Mindset
in sentence
418 examples of Mindset in a sentence
"Norma Desmond" and "Joe Gillis" are at opposite ends of this warped Hollywood mindset, with Gillis, played by that most cynical of actors, William Holden trying to pay the rent and Norma (Gloria Swanson) living a lie as a silent queen whose star burned "10,000 midnights ago".
This film is awesome but you need to be in the right
mindset
and it surly isn't a Disney film.
By banishing all trappings of justice, this
mindset
is oblivious to the suffering of the peace-loving civilians who comprise the vast majority of those living in Pakistan’s tribal areas.
Chicago, having already hosted the opening ceremony and first match of the 1994 World Cup, has adopted quite a different
mindset.
Her mantra, “You can’t buck the market,” did contribute to a
mindset
that led governments and central banks to be reluctant to question unsustainable market trends.
It is our task – with the support of the new Bosnian leadership – to redirect this approach to a genuine European
mindset.
But, before a modern open society was fully established or the associated
mindset
entrenched, it was overtaken by Putin’s “simple is better” approach.
The US remains stuck in the time-worn
mindset
of a deficit saver with massive multilateral trade deficits and the need to draw freely on global surplus saving to support economic growth.
The same
mindset
has become apparent among economists and policymakers.
Leaders who approach a political task with a corporate
mindset
are likely to focus more on efficiency than inclusion.
WWI began with a mindset, one based on the belief that military means could resolve pressing social and political issues in Central Europe.
This implies a major shift in
mindset
– one that I believe we need to undergo for the sake of our world’s long-term health.
Corruption isn’t only high-level governmental malfeasance; overcoming it requires nothing short of a change in Indians’
mindset.
Together in RecoveryNEW YORK – The United Nations’ recently released World Economic Situation and Prospects mid-year report warns that the global economy is at risk of a severe downturn, unless world leaders’ short-term
mindset
gives way to a focus on medium- and long-term policies.
Not even an organized network would be required; just a fanatic with the
mindset
of those who now design computer viruses.
Such a response is hardly likely to alter the
mindset
of potential recruits.
In 2014, while visiting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo, his Indian counterpart, Narendra Modi, took a veiled swipe at Chinese expansionism, criticizing the “eighteenth-century expansionist mindset” that was becoming apparent “everywhere around us.”Citing encroachment on other countries’ lands, intrusion into their waters, and even the capture of territory, Modi left little doubt about the target of his complaint.
Is it the pursuit of hyper-efficiency – the “Silicon Valley”
mindset?
And that will require a fundamental shift in mindset, from one of competition to one that emphasizes cooperation.
Today, it is difficult to imagine the
mindset
that prevailed before Margaret Thatcher came to power in the United Kingdom in 1979 and Ronald Reagan in the United States in 1981.
Much of Europe seems to be stuck in the same mindset: we say that we want a common foreign and security policy, but we do nothing about it until a crisis emerges.
One finding from the 2015 report that I can speak to directly is the emergence in the Arab world of a “silent majority” with a more liberal mindset, especially among the young.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel – whose East German upbringing should have given her especially acute insight into Putin’s authoritarian
mindset
– has described the Russian leader as detached from reality, guided by nineteenth-century Machtpolitik.
Indeed, to counteract the
mindset
forged in the recent financial crisis, spending measures will need to be longer-lasting if they are to raise expectations of future growth and thus stimulate current investment and hiring.
There are signs that such a shift in
mindset
is underway.
Denial remains the Saudi rulers’ dominant
mindset.
But the totalitarian
mindset
has since resurfaced in leaders who, with their claim to represent the will of the majority, appropriate more and more power.
There may not be nostalgia for the Cold War in any of this, but much of that era’s
mindset
can be perceived again in the arguments being knocked about.
The prevailing Chinese
mindset
is that the US is intent on isolating, containing, and undermining it.
Yet, to make the most of data sharing, donors should also shift their
mindset
and invest more in quality data collection and management during project implementation, and sustain funding for curation and continued analysis of datasets.
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