Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
With Morsi’s victory, some now fear that the Muslim Brotherhood will seek to implement
radical
policies aimed at Islamizing a Muslim country that is already conservative, but that has had a secular government for decades.
This presupposes that the Brothers reorganize themselves internally and find ways to distance themselves from more
radical
factions, and that they promote inclusive policies toward vulnerable groups and social minorities.
When the economy was near collapse during the recent crisis, we thought that the government would recognize the need to push ahead with
radical
reforms that would eventually lead to a diverse, de-centralized, and fast-growing economy.
But the Bush administration, backed by a few handpicked Iraqis, is pushing Iraq towards an even more
radical
form of shock therapy than was pursued in the former Soviet world.
This devotion to violence stands on two legs:
radical
culture and injustice.
When
radical
culture prevails, it brings people over to violence.
And the extremism of
radical
culture is fueled by the many inequities and grievances that face the peoples of the Middle East.
Unfortunately, Iraq has become a breeding ground for
radical
Islam, owing to the brutality that the Iraqi people suffered under Saddam and now at the hands of the occupation forces.
Trump has tried to implement his
radical
agenda using three approaches.
If these three urgent tasks are completed, there will be plenty of time – and much time will be needed – to contemplate
radical
changes like new budgetary rules, harmonization of other national policies, and a move to full fiscal union.
It’s a
radical
idea.
So why is the Bush administration spending time and energy proposing
radical
changes to the Social Security System as its signature domestic policy initiative – indeed, as virtually its only policy initiative?
The second, more
radical
approach, tries to improve not the economy but the way people themselves go about their lives.
Frustration with the complexities of trying to provide ready fixes leads to attempts to find even more
radical
solutions.
Beneath the Arab political revolutions lies a deeper and longer process of
radical
change that is sometimes called the information revolution.
Although the Civic Platform, which governed until 2015, grew out of the Solidarity movement of the 1980s, it betrayed its working-class base by pursuing
radical
neoliberal economic policies that increased economic inequality.
There were anxieties, too, that the increasing loss of legitimacy of Arab nationalist regimes would benefit
radical
Islamists - fears confirmed by Algeria's bloody civil war of the 1990's.
The so-called “Sputnik shock” convinced America and the West of the need for
radical
reform of science education, particularly recruitment, training, and retention of teachers.
To succeed economically, they will need Western support – and the West will not be eager to fund
radical
Islamist governments.
It might seem ironic that
radical
nationalists, like Bannon, should be seeking to unite in a global movement, as though they were mimicking their internationalist enemies.
But while many EU leaders were relieved to see Macron elected, it is often because they hope he will give a new lease on life to the old project, rather than a
radical
break with the past.
But although the language of China's incremental reforms always seems to be cautious, the results on the ground are
radical.
If the world used less oil, Iran would become less threatening, because its
radical
rulers rely on oil revenues to purchase domestic support and pursue their regional goals.
Meanwhile, those parties that intend to move left, such as die Linke in Germany, risk being overwhelmed by the
radical
anti-capitalist left.
Even in a number of European countries with old democratic traditions, a wave of populist,
radical
political parties opposed to minorities and immigrants has achieved success, sometimes even winning elections.
Yet Jewish settlements, built mainly under the right-wing governments of Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir, and Benjamin Netanyahu, remain in place, and relations between settlers - some of them extremely
radical
nationalists - and Palestinians remain raw.
Turkey's "conservative democrats" in the Justice and Development (AK) Party came to power in the first election thereafter, in November 2002, and were quickly able to marginalize
radical
elements among both the Islamists and secularists.
At the same time, a
radical
reform program within Ukraine is gaining momentum, and slowly becoming visible to both the Ukrainian public and the European authorities.
But it is an even greater test for the Palestinians: will they once again be led by a
radical
and fanatical leadership into another national catastrophe?
Homosexuals have been able to register civil partnerships since 1995 and marry since 2009, and the country is one of the most
radical
in its understanding of women’s rights – as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange can attest.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Change
Would
Their
Political
Economic
Groups
World
There
Policy
Other
Reform
People
Government
Policies
About
Country
While
Public
Between