Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
But here, too, there is a gap between rhetoric and reality, and no
radical
change should be expected.
From a strictly economic standpoint, academic freedom requires relative immunity to costs, whether stemming from trial-and-error experimentation or from more
radical
challenges to the status quo.
Second, there is the question of
radical
Islam and the borderless war that it has declared on the world.
Disintegration in the Arab Middle East reflects the region’s failure to find a path between the bankrupt, secular nationalism that has dominated its state system since independence and a
radical
brand of Islam at war with modernity.
The greater risk, I felt, would have been to leave these children sitting idle, losing their hopes and aspirations, or, worse, being forced into child labor or drawn in by
radical
ideologies.
This sounds reasonable enough, until one recognizes the lengths to which
radical
feminists are willing to go to re-engineer tastes and preferences.
As events like the Tour de France turn farcical, bioethics professor Julian Savulescu has offered a
radical
solution.
Indeed, a key NATO member state has become the paladin of
radical
Islam throughout the Middle East, led by a president whose core political constituency is ingrained with anti-Western sentiment.
The necessary reductions imply a rapid and
radical
transformation of industrial, energy, and land-use systems around the world.
While this seems to be a very pessimistic assessment of the regional situation, the
radical
Islamist side has many weaknesses.
The emphasis should be on building coalitions among the relatively moderate states that are threatened by
radical
Islamist forces, and on working hard to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons – a goal that is in the interests of many in the region.
Helping Hamas would empower
radical
Islamism and Iranian ambitions, while undercutting the PA and everyone else, not just Israel.
And the message of populism is similar everywhere in the democratic world: Liberal elites are to be blamed for all our ills and anxieties, from Europe’s refugee crisis to the inequities of the global economy, from “multiculturalism” to the rise of
radical
Islam.
Brazil’s economic success during the Lula years stems from the decision to maintain the previous government’s macroeconomic policy framework, which meant resisting more
radical
views within Lula’s Workers Party.
Hundreds of Israeli peace supporters, along with some international activists, have joined evicted Palestinians to protest the actions of these
radical
settlers, which have been supported by municipal and government officials.
Ideally, this should come about in a manner similar to democratic transitions in Latin America in the 1980’s, when authoritarian, army-backed rulers yielded to popular demands for radical, democratic regime change.
The Saudi government has been implementing
radical
changes, both domestically and in its foreign policy, and its reasons for doing so are not entirely clear.
This is the choice that European leaders now confront: a
radical
step forward toward political or policy integration, or a clear framework to deal with the consequences of a member country’s failure to abide by the fundamental rules of the monetary union.
For example, last year, Jobbik’s candidate, Oszkar Juhasz, was elected Mayor of Gyongyospata, where a
radical
paramilitary organization had staged patrols for two weeks in protest against “Gypsy crime.”
Today, the most
radical
step in urban transportation is Uber, and the most
radical
change in the near future is probably the self-driving car – both creations of the private sector.
Moreover, while the common security threat from the Soviet Union has disappeared, both the US and Europe face a new common threat from
radical
jihadist terrorism.
This government’s move represents a
radical
change of course, following three decades of relatively liberal economic policymaking, during which the authorities have permitted private-sector foreign-exchange transactions and even capital flight.
The message is impossible to miss: Increasingly, voters are deeply dissatisfied with mainstream parties and are willing to give a chance to those proposing
radical
alternatives.
What is particularly problematic in the EU is the clash between
radical
politics and mainstream governance.
At any given moment, some countries may have voted for
radical
parties, while others have not (or simply have not held elections).
Unfortunately, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, reflecting the
radical
change that Germans’ attitudes toward European integration have undergone, ruled that out.
The former Soviet satellites were offered the alluring prospect of joining the EU and NATO, which helped smooth the way for
radical
political and economic reforms.
Under Milosevic, a majority of the Serbs turned to
radical
nationalism based on violence and territorial conquest.
The Taming of TrumpNEW YORK – Now that Donald Trump has unexpectedly won the US presidency, it is an open question whether he will govern in accordance with his campaign’s
radical
populism, or adopt a pragmatic, centrist approach.
A
radical
populist Trump would scrap the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), repeal the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and impose high tariffs on Chinese imports.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Change
Would
Their
Political
Economic
Groups
World
There
Policy
Other
Reform
People
Government
Policies
About
Country
While
Public
Between