Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
What this reveals is that the Russian protests – called “mitings” – are no longer just for old people,
radical
extremists, or jobless, unskilled, feral youth.
A country poised to embark on some
radical
and uncharted course of action often believes that vacations produce additional scope for delaying or frustrating the other side’s counter-move.
Progressive, anti-nationalist Catalans, like Colau, find themselves squeezed from both sides: the state’s authoritarian establishment, which uses the EU’s directives as a cover for its behavior, and a renaissance of
radical
parochialism, isolationism, and atavistic nativism.
The election on Sunday must give rise to a government that is truly determined to bring
radical
reform to the country.
I don't know what should be done, but I am supporting one effort, called Americans Elect, to push for
radical
change in the US.
Once the Shah left, the
radical
minority that was willing to fight and die for its cause devoured the “moderate majority,” establishing Islamist rule in short order.
Elsewhere, state governments have taken the more
radical
step of establishing special redistricting commissions that are independent of the two dominant political parties.
In America and the West, many will probably regard Rowhani as the friendly face of the Islamic Republic, whereas Ahmadinejad was its true – because more
radical
– embodiment.
Many Iranians, in turn, regard Obama as the friendly face of a US that still seeks regime change in their country, whereas his predecessor, George W. Bush, was America’s more honest – because more
radical
– representative.
Hamas, a
radical
movement, won the Palestinian election in January 2006, but not before blatant pre-election meddling by the US in favor of Fatah, which merely helped to boost Hamas’s legitimacy.
The new silent majority is the best defense against the
radical
and suicidal undercurrents that have filled the political vacuum created by the collapse of the old order.
Putin fits the desired mould for a firmness and stolidity that ensures stability, a strong state, and a "golden middle" between
radical
reforms and strong-arm rule.
In April 1991 Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo linked the Argentine Peso to America’s dollar at a rate of one to one, kicking off an era of
radical
reform.
The future of the Arab Middle East will be decided in the fight between Syria’s Sunni insurgents, supported throughout the region by the Saudi Wahhabis – the patrons of religious fundamentalism – and its secular Baath regime; between the fundamentalist Hamas and the secular PLO in Palestine; and between Egypt’s young secular opposition, forged in the protests of Tahrir Square, and the Muslim Brotherhood and
radical
Salafists.
Two recent books – Identity Economics by Nobel laureate George Akerlof and Rachel Kranton and The Moral Economy by Sam Bowles – indicate that a quiet revolution is challenging the foundations of the dismal science, promising
radical
changes in how we view many aspects of organizations, public policy, and even social life.
Such achievements shattered the indomitable image of the Israeli army, exposing a weakness that other
radical
Islamist groups may attempt to exploit.
Nonetheless, Liberals and Colorados in Congress used the violence in Curuguaty to justify Lugo’s impeachment, arguing that he had failed to maintain social order and portraying him as a dangerous
radical
intent on fomenting a rural insurgency.
For them, religion is not a matter of personal belief, a form of stretching one’s hands toward the divine; instead, it is a key feature of traditional identity politics, a means for maintaining social order, ensuring discipline and conformity, and preventing
radical
change.
Beyond diagnostic disputes in individual cases, psychiatry's absence of objective diagnostic tests implies something more
radical.
As authorities in the US and abroad took ever more
radical
policy steps from October 6-9, stock, credit, and money markets fell further, day after day.
As we have seen in recent days, it will take a big change in economic policy and very radical, coordinated action among all advanced and emerging-market economies to avoid disaster.
Anything short of these
radical
and coordinated actions may lead to a market crash, a global financial meltdown, and worldwide depression.
There are reasons for people to feel anxious about economic globalization, pan-European bureaucracy, the huge and not always effectively controlled influx of immigrants, and the aggression of
radical
political Islam.
Adair Turner, Chairman of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, agrees that more
radical
policies are needed.
The final bastion of
radical
monetary-policy experimentation is Japan.
When Western powers send soldiers into Muslim countries, attempt to bomb extremists into submission, prop up brutal dictatorships, or blindly support every Israeli policy, they confirm the claims of the
radical
Islamists, driving new adherents into their arms.
After all, the force that brought down communism in Europe – a far more dangerous ideology than
radical
Islam – was not simply military containment, but also the power of ideas and ideals.
Social unrest, on the other hand, has already erupted, with violent protests by students and
radical
trade-union factions fueling alarm – as have threats and aggression against officials of both trade unions and employers’ associations.
In fact, events in today’s Middle East continue to be shaped by the
radical
changes brought about after World War I. Previously, most Arabs had been grouped together under various caliphates.
In the first round of the French presidential election, the far left, a motley collection of anti-capitalists and
radical
environmentalists garnered 14% of the vote.
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