Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
In the longer term, more
radical
policies – such as the introduction of a negative income tax or a basic income – must be considered, with the goal of providing a guaranteed minimum standard of living regardless of employment status and market wage.
But the most
radical
indigenous groups rejected the initiative, and the group organizing the coca growers took advantage of the situation, stirring up nationalist sentiments.
American threats, or talk of another war, fuel the fires of resentment and frustration in Iran, strengthening the most
radical
forces.
Yet Mao worried that his revolution was going off track, and in the mid-1960’s he launched an effort to regain control of the Party by educating a new generation of
radical
youth.
It doesn’t matter whether the murderer, Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, had any links to
radical
Islamism.
The Left's rank and file is faceless, with Communists, former guerrillas, and other
radical
fellow travelers marching side-by-side with a moderate majority of Social and Christian Democrats.
The principle of non-intervention in a state's internal affairs was never absolute, and globalization confronts it with a
radical
challenge.
Not only has he been re-concentrating power in the hands of the central government; many believe that his
radical
anti-corruption campaign is a fig leaf for a political purge.
Now they find themselves in an organization in the process of
radical
transformation.
The World Without AmericaNEW YORK – Let me posit a
radical
idea: The most critical threat facing the United States now and for the foreseeable future is not a rising China, a reckless North Korea, a nuclear Iran, modern terrorism, or climate change.
If Singh’s new reform agenda is again blocked, perhaps it will be time for a more
radical
assessment.
Economists’ inability to model such rapid,
radical
change should not be taken as a condemnation of the discipline; it is simply a reflection of the state of our knowledge, and of the fact that the economy is really, really complicated.
Acclaimed as a national hero among
radical
right-wingers, the iron-fisted Park Chung-hee ruled South Korea from 1963 to 1979, in the wake of the 1961 military coup, only to be assassinated by his intelligence chief.
Left-leaning pundits claim that the dictator’s daughter has the same autocratic vision as her father, though Park invariably prefers incremental change to
radical
measures, and cut her political teeth in the tough-minded politics of the GNP.
But this lurch toward centralized decision-making will produce inconsistent and
radical
policies, along with perpetual cheating.
Even Germany’s Left Party, which has 8% support and is not traditionally defined as moderate, has a more moderate “eastern” wing and a more
radical
“western” wing.
But, while the shutdown of the United States government, initiated by
radical
congressional Republicans seeking to block implementation of President Barack Obama’s health-care legislation, is over – at least for now – three enduring lessons have emerged.
In Turkey – and in a less
radical
form under the Shah in Iran and under military dictators in countries like Egypt, Tunisia, Syria, and Iraq – the population never had a choice.
Using its vast resources, and driven by unbridled ambition, Qatar has emerged as a hub for
radical
Islamist movements.
Indeed, the country’s relationship with the United States directly contradicts its links with
radical
Islamist movements.
Nigeria’s
radical
gender inequality reflects a widespread tolerance of discrimination against girls, which facilitates the brutal actions of extremist groups like Boko Haram and creates fertile ground for traffickers.
When the crunch comes – almost certainly in the year or two following the election – it will cause radical, wrenching change, perhaps even more far-reaching than Charles de Gaulle’s coup d’état, which led to the establishment of the Fifth Republic in 1958.
Will the public grin and bear it, or demand a
radical
change of direction?
That is a striking result – all the more so because it comes from the IMF, an institution hardly known for heterodox or
radical
ideas.
One strong school of thought that emerged almost as soon as the killing began in 1989, is that the more
radical
student leaders had been reckless.
Indeed, the
radical
student leaders had no more understanding of democracy than the Communist leaders they opposed.
There is, however, no evidence that even the most
radical
students ever had such ambitions, and the demonstrations had been entirely peaceful.
Too frequently, revolutions are hijacked by a second wave, either more conservative or more
radical
than what was first contemplated by the initiators of change.
Al Jazeera has no shortage of enemies, from the most
radical
Islamic fundamentalists to American and Israeli intelligence gatherers.
Even Trump’s non-family appointments – often controversial or
radical
figures who would not have a place in any administration except his – reflect an emphasis on personal loyalty.
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