Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
But the SLD must compete with Razem, a
radical
leftist party that was founded just before the 2015 parliamentary election.
If they choose centrist candidates, who look for reforms rather than
radical
change, they might lose the fired-up young.
When the NHS was founded in 1948, its mission, to provide universal high-quality health care, was daringly
radical.
Historically,
radical
political realignments have been rather rare in British politics.
In the stable British model, if a political party is too radical, it will lose the political center in the next election.
Firms get to be large by exploiting economies of scale, refining and mass-producing the
radical
innovations developed by entrepreneurs (discussed next).
Bureaucratic enterprises are typically allergic to taking big risks – that is, developing and commercializing the
radical
innovations that push out the production-possibility frontier and generate large sustained jumps in productivity and thus in economic growth.
Economies in which dynamism comes from new firms historically have commercialized the
radical
innovations that keep pushing out the production-possibility frontier.
The optimal mix of firms contains a healthy dose of large enterprises, which have the financial and human resources to refine and mass-produce
radical
innovations, along with newer firms.
When economic problems once again became particularly acute, the country’s leadership embraced a
radical
approach to achieving price stability.
And as these technologies continue to be developed and widely adopted, they will bring about
radical
shifts in all disciplines, industries, and economies, and in the way that individuals, companies, and societies produce, distribute, consume, and dispose of goods and services.
But, ultimately, his chief failure had been to hand power to military and civilian hawks – wrongly called conservatives, for their vision was a
radical
reordering of Europe.
Yet, as the security expert Sajjan M. Gohel has observed, “the displaced and disillusioned Taliban youth of today” have “found solace and purpose in an extremely
radical
interpretation of Islam.”
What is new, and encouraging, about the events of the last month is that Russia has found enough common ground with the US – in their mutual anxiety about the rising influence of
radical
Islam in an increasingly fragmented and volatile region – to be prepared at last to do some squeezing.
Compromise is anathema to the
radical
mind.
Some
radical
leftist Muslims, obsessed with their opposition to Western “imperialism” and Israel, saluted Mousavi’s defeat, for, as one such activist put it, “the [anti-Zionist] resistance cannot afford a pro-American velvet revolution.”
Playboy and the MullahIndonesia recently witnessed a pair of dramatic releases: one a
radical
Muslim cleric from prison, the other a saucy men’s magazine from its editors.
Abu Bakar Ba’asyir is a
radical
Muslim cleric who was convicted of blessing the original 2002 Bali bombing, and suspected by some of providing much more.
The proposed bill attracted support from moderate Muslim leaders, but its most vocal advocates were a collection of
radical
religious groups with a predilection for violence, led by the Islamic Defenders Front (known by its Indonesian acronym, FPI).
In the months following Playboy’s announcement, the public backlash against the magazine appeared to have pushed the Indonesian mainstream firmly to the right, an impression only furthered by the high visibility and loud belligerence of
radical
groups.
The Jakarta police have begun acting with new vigor: they charged one prominent
radical
leader with defamation for publicly calling women opposed to the anti-pornography bill “evil, wretched, and immoral,” and then arrested the chairman and twenty members of FPI for attacking a group of cafes.
Finally, the argument must be made more forcefully that it will be much harder to protect our societies against the revolutionary terrorism of
radical
Islam without the active support of all law-abiding Muslims.
The Republicans’ presumptive nominee, Donald Trump, has also presented a
radical
tax plan, as did his last remaining rival, Ted Cruz.
This analysis calls for the most
radical
action: to develop an economic and social system in which resources, particularly wealth and power, are more evenly distributed.
But Tsipras squandered Greece’s opportunity, because he and other Syriza leaders were unable to see beyond the horizon of their party’s origins in
radical
opposition activism.
But Syriza’s inability to escape its
radical
bubble does not explain why it formed a coalition with the far-right Independent Greeks, when it could have governed with one of the centrist pro-European parties.
But the experience of other terrorist groups – most notably, al-Qaeda – shows that, even without anything resembling a state,
radical
ideologies can survive.
In both Syria and Iraq, this may require a closer look at the Muslim Brotherhood, an international political movement that many believe has infiltrated various Sunni
radical
groups, despite its public insistence that it is a nonviolent movement.
What Zuma seems to seek is
radical
asset redistribution in the direction suggested by Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters and an admirer of Venezuela’s chavista approach.
In a world where inequality is a major concern and appetite for
radical
change is high, what should the world make of these experiences?
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Change
Would
Their
Political
Economic
Groups
World
There
Policy
Other
Reform
People
Government
Policies
About
Country
While
Public
Between