Argue
in sentence
2151 examples of Argue in a sentence
The rabidly anti-Castro Cuban exiles clustered in Miami
argue
that it is fear that holds Cubans back, but that's not true.
While some
argue
that humanitarian intervention is never justified without approval by the United Nations Security Council, the UN Charter itself provides a dubious foundation for this view.
Indeed, some economists now
argue
for a two-pronged attack on inequality: redistributive measures alongside market interventions to bolster wages and employment.
But I would
argue
that the decline in volatility in currency, bond, and equity markets largely reflects low inflation in many parts of the world, and the lack of significant monetary-policy adjustments by major central banks in recent years.
So it may seem anomalous to
argue
that, if rights are to be protected, what is required today in various parts of the world is reinforcement of centralized governmental power.
Singapore is rightly proud of its elite secondary and tertiary academic institutions, but one could
argue
that the hidden gems of the system are the hundreds of neighborhood schools, institutes for technical education, and polytechnics that provide high-quality education for all.
Some environmental campaigners
argue
for cleaner stoves.
We must
argue
the case for free trade, which has brought far-reaching benefits to humanity.
Iranian experts
argue
that, in considering the trade-off between internal unrest and external sanctions, the Iranian government must choose between domestic security and international security.
Some experts
argue
that it has already raised oil prices by about $15 per barrel.
I
argue
in my book Mass Flourishing that the right model is the good economy, which is an economy that offers the good life.
Now some American neo-conservatives
argue
that the US should drop its longstanding support for European integration.
Proponents of this view often
argue
that migrants drive down wages, particularly at the lower end of the income distribution, undermining natives’ living standards.
They also
argue
that migrants dilute the recipient country’s culture and traditions – a claim with an emotional pull that economists often underestimate.
Allah goes on to
argue
that these revolutions did more than just topple regimes like Mubarak’s.
This tactic worked once, they argue, and it will work again.
The problem, as I
argue
in my new book, Unbalanced: The Codependency of America and China, is not with China, but with the world – and the United States, in particular – which is not prepared for the slower growth that China’s successful rebalancing implies.
American conservatives
argue
that a large public sector is subject to inefficiency and mismanagement, corruption, and bureaucratic abuse, while the taxation needed to support it blunts economic efficiency.
Indeed, many
argue
that by refusing to take into account distinctions linked to ethnic and religious origin, these distinctions are legitimized.
Advocates of rapid euroization
argue
that it will promote and lock in fiscal, financial, and labor market reforms while expanding trade and boosting income.
Agriculture Minister Luca Zaia has gone so far as to
argue
that relating salaries to the cost of living in different regions will force the south to be self-sufficient and stop relying on help from the north.
They now
argue
that Putin personally chose repression in responding to the protest movement that filled the streets of Moscow and other major cities in late 2011 and early 2012.
Throughout the 1990s, the American Petroleum Institute (API) – the largest oil and gas trade association and lobbying group in the US – repeatedly relied on economic models created by two economists, Paul Bernstein and W. David Montgomery, to
argue
that pro-climate policies would be devastatingly expensive.
This, the SNP’s leaders argue, would allow an independent Scotland to remain part of Europe, even as England, Wales, and Northern Ireland set out on their own.
As we
argue
in the Report on Economy and Development for the Development Bank of Latin America (CAF), the needed skills can be broken down into three categories.
Countries like Germany, Finland, and the Netherlands are right to
argue
that rapid progress cannot come at the expense of the new supervisory structure’s quality.
And they oppose those shrill voices who
argue
democracy is incompatible with Islam.
In Juliana v. United States, the plaintiffs
argue
that because they will have to live with the repercussions of global warming for much longer than anyone else, on average, the government’s failure to protect the environment violates their constitutional rights to equal protection under the law and due process.
It may be, as President Mubarak’s critics argue, that the faltering progress of democratization reflects the attempt to block all potential challengers to Gamal.
All that liquidity, they will argue, had to go somewhere.
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