Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
However
radical
a transformation you want to achieve, knowhow cannot be expropriated or nationalized.
Each time,
radical
improvements in technology made the threat evaporate.
Hamas Takes on the RadicalsGAZA CITY – The recent shoot-out in a Gaza mosque between Hamas security officers and militants from the
radical
jihadi group the Warriors of God brought to the surface the deep tensions that divide Palestinian Islamists.
The Warriors of God is one of a handful of radical, al-Qaeda-inspired groups to have appeared in the Gaza Strip in recent months, first coming to public attention in June after claiming responsibility for a failed horseback attack on Israel from Gaza.
The Salafi groups, however, appear increasingly influenced by the growth of
radical
al-Qaeda-style extremism in Pakistan, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
Though Trump has backed away from some of his more
radical
campaign promises, he is unlikely to drop his “America first” approach; as a result, the US may be about to break decisively with the universalism and global engagement that has characterized the last 70 years.
To be sure, France’s two-round voting system, which ensures that the president obtains the support of a majority of voters, makes it extremely unlikely that a
radical
candidate like Le Pen can take power.
His visions were magnificent, and apparently somewhat
radical.
In 1970, the
radical
left-wing Italian underground periodical Sinistra Proletaria carried an article entitled “The Process of Globalization of Capitalist Society,” which was a description of IBM, an “organization which presents itself as a totality and controls all its activities towards the goal of profit and ‘globalizes’ all activity in the productive process.”
Because our right-leaning governments have been too decent to use the populist language of the
radical
right, they are helpless in appealing to mass emotions.
Such a
radical
shift in policy goals will be difficult.
Their
radical
ideology is obvious, and their willingness to forgive the casualties and suffering of a long and brutal conflict is unknown.
Together with the war clouds hovering over the Iranian nuclear program, the failed Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and
radical
political change throughout the wider Middle East, the conflict in Syria shows that Europe’s southeast will continue to be a major security challenge.
The moderate Republican Party of Dwight D. Eisenhower and the Rockefellers has been taken over by a
radical
crowd, with even Eisenhower’s granddaughter now openly backing Obama.
Today’s
radical
Republican Party represents a large segment of the population that believes that abortions and same-sex marriage are immoral, God sent America to Iraq, and that bailing out Wall Street is “socialism.”
Taming our radicals, and the
radical
impulse, has not been easy.
Likewise, Tunisia’s Ennahda (Renaissance) party was originally shaped by the legacy of the Iranian revolution and the thinking of
radical
Islamist critics of Western values, such as Sayyid Qutb, a leading Muslim Brotherhood theorist in the 1950s.
They have deemphasized some of their
radical
principles to accommodate key tenets of secular democracy, such as cultural pluralism and freedom of expression.
Those decisions demonstrated his resolve to uphold Egypt’s role as a force for regional stability, which implied refusing to allow his ideology to drive him toward a
radical
foreign policy.
A third layer of this problem is the increasingly symbiotic alliance between
radical
Islamist groups in Sweden and a left that has departed from the honorable social-democratic traditions for which the country is famous around the world.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras – a supposedly
radical
leftist who, paying homage to Che Guevara, named his son Ernesto – has become a Chinese patsy.
Indeed, Lapid, a popular, eloquent, and attractive television journalist, clearly found the right formula for opposing the status quo without alienating too many voters with
radical
positions.
Bennett is religious and the former head of the West Bank settlers’ council, but he is also young, articulate, a successful high-tech entrepreneur, and a former combat officer – a combination that attracted both
radical
right-wing voters and young, urban, secular support.
With its huge state enterprise sector and pervasive restrictions on just about anything, China has only one option:
radical
transformation of its economy.
Now is a time for
radical
moves.
What is happening today in the Arab world is a revolution that may turn out to be for the Middle East the equivalent of what the French Revolution was for Europe in 1789: a profound and
radical
change that alters completely the situation that prevailed before.
Liberty’s Revolutionary MuseGreat social thinkers almost always start out as polarizing figures, admired by some and scorned by others, until their
radical
challenge to how we understand the world finally prevails.
The Industrial Revolution is often remembered for its “Satanic mills”; but it was also a time of
radical
new thinking in economics, spearheaded by Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill, David Ricardo, Antoine Cournot, and many others.
While continuing the current coalition may seem advisable in policy terms, it could well strengthen the hand of advocates of
radical
political change.
In his election campaign, and since coming to power, Abe has advocated a
radical
revitalization of the Japanese economy that would end two decades of deflation and growing political and strategic uncertainty.
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