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6 Sentences With "as one sees fit"

How to use as one sees fit in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "as one sees fit" and check conjugation/comparative form for "as one sees fit". Mastering all the usages of "as one sees fit" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It is one thing to practice one's faith as one sees fit.
To understand why an incredibly wealthy man like Lucas would care about the fate of a pair of Oregon ranchers, you have to consider the concept of "the harvest" as Lucas is using it: a stand-in for everything from actual crop yields to what he views as the fundamental right to make a living as one sees fit off the land.
Additionally, Article 17(1) of the ICCPR protects against 'unlawful attacks' against one's honor and reputation. The scope of Article 17 is broad. Privacy can be understood as the right to control information about one's self. The possibility to live one's life as one sees fit, within the boundaries set by the law, effectively depends on the information which others have about us and use to inform their behavior towards us.
" Instead the view that "organization is for concrete tasks". "The informal anarchist organization is therefore a specific organization which gathers around a common affinity." 5\. The transcendence of the dichotomy between the individual and the rest of society and of individualism and communism: "Insurrection begins with the desire of individuals to break out of constrained and controlled circumstances, the desire to reappropriate the capacity to create one's own life as one sees fit.
Other suggested innovations such as Iĉismo are more acceptable and are discussed among Esperantists. The Volapük experience still is a factor in the "protectionism" of Esperantists, but no longer predominant; however, as many "ConLangers" mistake Esperanto as an "artistic ConLang" to be changed as one sees fit instead as a living, employed "synthetic IAL/LAI" and try to invent "reforms" a dime a dozen, proposals for change are seen in Esperanto still with much more suspicion than in "natural languages". The present day attitude is shown by the Esperanto Encyclopedia where it states that reforms, i.e. changing the fundaments of a language, have never been successful neither in Esperanto nor anywhere else, while evolution through use "enriches languages".
Roger Chartier points out that Ménétra's text has helped establish that people of humble social status owned books that were not aimed at them. Lisa Jane Graham, writing in The Journal of Modern History, describes Ménétra's Journal as an example of "low Enlightenment" culture, an example of how "[t]he Enlightenment clearly strayed beyond glittering portals into much shabbier abodes." Raymond Birn, writing in Eighteenth-Century Studies, points out the importance of Ménétra's Journal as a historical document: > [B]eneath the surface of Ménétra's consciousness, a theme does appear to > prevail. It is the struggle for liberty—the liberty to work or not work, to > select companions and friends irrespective of conventional social > restraints, to make love as one sees fit, to choose between social > integration and dissociation.

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