Rightly
in sentence
675 examples of Rightly in a sentence
The strategy
rightly
recognizes the importance of building systems that support the development of education on a large scale.
Pinker and others
rightly
point out that rising inequality does not imply absolute losses for subgroups, unless overall income growth is flat.
But the international community must hold the FRY to the same high standards for inclusion in intergovernmental structures that have been
rightly
required of Croatia and Bosnia since 1996.
Many blame the crisis on the decades-long ascendancy of a laissez faire approach to economic policymaking, and
rightly
credit government intervention with facilitating recovery.
Many on the left
rightly
disdain the easy surrender of others on their side to the premise that globalization has rendered the nation-state irrelevant.
With India’s sluggish economic performance having
rightly
dominated the campaign, the question of what foreign policy the new government should pursue remains unanswered.
Economic historians like Ken Pomeranz
rightly
point out that before the Industrial Revolution, differences in median standards of living across the high civilizations of Eurasia were relatively small.
Left-wing revolutionaries were once a staple of campus life, and efforts to ban them would
rightly
have been resisted.
Around the world, most people now
rightly
celebrate the gentle dignity with which Mandela led South Africa out of the political wilderness.
But, as the Court
rightly
noted, it should rule only on the cases to which it is referred, and should not make known its opinion on the Czech education system’s legitimacy, as choices concerning educational opportunities fall under the jurisdiction of states and therefore can vary accordingly.
Many
rightly
worry that Trump might not respect the US Constitution.
On that basis, those who have
rightly
criticized the WTO in the past should join forces with its supporters.
When war or disaster strikes, the international community
rightly
mobilizes funding for food, shelter, and health care.
Democracies
rightly
constrain majority domination, which is why they enshrine certain basic rights that cannot be denied.
Kalanick, who declared in 2012, “I like pissing people off,” was the most directly responsible for these decisions, and recent news coverage of Uber has
rightly
held him up as a poster child for leadership gone wrong.
Nunn has
rightly
pointed out that US/NATO and Russian threat perceptions will never completely overlap.
In the longer term, as we
rightly
move toward universal Internet access, we need to ask: How much of ourselves are we willing to give away?
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
rightly
warned the opposition recently that, thus far, they have been unable to unite the minorities behind them precisely because it is unclear to these groups that they will fare better without Assad than with him.
But if a bunch of speculators decide
(rightly
or wrongly) that a government’s debt is overpriced, they can force down its price, thereby forcing up its yield (the interest rate that the government must pay).
Someone once
rightly
said that it is easy to bomb, but much harder to build; it is relatively easy to defeat a regime militarily, but it is far more difficult to create a solid, sustainable, civil society in its place.
When many of the same leaders met in April to address the economic crisis, they
rightly
pledged to do “whatever is necessary.”
For years, the emphasis has
rightly
been on persuading people that there must be sufficient “will” to tackle climate change.
As a result, taxpayers in donor countries are demanding more transparency and accountability in how their money is spent both domestically and abroad – and
rightly
so.
It would have been very dangerous to expose the federal government to this danger, given that the operation was
rightly
perceived at the outset as extremely risky.
For starters, Summers
rightly
calls for universities to do more to “recruit, admit, and educate economically disadvantaged students.”
As communities of speech and debate, universities are vulnerable to disruption, which is why civility, as Summers
rightly
emphasizes, must be upheld.
She
rightly
described herself as a “conviction politician.”
As then-UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
rightly
argued, this opened the door to the proliferation of unilateral, lawless use of force.
It is often (rightly) stressed that property is not secure unless government cannot deprive a person of it without due process of law, and compensation.
Today, the fight against corruption is consuming a large share of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s energy and attention – and
rightly
so.
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