of government figures and politically objectionable views. |
|
There were more reports of politically motivated disappearances in the country. |
|
Senegal peacefully attained independence from France in 1960, and has since been among the more politically stable countries in Africa. |
|
In various periods, various other territories were politically connected with the Moldavian principality. |
|
Currently, the Azores, Madeira, and Savage Islands are the only overseas territories that remain politically linked to Portugal. |
|
Though his novels celebrated Scottish identity and history, Scott was politically a firm Unionist. |
|
Its capital is Cebu City, the oldest city and first capital of the Philippines, which is politically independent from the provincial government. |
|
This left his younger son, the pious but politically ineffectual Feodor Ivanovich, to inherit the throne. |
|
Traditional accounts indicate that he was politically active in Magna Graeca. |
|
In Taiwan, the relationship between Standard Chinese and other varieties, particularly Taiwanese Hokkien, has been more politically heated. |
|
But the perception that Clemenceau had failed to achieve all of France's demands damaged him politically. |
|
The group consisted of wealthy, politically powerful, and interrelated families of Geneva. |
|
They are politically and socially conservative, and emphasize that God's favor translates into business success. |
|
Use of the Irish language in Northern Ireland today is politically sensitive. |
|
Some cultures limit or discourage access to birth control because they consider it to be morally, religiously, or politically undesirable. |
|
From about the year 1000 onwards, Western Europe saw the last of the barbarian invasions and became more politically organized. |
|
|
Jane Fonda may be a hit at the box office, but she is bombing out politically. |
|
Once on the Court, Brandeis kept active politically but worked behind the scenes, as was acceptable at the time. |
|
Interpretations of both the harm and offense limitations to freedom of speech are culturally and politically relative. |
|
He or she is, along with the Deputy, politically responsible for all aspects of the Presiding Office to which the Standing Orders relate. |
|
Pope John XXII, elected in 1316, sought Edward's support for a new crusade, and was also inclined to support him politically. |
|
Significant though the loss was personally, its impact on Asquith politically can be overstated. |
|
Abigail was related to both Harley and the Duchess, but was politically closer to Harley, and acted as an intermediary between him and the Queen. |
|
Edward III's government sought to blame Mortimer for all of the recent problems, effectively politically rehabilitating the late King. |
|
The exercise of these powers is entirely at the President's discretion, for which the President is neither legally nor politically responsible. |
|
However, after the 17th century, most states invested in better disciplined and more politically reliable permanent troops. |
|
This reintroduced British culture to those parts of Britain lost to the British politically. |
|
In Italy, general strikes had been both socially effective and politically unproductive. |
|
Flanders faced the difficult situation of being politically subservient to France, but also reliant on trade with England. |
|
Collectively, the genro made decisions reserved for the Emperor, and the genro, not the Emperor, controlled the government politically. |
|
However, in some cases the direct heir was set aside for a more politically accomplished or belligerent relative. |
|
Chafee was born in Providence, Rhode Island to a politically active family. |
|
After decades of being considered politically sacrosanct, why are homeowner mortgage write-offs suddenly on the chopping block? |
|
Touring theatre companies include the politically radical Banner Theatre, the Maverick Theatre Company and Kindle Theatre. |
|
Great Britain refers geographically to the island of Great Britain, politically to England, Scotland and Wales in combination. |
|
By 1914 the conscience was weakening and by the 1920s it was virtually dead politically. |
|
|
Cromwell chose his eldest surviving son, the politically inexperienced Richard. |
|
Despite a quiet, modest manner, and his politically moderate stance, he was a witty, often scathing speaker. |
|
India was essentially feudal, politically fragmented and not as economically advanced as Western Europe. |
|
The term politically correct has been transformed into a mocking description of vocabulary or actions used to avoid race or gender bias. |
|
And those politically correct lamebrains who think otherwise should be told to leave it alone. |
|
She's smart, ballsy and far more interesting than a lot of the politically correct TV personalities out there. |
|
Gradually, Low German came to be politically viewed as a mere dialect spoken by the uneducated. |
|
He further said that leaders should resolve the issues politically as the political intolerance will add fuel to the fire. |
|
Alarcon is too shrewd politically to touch that, but his ambition has already spoken. |
|
Working as a prison officer has given Roy Oakley a politically uncorrect view on upbringing. |
|
However these ideologies are all very marginal and politically insignificant during elections. |
|
Most Zambians can see right through these fabricated charges and trials-by-headline which are politically driven and in no way rooted in fact. |
|
His first task was to get custody of James and Alexander, politically essential for the authority of the regency. |
|
These conflicts were largely about creating a new political framework of states, each of which would be ethnically and politically homogeneous. |
|
East Germany knew that West Germany would exchange ostmarks for DMs not at their black market rate, but rather at a politically determined rate. |
|
The aristocracy was more thoroughly powerful politically if not economically in Italy than in contemporary Gaul and Spain. |
|
The ardent hope in the room is that those in power will simply find it politically untenable to keep the landfill open. |
|
The pluralist model favors having government shared by politically salient social groups. |
|
The second order, those who fight, was the rank of the politically powerful, ambitious, and dangerous. |
|
By the Late Middle Ages, the whole of the Nordic Region was politically united in the loose Kalmar Union. |
|
|
And while the Pope supported the reintroduction of the iconic veneration, he politically digressed from Byzantium. |
|
Before the consolidation of Sweden, the Geats were politically independent of the Swedes or Svear, whose name was Sweonas in Old English. |
|
This saw the emergence of a small, politically active commercial class in Barcelona. |
|
Critical researchers typically are politically minded people who look to take a stand of opposition to inequality and domination. |
|
These individuals often participate politically on the local level, but shy away from national elections. |
|
NuLab will give an Eartha Kitt for as long as it is politically expedient to do so, and not a moment longer. |
|
An across-the-board reduction in benefits enjoys little popular support and is, most likely, politically unfeasible. |
|
Yet the return of Titus further highlighted the comparative insignificance of Domitian, both militarily and politically. |
|
He was twice briefly returned to power in 1185 and 1189, but even within his home kingdom of Connacht he had become politically marginalized. |
|
These are times of torpor in Paris, politically as well as economically. |
|
He knows that supporting a tax increase would be politically suicidal. |
|
Edward was a precocious child who had been brought up as a Protestant, but was initially of little account politically. |
|
Both groups remained politically distinct until Clovis, a Salian and a member of the Merovingian dynasty, unified Francia. |
|
The 1997 Asian financial crisis affected Indonesia both economically and politically. |
|
This ensures that officers and enlisted men swear an oath to a politically neutral head of state, and not to a politician. |
|
In 2010, according to the Failed States Index, Iraq was the world's seventh most politically unstable country. |
|
The royal family is politically divided by factions based on clan loyalties, personal ambitions and ideological differences. |
|
But this politically mindless approach may produce, whether intended or not, the most grossly gerrymandered results. |
|
She was politically active as a volunteer for her state representative. |
|
Yet in October the same year, the king repudiated this statute and Archbishop Stratford was politically ostracised. |
|