Revolution
in sentence
2138 examples of Revolution in a sentence
The true Che was a more significant figure than his fictional clone, for he was the incarnation of what
revolution
and Marxism really meant in the twentieth century.
When criticized by one of his early companions for the death of millions during the Chinese revolution, Mao observed that countless Chinese die everyday, so what did it matter?
After he seized power, Che put to death five hundred “enemies” of the
revolution
without trial, or even much discrimination.
He did not care about Cuba’s economy or its people: his purpose was to pursue
revolution
for its own sake, whatever it meant, like art for art’s sake.
Indeed, fifty years after Cuba’s revolution, Latin America remains divided.
When Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and his followers hijacked the Iranian
revolution
in 1979, democracy became impossible; the cleric had become a dictator.
"The return to Europe" was a central motto of the peaceful
revolution
in Central Europe ten years ago.
The overthrow of King Louis Phillipe in France in 1848 was carried by the recently introduced telegraph to Germany, igniting
revolution.
Such a network would be based on multi-directional flows of renewable energy, supported by the digital
revolution
and the rise of big data.
The rich countries can do vastly more to assist the poor countries in becoming a part of the information-technology
revolution.
Second, we need a clean-energy transformation at the speed and scale of the digital
revolution.
The agricultural revolution, the industrial revolution, the technology revolution, all provided enormous opportunity and government played a key role in each, by reacting quickly to put the policy structures in place to support those changes.
The low-carbon
revolution
is next.
With a clear commitment to the low-carbon industrial revolution, businesses around the world, large or small, can compete with confidence, invest with certainty, and drive the scale and innovation necessary to make the changes we need to make.
With these three straightforward principles at its core, a global deal signed in Copenhagen can fire the starting pistol for the new industrial revolution, the low-carbon revolution, creating significant growth, job creation and economic development throughout the world.
Despite the importance of social media in fomenting revolution, and even in deposing deeply unpopular leaders, governing in the real world is not as easy as governing online.
The Abandonment of ProgressPARIS – Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan are remembered for the laissez-faire
revolution
they launched in the early 1980s.
The second reason progress has lost credibility is that the digital
revolution
risks undermining the middle class that formed the backbone of the post-war societies of the world’s advanced economies.
Today, despite the Keynesian revolution, the same question demands an answer.
The roots of America’s “environmental movement” lie in the nineteenth century, when the damage wrought by the industrial
revolution
and the fragmentation of the natural landscape by individual property rights and tenures first became apparent.
The European Commission estimates – conservatively, in my opinion – that the digital
revolution
could spur an “additional 2.1% of GDP growth over the baseline."
Education – one of the last big economic sectors yet to be transformed by the digital age – is on the cusp of a
revolution.
Fortunately, many governments are taking steps to promote the online education
revolution.
In 1995, Cuba’s minister for heavy industry, referring to the country’s heavy economic dependence on the US until the 1959
revolution
and heavy dependence on the Soviet Union until the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, vowed, “We will never let this happen to us a third time.”
The Fall of the Language CurtainTen years ago the body of Imre Nagy, the political leader of the failed Hungarian
revolution
of 1956, was exhumed from a secret grave for a public and honorable reburial.
The philosophers who were the intellectual fathers of the 1789
revolution
longed not for democracy, but for enlightened despotism, which is what many French still look for when they elect a president.
With this in mind, the high-level panel on the post-2015 development agenda is right to call for a global “data revolution.”
We seek a new “green revolution” in Africa.
How Macron Keeps WinningPARIS – Emmanuel Macron’s one-man
revolution
in French and European politics continued this weekend, as he will soon be able to add a huge parliamentary majority to his cause, if the results from the first round of the French parliamentary election hold.
The digital revolution, despite its potential, also carries serious risks for privacy, security, jobs, and democracy – challenges that are compounded by the rising monopoly power of a few American and Chinese data giants, including Facebook and Google.
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