But Dubuffet frustrates distinctions among mediums; frustrating distinctions was his stock in trade.
|
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I was thinking about [these binary distinctions] as a metaphor for gender distinctions and the boxes that we're asked to fall into.
|
|
The Republican vision for health care reform implies sharp distinctions between lives with value and those without, and those distinctions map directly onto socioeconomic divides.
|
|
Moral clarity is long defined by usage as a capacity to make firm, unflinching distinctions between evil and good, and to take action based on those distinctions.
|
|
This means that the traditional distinctions between man and machine, as between humans and nature — distinctions that have underpinned Western philosophy, religion, and even political institutions — no longer hold.
|
|
His attempts to draw distinctions between varying levels of sexual misconduct — distinctions that some people believed in privately yet would not dare say publicly — set off a firestorm of criticism.
|
|
Gorsuch praises Finnis for arguing that certain very subtle distinctions in the law — distinctions some find legalistic and arbitrary — are nevertheless morally important and relevant to a sound moral reading of the law.
|
|
Since then, however, Virginia has lived down some troubling distinctions.
|
|
Cernan earned several distinctions in his 222 years with NASA.
|
|
U.S. case law provides many other examples of nuanced distinctions.
|
|
There are important distinctions between plans put forward by Sens.
|
|
She makes crucial distinctions that urban planners fail to make.
|
|
"We show why these distinctions are crucially important," Parks said.
|
|
Black support jumped as distinctions between the two candidates crystalized.
|
|
Future basket trials could help doctors tease out the distinctions.
|
|
And even in water they like to maintain certain distinctions.
|
|
I know — major, indie, the distinctions often don't matter anymore.
|
|
Stories change how we make distinctions about individuals and groups.
|
|
Distinctions between left and right mean nothing to the crushed.
|
|
First of all, let me make a couple of distinctions.
|
|
Mr. Laufenberg's stage imagery blurs religious distinctions in affecting ways.
|
|
It has pierced the stark distinctions that divide American communities.
|
|
But do either of these comparative distinctions make you "wealthy"?
|
|
There remain vital distinctions between Fidesz and the GOP, though.
|
|
An abundance of labels, with subtle distinctions, are in play.
|
|
There are a number of important distinctions we can make.
|
|
The economic and social distinctions from older, imperial divisions remain.
|
|
Why are they careful to emphasize these boundaries and distinctions?
|
|
In my childhood, these distinctions did not exist for me.
|
|
Formerly ironclad distinctions among musical styles have significantly melted away.
|
|
But those advising Mr. Trump seem unwilling to draw distinctions.
|
|
There are plenty of distinctions to set the speeches apart.
|
|
The law, however, often draws subtle distinctions and balancing tests.
|
|
These are, once again, largely if not entirely cosmetic distinctions.
|
|
Doing so will ultimately draw distinctions between himself and others.
|
|
Such distinctions, shaped by geography and history, play out worldwide.
|
|
But Mr. Sanders's legislation makes no distinctions for income levels.
|
|
Smith has preserved her uncannily precise eye for the subtle distinctions of class and race that preoccupy her characters, and for the way those distinctions shift across communities; that skill is on full display here.
|
|
Digging deeper, there are a few important distinctions to be made.
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|
An influx of bourgeois attractions has begun to lessen those distinctions.
|
|
Such microscopic distinctions often come in the form of split decisions.
|
|
There are a few important distinctions between the two cases, too.
|
|
Gorsuch suggests that capacity-based distinctions like this might be illegitimate.
|
|
But Sester worries that such distinctions may be difficult to maintain.
|
|
That's one of the distinctions between a game and a puzzle.
|
|
Sure, there are a handful of distinctions between the two ensembles.
|
|
Trump's campaign has translated those blurred distinctions into the political arena.
|
|
The model simply doesn't have the data to make these distinctions.
|
|
The daunting scope of his distinctions may be his greatest liability.
|
|
But, there are two important distinctions between Sam's Clubs and hospitals.
|
|
The study found a number of distinctions between the two groups.
|
|
But differences in sites and winemaking methods sometimes blur those distinctions.
|
|
Still, there are important distinctions between Arizona and the California case.
|
|
The distinctions between blacks are almost entirely invisible in these works.
|
|
How can you teach an algorithm to understand all these distinctions?
|
|
As a result, distinctions between commerce and curation can sometimes blur.
|
|
MMA, on the other hand, is separated by its promotional distinctions.
|
|
Karrabing's films slice across distinctions of fine art, cinema and anthropology.
|
|
I don't think it's sustainable for you to draw those distinctions.
|
|
Such judgments are purely social — to linguists, the distinctions are arbitrary.
|
|
The debates are unwieldy and the policy distinctions are often picayune.
|
|
Historians are supposed to notice and analyze details and make distinctions.
|
|
But such distinctions mask a troubling disconnect among the media elite.
|
|
The distinctions on the politics of the moment are even starker.
|
|
But Justice Kagan said the distinctions it drew made no sense.
|
|
Adults like to make distinctions; childhood is lived as a continuum.
|
|
Once you have the opponent, you get to draw the distinctions.
|
|
The important distinctions are ethical as much as they are scientific.
|
|
I make no party distinctions; they are all equally at fault.
|
|
But Mr. Edelman drew some critical distinctions between the two presidents.
|
|
And, of course, there are historical distinctions to grapple with, too.
|
|
But both morally and legally there are distinctions — degrees of behavior.
|
|
There are also subtler distinctions in the tenor of Americans' love.
|
|
The lower court's rationale hinged upon the most lawyerly of distinctions.
|
|
Calculating the greenness of a cloud is rife with nuanced distinctions.
|
|
Politics also seem to hinge more on atavistic distinctions than on policies.
|
|
But it is the quirky distinctions that devoted baseball fans remember most.
|
|
With a few key distinctions, it leaves the original deal largely intact.
|
|
The distinctions between the conflicts, the countries and their people, are lost.
|
|
Of course, neither of those distinctions are things that internet providers like.
|
|
When quantitative standards pass certain thresholds, they become qualitative distinctions as well.
|
|
In performance, the distinctions among the pieces were somewhat blurred, intentionally so.
|
|
Overall, I found the harsh distinctions between absolute quiet and sound distracting.
|
|
These old left-right distinctions are fading as class identities break down.
|
|
"This wipes out all of the distinctions courts have drawn," Hellman said.
|
|
The Brotherhood is itself partly to blame for the blurring of distinctions.
|
|
The 21st Club notes some important distinctions between shot-stoppers and outfielders.
|
|
They tend to erode distinctions of faith based on ethnicity or birthplace.
|
|
Understanding such distinctions is critical before cars can operate without human drivers.
|
|
There are distinctions between the 2016 presidential election and the 85033 midterms.
|
|
The federal government was once in the business of making such distinctions.
|
|
In fact, Conversation AI's algorithm goes on to make impressively subtle distinctions.
|
|
They can draw distinctions between people along economic, religious, or moral lines.
|
|
And I've often felt textural distinctions: pebbly, stony, papery and, yes, powdery.
|
|
But it's not always easy to make those distinctions in business practices.
|
|
Gardeners and botany enthusiasts, however, have no trouble making the necessary distinctions.
|
|
Regional and subtle cultural distinctions become apparent in many of the images.
|
|
Do you draw ideological distinctions between these guys and traditional conservative media?
|
|
In the Boeing-Bombardier case, the ITC showed it understands these distinctions.
|
|
The Cold War drew stark distinctions between the free and the oppressed.
|
|
We will continue to clearly communicate these distinctions to avoid any misperceptions.
|
|
Those fighters disavow nationalism and envision a stateless society without gender distinctions.
|
|
These distinctions aren't just academic subtleties — they have important real-world ramifications.
|
|
There's something more fundamental at stake here beyond such million-dollar distinctions.
|
|
But by the end of the day, the distinctions seemed to fade.
|
|
In countries that have multiple leftist parties, these distinctions are commonly understood.
|
|
"The brain isn't impressed by all these explanations and distinctions," Dryden said.
|
|
The little nuances between these stories, however, are distinctions with major implications.
|
|
It's possible that a closer look into these distinctions might reveal differences.
|
|
But such distinctions are lost in the whirlwind of social media outrage.
|
|
At the same time, according to Erickson, these distinctions will be minor.
|
|
While headlines rarely make clear distinctions, each hostage case is radically different.
|
|
There was a time when distinctions among formal dress codes were significant.
|
|
"We can't have district judges going on immaterial distinctions here," he said.
|
|
The trouble is that old school/snowflake distinctions are not that clear.
|
|
But Golden was not prone to make rigid distinctions in this matter.
|
|
Bonobos, an online retailer of men's clothing, is further blurring these distinctions.
|
|
Such violence often blurs clear distinctions between what is right and wrong.
|
|
Some states have their own campaign finance laws that draw clearer distinctions.
|
|
After all, Assange never cared much for distinctions between whistleblowers and hackers.
|
|
As a woman of her generation, Rachel draws no arbitrary social distinctions.
|
|
This is one of the distinctions you can make in terms of emojis.
|
|
Students, and their elders as well, must not lose sight of these distinctions.
|
|
The philosophical distinctions are irrelevant; what matters is the catastrophic effect on humanity.
|
|
Recognising those distinctions allows us to demarcate righteous anger from unjustifiable bad behaviour.
|
|
Online and offline, data and Wi-Fi, all the distinctions could become meaningless.
|
|
So long as such distinctions are not wholly irrational they must be sustained.
|
|
So the sharp distinctions between the two companies may start to melt away.
|
|
I think there are some important ideological distinctions, at least in the abstract.
|
|
I think there are some important ideological distinctions, at least in the abstract.
|
|
The film also continued the tradition of erasing distinctions between Middle Eastern cultures.
|
|
The first is to systematise distinctions in quality that can allow useful pricing.
|
|
Occasionally the tone of the hyperintelligent narrator blurs the distinctions between the characters.
|
|
Jurors don't make distinctions between 404(b) evidence and improper criminal character evidence.
|
|
There are distinctions between a ceasefire, a cessation of hostilities and a truce.
|
|
I'm having a lot of trouble in this conversation drawing out the distinctions.
|
|
Even in a town of 750 people or so, class distinctions were present.
|
|
" Bjork-James similarly dismisses the distinctions between the three groups as "splitting hairs.
|
|
Drawing distinctions between rape, assault, sexual misconduct and genuine misunderstanding can be difficult.
|
|
But the Trump era has, to some extent, erased many of these distinctions.
|
|
In addition to these two broad categories, there are visual, almost stylistic, distinctions.
|
|
It is important to note the distinctions between different kinds of background checks.
|
|
With the sonic distinctions blurred, I soon stopped listening to Metallica almost entirely.
|
|
There are very few business model or other distinctions between the two sets.
|
|
Though both products sound similar, there are some important distinctions between the two.
|
|
Though both products sound similar, there are some important distinctions between the two.
|
|
But at the same time she argued that making these distinctions is pointless.
|
|
For many Palestinians, the distinctions between Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Gantz were inconsequential.
|
|
For him, hearing these distinctions translates to writing with that level of precision.
|
|
But like those English philanthropists, Antico makes distinctions between various types of debt.
|
|
For persons immigrating from abroad, moreover, racial distinctions were built into federal law.
|
|
It depends on the belief that people are incapable of making aesthetic distinctions.
|
|
Why make binary choices when you can turn these distinctions on their head?
|
|
However, Stetson said Supreme Court precedents discourage federal courts from drawing such distinctions.
|
|
"There are distinctions between food delivery models," Ms. Nguyen wrote in an email.
|
|
She might have been disoriented by racial distinctions, but class differences she understood.
|
|
The #MeToo movement has obvious parallels to -- and distinctions from -- the #BlackLivesMatter movement.
|
|
Fifteen earned "World&aposs Best" awards, and three received best-of-Europe distinctions.
|
|
Mr. Lyght blurs all distinctions between drawing, painting, sculpture, digital photography and installation art.
|
|
In fact, in Busch's time there weren't many distinctions between legal and illegal immigration.
|
|
To graphic-design aficionados, though, there are notable, carefully considered distinctions within that cluster.
|
|
Those distinctions are widening not closing, and that is greatly, greatly to be feared.
|
|
But as Sanders looks ascendant, Warren may try to draw more distinctions like this.
|
|
After all, Jesus opposed violence, opposed the taking of life and opposed racial distinctions.
|
|
It is doubtful that most people make hard distinctions between public and private transport.
|
|
But the legal distinctions between them affect what they can do with their lives.
|
|
His mixing and melding of theories highlights how easily the distinctions between philosophies collapse.
|
|
"I'd like to ... question the premise of even having these artificial distinctions," he said.
|
|
But in the heat of political debate, distinctions can blur and ancient hatreds flame.
|
|
ANDREW ROSS SORKIN: One of the other distinctions, though, is there is no lockup.
|
|
But there's also a lot of differences and distinctions between Gary Cohn and us.
|
|
But these distinctions get tricky with the growing reliance on computer-generated visual effects.
|
|
It is on-demand audio, however I do think actually there are some distinctions.
|
|
Mr Trump uses Twitter to shout his Schmitt-like distinctions between friend and foe.
|
|
These kinds of fundamental distinctions will influence the Top 10 rankings of the future.
|
|
Still, there were some key distinctions between the Impossible Whopper and its beefy brother.
|
|
But in the crucible of online fandom, demographic distinctions can coarsen into warring factions.
|
|
And while the two models seemed well differentiated before, now the distinctions are hazy.
|
|
They are highly sensitive to the pecking order and in-group/out-group distinctions.
|
|
The resulting works blur distinctions between what exactly is real and what is imagined.
|
|
General distinctions are easy to draw between tanky frontliners, damage dealers and supports/healers.
|
|
"We cannot and will not make distinctions between good and bad terrorists," Kerry said.
|
|
One of Korine's distinctions as a filmmaker is his total commitment to his characters.
|
|
How each of these categories voted in 201863 shows the importance of these distinctions.
|
|
The Department of Education could underwrite the program and award distinctions to successful participants.
|
|
The king was often remembered for distinctions that were not of his own making.
|
|
Because it can draw sharp distinctions between candidates, prudence can be a political asset.
|
|
In 1980, experts revising psychiatry's influential diagnostic manual eliminated distinctions in kinds of depression.
|
|
"We need to start making some real distinctions between the two candidates," he said.
|
|
Childbearing, Ms. Firestone argued, should be taken over by technology, and sex distinctions eliminated.
|
|
Distinctions based on color and ancestry are utterly inconsistent with our traditions and ideals.
|
|
Here are the distinctions that the rules of "unity" apparently allow you to make.
|
|
These distinctions matter because TikTok is a rapidly growing force in social media, a.k.a.
|
|
But now, there are different distinctions than those simply of traditional right and left.
|
|
Still, both carved out distinctions between their policies on the debate stage Tuesday night.
|
|
Still both carved out distinctions between their policies on the debate stage Tuesday night.
|
|
"The political branches are far better equipped to make appropriate distinctions," the decision said.
|
|
There can also be regional, as well as urban/rural distinctions among Hispanic voters.
|
|
One of the key distinctions between robo-advisors and traditional advisors is the price.
|
|
Fifteen hotels received "World&aposs Best" awards, and three earned best-of-Europe distinctions.
|
|
"Loser" is a word from childhood, of the blunt social distinctions of the playground.
|
|
These geographical distinctions are central to the debate about whether the ACA is collapsing.
|
|
Common clothing flattened distinctions of class and rank and cultivated equity among the monks.
|
|
"They see it as an existential threat and don't really draw any distinctions," Hannah said.
|
|
For within our distinctions, our quirks, and our self-perceived 'flaws'… therein lies the beauty.
|
|
It's a collapse of all kinds of different distinctions that we like to think about.
|
|
But elections are about choices and they are about differences and they are about distinctions.
|
|
Straightforward discographical exposition suits the Cars because they specialized in fine distinctions and subtle advances.
|
|
When it comes to guns, that often means drawing distinctions between urban and rural areas.
|
|
A relatively painless explanation of the distinctions between Album, Record, and Song of the Year.
|
|
But in a crowded presidential field, these distinctions are going to be treated as meaningful.
|
|
The distinctions between Argentina and the broader group of emerging markets have not gone unnoticed.
|
|
The change also removed many of the R&B genre's distinctions, including Contemporary R&B.
|
|
Moyer's new paintings revel in color and visual pleasure, scrambling distinctions between abstraction and representation.
|
|
There are legal distinctions to calling an act of violence a hate crime or terrorism.
|
|
She graduated from Harvard with the highest distinctions and attended Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar.
|
|
Distinctions here are significant and a breach into each one would have vastly different repercussions.
|
|
Such distinctions matter, because spotting and stopping crimes means knowing who commits them, and why.
|
|
Democrats now have an opportunity to reinforce the distinctions between their party and the GOP.
|
|
The difference between payday and installment loans can seem trivial, but there are important distinctions.
|
|
The old labels and distinctions –"developed" and "developing" economies, "emerging" and "established" – no longer apply.
|
|
In other words, Phillips doesn't discriminate based on status; he makes distinctions based on content.
|
|
For men, former president Dwight Eisenhower holds the highest number of wins with 12 distinctions.
|
|
It would be simpler to draw distinctions between cases involving family members and business associates.
|
|
But Mr. Younge cautions against distinctions between "innocent" victims and those who made bad choices.
|
|
This approaching Japanese woman appears as familiar as any woman, but the distinctions end there.
|
|
It is assimilationist and not integrationist; there are no ethnic distinctions, only citizens of France.
|
|
Those dubious distinctions won the pair a trophy taller than either of them and $1,500.
|
|
The problem is that we are not effective at administering punishment based on these distinctions.
|
|
So neither party's voters were inclined toward the candidate who drew the brightest line distinctions.
|
|
Part of this struggle is to maintain those distinctions, not to contribute to their evisceration.
|
|
Conspicuous consumption became more acceptable, and businesses became more comfortable making distinctions between their customers.
|
|
Both opinions concurred on the basic distinctions between the lawmaking and other functions of government.
|
|
Joe is callow, Frank is angry — distinctions that verge on stereotype, then fall right in.
|
|
The ERA could threaten hundreds of laws that recognize the genuine distinctions between the sexes.
|
|
The distinctions between fact and fiction, truth and falsehood seem quaint and impossible to parse.
|
|
Buttigieg has long used health care as a way to draw distinctions with other Democrats.
|
|
But when we talk about other labor markets, we pretend the same distinctions don't exist.
|
|
Both countries have large external financing needs and current account deficits, but with key distinctions.
|
|
Joe is callow, Frank is angry — distinctions that verge on stereotype, then fall right in.
|
|
All societies make necessary moral distinctions between high crimes and misdemeanors, mortal and lesser sins.
|
|
But the world is actually gray, and Mr. Trump's strategy struggles to draw nuanced distinctions.
|
|
The scoring scale, not yet finalized, is expected to make no age or gender distinctions.
|
|
But there are crucial distinctions between judge and advocate, and she traversed those lines repeatedly.
|
|
To help make sense of this, here are some key distinctions you need to know.
|
|
This and other distinctions, he argues, make it more complicated than warmed-over white supremacy.
|
|
The supposed distinctions between men's and women's ways of talking are, often, not that distinct.
|
|
Among Concordia's many distinctions are a history of slavery and longstanding racial tensions and disparities.
|
|
He didn't care if it was "abstract" or "realistic," he didn't make such useless distinctions.
|
|
What we're trying to engender here in the UI is the ability to make those distinctions.
|
|
There are a number of important distinctions between GoPro's handheld and DJI's competing product, the Osmo.
|
|
And there are important distinctions within the category, such as that between inclusive and exclusive varieties.
|
|
I was fuzzy as to how all these distinctions in belief and objective applied to Raqqa.
|
|
Lee highlighted a couple distinctions between Zindi and data-driven consulting firms: affordability and potential scale.
|
|
He received several awards and distinctions, including the Joint Meritorious Unit Award and Navy Unit Commendation.
|
|
It's one of a small handful of distinctions between the models, including screen and battery size.
|
|
In the eight decades since, the FDA and TTB have hammered out the distinctions even more.
|
|
Forget the distinctions between human and host, which have worn thin as the show has progressed.
|
|
When the ideological distinctions between parties become blurred, voters are more likely to reject parties altogether.
|
|
I THINK INSTEAD WE'LL TRY AND DO WHAT WE CAN TO DRIVE DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN THE BRANDS.
|
|
This plan, and these distinctions, are now garnering major pushback from Sanders's high-level campaign staff.
|
|
That last one represents one of the pretty clear distinctions between Microsoft and Apple's respective approaches.
|
|
It's not a book about shared online experiences, or about the blurriness of real / virtual distinctions.
|
|
Student loans come with wide-ranging rules and distinctions, and not all repayment plans are identical.
|
|
It seems as if the distinctions between flirtation, courtship, loutish behavior and actual assault are blurring.
|
|
In 21967, Mr. Peres was awarded the French Legion of Honor, one of many international distinctions.
|
|
But though black millennials have much in common with their white peers, there are important distinctions.
|
|
They make clear distinctions between—and, thus, treat differently—friends and foes of the United States.
|
|
It's about invidious distinctions, the ways men compare themselves to other men and come up short.
|
|
We have to make clear distinctions between normal politics and actions we consider out of bounds.
|
|
These two categorical distinctions in problem complexity have origins before the societal rise of home computers.
|
|
"They are worried about the imprecise distinctions on when travelers may be contagious," Mr. Reardon said.
|
|
After changing the system, including the government, O'Rourke foresaw the end of starvation and class distinctions.
|
|
Populism is a form of identity politics because it's based on in-group/out-group distinctions.
|
|
For people who grew up hearing only the real sounds, the new distinctions are likely clearer.
|
|
Ancestry also allows for more continuous and granular distinctions than our relatively crude categories of race.
|
|
Like other features of high-density living, Via's courtyard plays with distinctions between private and public.
|
|
An earlier version of this briefing misstated one of the historical distinctions of the new Congress.
|
|
That is why she has made a point of building such distinctions into Korai Kitchen's branding.
|
|
The distinctions between Nissan and Renault began to blur, wrongly so to its top Japanese managers.
|
|
Here, the squabbling borders on symphonic, better modulated to draw out the distinctions among the wails.
|
|
Having said that, distinctions once critical to our engagement with customers seem less and less relevant.
|
|
Increasingly, distinctions are being drawn in response to more complaints and concerns about scooters than bicycles.
|
|
That pattern suggests a particularly troubling dimension to age-old distinctions between city and rural life.
|
|
Facebook only imposes, smashing flat all of the distinctions that were honed over years of experimentation.
|
|
Proponents of gendered categories say that absent such distinctions, men would dominate the nominees and winners.
|
|
The GOP's current proposal is too crude, making no distinctions between the Bereas and the Yales.
|
|
The larger problem, in California and elsewhere, is that scarce housing assistance makes these distinctions relevant.
|
|
The differing positions capture the distinctions between Sanders and Clinton, said former Democratic Puerto Rico Gov.
|
|
While the Democrats were united in condemning Trump's decision, there were some distinctions in their responses.
|
|
Democrats are also likely to press the companies on their distinctions between mint and menthol flavors.
|
|
There may be distinctions to draw between the statements made by McCabe and defendants like Flynn.
|
|
The proximity of birds and water blurred the distinctions between sea and sky, drive and flight.
|
|
One is impatience with drawing essential distinctions such as that between a lawyer and his client.
|
|
Forget the old distinctions between therapists who specialize in mood disorders versus those who do marriage counseling.
|
|
But distinctions deserve to be made when the principles of clean eating are classist, elitist, and fatphobic.
|
|
In the past, sometimes they've overlapped and sometimes not; the distinctions were sometimes clear and sometimes fuzzy.
|
|
These distinctions are important, since they might someday help scientists develop better diagnostic tests, the researchers said.
|
|
The distinctions between the fight against al-Shabab in Africa and the Taliban in Afghanistan don't exist.
|
|
Distinctions like that are important for telling people — especially people who eat bats — which species are dangerous.
|
|
Autonomous driving, however, will make a massive difference, and the distinctions between its various tiers are meaningful.
|
|
These are distinctions for a cellphone plan that I haven't had to consider in over a decade.
|
|
His real achievement, though, is to scramble such facile distinctions, and a host of others as well.
|
|
Social-justice warriors inevitably create distinctions — they have appointed themselves the arbiters of which cultures deserve protecting.
|
|
The distinctions may have blurred, but they are still important to diplomats and experts in international law.
|
|
So far, the candidates have largely refrained from drawing distinctions between themselves and the other Democratic contenders.
|
|
And Clinton is drawing sharp distinctions with Sanders, saying she is the true progressive in the race.
|
|
By simply respecting the freedom and privacy of all Americans, we need not draw such unpleasant distinctions.
|
|
Politics is a business with a lot of tough talk where contrasts and distinctions are constantly drawn.
|
|
These distinctions are meant to show the reader how word selection and emphasis can produce biased reporting.
|
|
Distinctions that may seem small to you are actually a big deal; after all, it's someone's identity!
|
|
But the state has long tried to erase ethnic distinctions in favour of a single Egyptian identity.
|
|
Uttar Pradesh does not make distinctions when it comes to property rights, a senior state official said.
|
|
Even so, I'd still bet on the model underestimating or missing important interstate distinctions among Hispanic voters.
|
|
But beneath those generalities, there are crucial distinctions between the Brexit vote and the 2016 presidential election.
|
|
When it comes to $2.7 trillion in money fund assets, though, the distinctions have potentially systemic implications.
|
|
But when it comes to making war, there are moral and strategic distinctions that Americans should consider.
|
|
Senate Republicans prepare for battle Still, for conservative activists, such distinctions between the potential nominees are quibbles.
|
|
" The distinctions were explained to trainees in arcane formulas such as "Not Protected + Quasi protected = not protected.
|
|
Looking toward the future, several analysts predicted that cultural distinctions between gaming populations will begin to subside.
|
|
As for the differences between the Fluance RT81 and lower-end RT80, there are five key distinctions.
|
|
We now have crisp distinctions and tools that just a few years ago were muddled and fuzzy.
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He is wholly unqualified to talk about speech, evolution or the biological distinctions between humans and animals.
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In joining the national discussion over monuments, he failed to make distinctions that should have been apparent.
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Not all experts acknowledge such fine-grained distinctions, instead grouping people into morning, evening and "intermediate" types.
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SC: I think it's crucial to make distinctions, and Aziz's accuser fell far short because she didn't.
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But he's neither synonymous with the country nor indispensable to it, obvious distinctions that routinely elude him.
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For now, however, Sanders is focused on the primary, and on drawing distinctions with Biden, not Trump.
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The distinctions that emerged in Polish Brutalism were less a matter of aesthetics than of construction methodology.
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The fuzzy distinctions between the author's life and that of his fictional protagonist are multiple and intentional.
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But with stakes this high, and facts this difficult to bear, such distinctions among methodologies become insignificant.
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These distinctions are necessarily arbitrary, but I find it useful to split Google into three distinct eras.
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But the political distinctions were not highly partisan compared to other issues covered by the CNBC survey.
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And the committees should be allowed to do their work without getting caught up into semantical distinctions.
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You have to be able to make immediate distinctions between seemingly small matters, and stand your ground.
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But the distinctions that are already brutal during normal times are only more barbaric in a crisis.
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"Most Americans are obviously not up on the distinctions between democratic socialists and communists," Mr. Kazin said.
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To make fine distinctions was to evade responsibility and, in her stark moral universe, commensurate with complicity.
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There is no hierarchy between figurative and abstract paintings, nor are there distinctions about materials or processes.
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Despite her efforts, my taste buds and nose deciphered tiny distinctions that rendered the outwardly similar dish unpalatable.
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Maybe this is not 'activism' per se, but 'political art,' as if these categorical distinctions were helpful here.
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These are increasingly crucial distinctions in sports, where the information available to all teams has basically become standardized.
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The most significant distinctions between their e-motos and gas two-wheelers are power delivery and no shifting.
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Sanders made the decision himself to begin drawing distinctions between his and Biden's voting records during television interviews.
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Quanta Magazine spoke with Valiant about his efforts to dissolve the distinctions between biology, computation, evolution and learning.
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Sometimes we hear people say they don't see color, that their family taught them to ignore racial distinctions.
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For child Otis, though, Honey Boy tends to muddy those distinctions in less showy but more disturbing ways.
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One of the distinctions you make is between nominal life-hacking and optimal subhacking, which I found interesting.
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The Group pioneered the "pooling" concept (shared transport and logistic resources), for which they received numerous professional distinctions.
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Read on to learn the distinctions between a polyamorous relationship, an open relationship, a monogamish relationship, and more.
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Artificial intelligence might also make medicine more specific, by being able to draw distinctions that elude human observers.
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I thought iPhones were a fad and didn't imagine that smartphones would eventually elide many of those distinctions.
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Despite being only one phone by name, there are multiple variants of it with some really big distinctions.
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The next generation of studies should draw finer distinctions around what kinds of social networking affect people negatively.
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First things first: It's important to understand the distinctions between acids, because they are not all made alike.
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He eventually got there, laying out the distinctions between the two candidates in fundraising and in other areas.
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Smaller distinctions over skin color have taken a back seat to larger ones of survival and political necessity.
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You start to get a critique on artdom from fandom too, or perhaps these distinctions are finally irrelevant.
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Santigold, as the songwriter Santi White calls herself, danced across those distinctions at Hammerstein Ballroom on Saturday night.
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Obama knows all this, of course, but obfuscates the distinctions because he distrusts the people who elected him.
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These small distinctions let drivers decide how they might approach a ride: Does the customer want to talk?
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Maybe now it's time to scrap those distinctions and give it a new nickname: NoPho, for no phones.
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I believe the distinctions between the valuation models are important when it comes to warehouses and machine tools.
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"Draw distinctions where you can, and it doesn't have to be with a top tier candidate," Elleithee said.
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Those distinctions come hard in the show, which does maintain fairly lofty standards of quality but logically needn't.
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Musk, in contrast, appears to aspire to a state where there are no distinctions between himself and Tesla.
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But we should also demand that they be serious, that they draw distinctions between these two presidential candidates.
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Chu, elsewhere, has drawn distinctions between action and desire, the latter of which, here, means belief or intention.
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Philosophical and logistical changes to medical training and practice are erasing some of the subtle distinctions that remain.
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"The Logic of Sense," Gilles Deleuze Deleuze interrogates language, revealing all its inescapable paradoxes, distinctions, irresolutions and contradictions.
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Many San Francisco artists do not draw distinctions between the process of art and the practice of technology.
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" Their testy exchange went viral and, in the ultimate of political distinctions, was parodied on "Saturday Night Live.
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But these are fine-grained and detailed distinctions that will likely be lost on a lot of people.
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Her books avoid simple black-and-white moral victories, and don't draw stark distinctions between good and evil.
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EU lawmakers want to go further by making clear distinctions between what is sustainable and what is not.
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He does not acknowledge the distinctions between himself, his business, his campaign, and office that he temporarily holds.
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" On the same page, he also bemoans that "we obviously don't live at a time of careful distinctions.
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The candidates have meaningful distinctions on how they'd handle the growth of Big Tech, among many other things.
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Mr. Purcell also said that it was hard to tell precisely what distinctions the government meant to draw.
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Those distinctions, which bind but by no means define them, lie at the heart of their recent work.
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It's a type of partnership that has become more common in an industry that's shedding traditionally rigid distinctions.
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Yet "hackback" legislation (the Active Cyber Defense Certainty Act "ACDC Act") has lost sight of these legal distinctions.
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Afghanistan does have three major geographic regions, but it's not clear how politically important those geographic distinctions are.
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On the first night, CNN's moderators will undoubtedly seek to draw distinctions between Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren.
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On the first night, CNN's moderators will undoubtedly seek to draw distinctions between Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren.
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The memorial was in one way ahead of its time, making no distinctions between white and black soldiers.
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Which is to say, it is an extremely of-the-moment amalgam, refusing to draw distinctions between genres.
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They are more attuned to in-group/out-group distinctions and to the purity of the in-group.
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"There are important distinctions to be made, and the FDA seems to be making these distinctions in terms of suggesting that they are putting together this working group, a task force, going after businesses marketing unproven interventions, going after businesses making illegitimate or unwarranted claims about stem cell treatment," he said.
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Google established the Street View Ready program with four certification distinctions — mobile, auto (as in automotive), VR, and workflow.
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The distinctions will surely be front-and-center at the CNN debate on July 30 and 31 in Detroit.
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The American Idea is that we have inalienable rights regardless of skin color, religion or any other possible distinctions.
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These and other distinctions lead to close scrutiny, which is part of the paintings' power, as well as pleasure.
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After working with subjects all over the nation, Aftel noticed distinctions between people living in rural versus urban areas.
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Mr. Ratelle views the gesture as political, a visual retort to overly codified distinctions between masculine and feminine dressing.
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And in the process it sharpened distinctions between the campaigns on issues where their platforms were blurry going in.
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Unlike the card game, positive distinctions are handed out seemingly at random:Some threads have bans on every single comment.
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I think there's two distinctions between this progressive approach, as I see it emerging, and the liberal internationalist approach.
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Update April 17th, 4:09PM ET: Updated with specific distinctions between the newest watch models, as given by Casio.
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Yet, you routinely implied causation while only demonstrating correlation, and opted for broad generalisations where fine distinctions are required.
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Kaplan said the development team hopes to "redefine what a sequel means," which has some important and interesting distinctions.
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Traditionally men give roses to women and women give books to men, though such distinctions are now frequently ignored.
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I came out of it with the conclusion that three distinctions mark the chancellor and unlock her apparent contradictions.
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These distinctions can influence how people think about policy, individual responsibility, and even behavioral changes related to climate change.
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Moyer's new acrylic paintings, exuberant and protean, revel in color and visual pleasure, scrambling distinctions between abstraction and representation.
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According to Salari and others who study the phenomenon, two important distinctions emerge between homicide-suicides and homicides alone.
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Just comparing the top 10 stocks in the tech sector in 1999 and now sheds light on key distinctions.
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But the movie is so well made and engaging that such distinctions will make little difference to the viewer.
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Clinton has frequently addressed the issue, seeking to draw clear distinctions between her positions and those of Mr. Sanders.
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The whole issue was subsumed by a failure to make distinctions—between a hand on a backside and rape.
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This also tells us that, very often, these distinctions are for social purposes: People label music, music labels people.
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" He added that the court's "First Amendment cases draw vital distinctions between words and deeds, between ideas and conduct.
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It tends to flatten distinctions and quiet anything that deviates from its Grand Narrative about The Truth of War.
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This is a liberal tic that obscures the moral distinctions between Graham-Cassidy and proposals like Medicare for All.
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Investigating the investigators As the church moves from the apology stage to the action stage, such distinctions are important.
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Moreover, threats of imminent bodily harm cannot serve as factual distinctions; such threats already are prohibited under Virginia law.
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More distinctions around breaking news from verified publishers might help point readers to verified sources during breaking news events.
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Those distinctions are violent in that they imply people who live in these spaces demand less respect and sensitivity.
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Indeed, to the extent that Mazars is distinguishable from prior investigations into past presidents, those distinctions cut against Trump.
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" As he tried to rein in deportations, Mr. Obama drew moral distinctions, pledging to focus on "felons not families.
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What sets Mr. Ruby apart is his refusal to draw distinctions between one form of creative practice and another.
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Second, there's a divide between a hierarchical worldview, where traditional practices and distinctions between genders, ages, social groups, etc.
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The lozenge interiors are each painted a slightly different, but related tone; the distinctions vary from sharp to subtle.
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If so, do you make distinctions between this person and the friends who are physically present in your life?
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The distinctions here are important: Only candidates who break 13 percent will win a proportional share of statewide delegates.
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Once you start paying attention to those types of distinctions then the area becomes so much more culturally rich.
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There are some pretty significant distinctions between tweets and fleets that go far beyond just the latter's ephemeral nature.
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Bally's also holds the distinctions of having the Strip's largest tennis complex and the first Wahlburger's Las Vegas location.
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I found this argument troublesome in that it seems to confuse assertiveness with aggressiveness, critical distinctions too often misinterpreted.
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Pete Buttigieg and Joe Biden and all the others are trying to draw distinctions between themselves and other candidates.
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We students at Mount Holyoke College in the early '60s took pains to play down economic and class distinctions.
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They, too, were sensitive to the humble pronoun's ability to reinforce hierarchies by encoding invidious distinctions into language itself.
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Gillibrand, Driver and others want to blur such distinctions, on the theory that we need a zero-tolerance approach.
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These standards vary, with government actions that make distinctions based on religion or race usually meriting the highest standard.
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But that does not mean all distinctions between migrants and established citizens should cease the moment they leave the airport.
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As an outsider, the distinctions that others might make between Mario Kart 83 and other, more "serious" games, aren't there.
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Right. We can just say life-hacking is stupid or overly privileged or whatnot, but I want to make distinctions.
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As an outsider, the distinctions that others might make between Mario Kart 8 and other, more "serious" games, aren't there.
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Honestly, I've been looking most of the afternoon, and I couldn't really tell you the distinctions between the various lines.
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He added that many sites appear to intentionally blur the distinctions between approved, evidence-based scientific practices and quack procedures.
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Even to use the phrase, 'the ancient Greeks,' blurs important distinctions, since the Parthenon sculptures come from an Athenian monument.
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By the way, if you're super confused by the very slight distinctions between all of these phones: you're not alone.
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As Kidman and Close prove, drawing those distinctions and pledging to write off any alleged abusers isn't always so simple.
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Mr. Trump, of course, is not drawing distinctions between Bill Clinton's behavior and Hillary Clinton's attacks on her husband's accusers.
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Think about Mark Zuckerberg's performance in front of Congress … [those senators and representatives] didn't even get some of these distinctions.
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Are we heading toward a next phase of existence in which IRL, VR, and AR are no longer meaningful distinctions?
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The exchange illustrated the Democrats' annoying tendency to draw moral distinctions between firms deserving and ill-deserving of state largesse.
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But assistants aren't necessarily good at making those distinctions, and often give preference to results that rank higher in search.
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Similar distinctions can be drawn in New York City and Chicago, where valid state permits from neighboring counties aren't honored.
|
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The key distinctions, really are stylistic, with the Wander offering up a softer frame to the Marshal's more rugged case.
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Instead, the distinctions between all three of these phone cameras are more about the stylistic decisions each company is making.
|
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Piwowar said the SEC's current rules apply "artificial" distinctions between accredited and non-accredited investors that should be re-evaluated.
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But it wasn't rousing, and it could have drawn sharper distinctions between her proposals and Mr. Trump's ideas, however sketchy.
|
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Ozick has always been a great guardian of distinctions — between the major and the minor, the high and the low.
|
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The thematic distinctions clarify each brand's identity and allow potential customers to better understand the brand in a larger context.
|
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There is, however, much psychological research on the personality dimensions that underlie trolling behavior and the distinctions among these traits.
|
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What we've seen from the Trump-o-verse is that many bigots do not make these same fine-grained distinctions.
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These are, Reynolds shows, theologically rich distinctions: the Muslim God doesn't delegate a vital task even to his best creation.
|
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"Ultimately as you get closer to decision time, candidates have to draw distinctions, they have to draw contrasts," Murphy said.
|
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The play depends on our drawing fine distinctions between different kinds of sex crimes and between different kinds of perpetrators.
|
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"Taking harassment seriously also requires making serious distinctions," Jonah Goldberg, a conservative columnist, wrote recently for The Los Angeles Times.
|
|
The handbook does not make any distinctions in the OH-58 section, which appears to describe the RAID version only.
|
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We elevate to the status of "race" the distinctions that are our current political and cultural preoccupations, while eliding others.
|
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Obviously, Iraqis were aware of Sunnism and Shiism before 2003, and those distinctions were not totally irrelevant to Iraqi life.
|
|
But as that tale of grief, fraud, guilt and madness unfolds, the distinctions between the two men's identities become blurred.
|
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The tech sensibility, which has leaked into so many other industries, imagines distinctions between work and private life as benighted.
|
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With this move, the court's conclusion was inevitable, resting on the many policy reasons and distinctions adduced in the order.
|
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David Leonhardt Mainstream news coverage has a hard time making subtle distinctions between the behavior of the two political parties.
|
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When filters fail to make those distinctions, they will take down information and discussion on topics of vital public importance.
|
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But if Clinton and Obama were on the same page in that regard, there were also some distinctions between them.
|
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In times of anxiety and distrust, it's a lot easier to sell us/them distinctions than tolerance for cultural diversity.
|
|
Kazan didn't appear to fully understand the distinctions between donating to a nonprofit or to a political campaign or party.
|
|
The sorts of ethical distinctions made in Key West, where dengue was only a distant prospect, seem silly to them.
|
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In the coming decades, these fine distinctions will mean little, as the risk of flooding becomes the certainty of it.
|
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People with convictions would be reviewed by a three-person panel under guidance that would make clear distinctions between offenses.
|
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Among the distinctions of John McCain's political life was being targeted by one of the ugliest smear campaigns in memory.
|
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But different types of heat produce different results; there are nuanced distinctions between irritatingly spicy, deliciously spicy, or refreshingly spicy.
|
|
Discrimination and stereotypes existed, but they were based on country of origin, religion, or culture, not so-called scientific distinctions.
|
|
The distinctions between work and personal information kept on employee mobile devices, as well as employer policies, are increasingly hazy.
|
|
But dismantling the distinctions between irony and sincerity, counterculture and commercialism, subversion and self-promotion, is what DIS does best.
|
|
Among its offerings are the ability to help machines understand the intent of speakers, which often relies on subtle vocal distinctions.
|
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Amazon, which by some measures accounts for more than half of all online sales, has banished gender distinctions for its toys.
|
|
The remaining 20 percent did not have clear enough distinctions in scores, which required us to be a little more clever.
|
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Among other distinctions, she is thought to be the inspiration for the gunboat Luisa in C.S. Forester's novel, "The African Queen".
|
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Academics draw distinctions between going global "vertically"—relocating production and the sourcing of raw materials—and "horizontally"—selling into new markets.
|
|
Such distinctions may not trouble Mr Sessions but, as Mr Trump has found, the courts do not always do his bidding.
|
|
And this is where it gets messy when scholars and judges try to make logical distinctions between humans and other animals.
|
|
First, I'll review some definitions since the carriers make important distinctions between these calls — even if they're all unwelcome and annoying.
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I spent a long time trying to pick out differences and select a winner, but ultimately the distinctions are too small.
|
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The general public, and many virtual reality evangelizers and practitioners, do not differentiate the distinctions between 360 video and virtual reality.
|
|
Nigeria has dual distinctions as Africa's most populous country (183 million) and largest economy with half a trillion dollars in output).
|
|
Postmodernism brings with it the erasure of older distinctions not just between reality and fiction, but between elite and popular culture.
|
|
The contrast between this "neo" liberalism and its political and economic forebears can best be understood in terms of three distinctions.
|
|
Drawing distinctions between yourself and one unpopular politician is difficult enough, as Gillespie's hot-and-cold relationship with Trump will testify.
|
|
The message in this case is that women, and young people, are not able to make such distinctions on their own.
|
|
Those distinctions are hard to measure, but might also account for some of the relative difference between parental and nonparental happiness.
|
|
Given how partial our species is to intellectual distinctions, we apply such linguistic castrations even more vigorously in the cognitive domain.
|
|
As a host, I blur these distinctions because I find myself and the visitors in the midst of a social situation.
|
|
Among the show's distinctions are its strenuously gymnastic and violent fight scenes, some of which Mr. Cox performs — rather proudly — himself.
|
|
"Towards the end of any campaign, there's more pointed language used and candidates make sharper distinctions with one another," she said.
|
|
The distinctions between the Clinton marriage and the Trumps' reflect an uncomfortable evolution also happening in homes across the United States.
|
|
For example, we have the Navy and Coast Guard as military and civil counterparts, with significant distinctions between their legal authorities.
|
|
The justices also rejected efforts to draw distinctions between individuals within the United States for other purposes of the 14th Amendment.
|
|
"In 2008 and 2010, voters did not draw distinctions," said Fergus Cullen, a former chairman of the New Hampshire Republican Party.
|
|
Those distinctions have blurred, Professor Fukuyama pointed out, reflecting the particularly American belief that humanitarian and strategic goals almost always align.
|
|
Verheyden-Hilliard was particularly critical of a proposal to reduce distinctions between demonstrations and "special events," which include concerts and festivals.
|
|
Given society's long history of pegging Satan as the root of all evil, that's fair—though it's worth making some distinctions.
|
|
While owner Jonah Oryszak thought the illustrations made the distinctions clear enough, they didn't cut it during an inspection on Tuesday.
|
|
Finally, art lawyer Alia Sonora will lay out the distinctions between copyright infringement and plagiarism, and between copyright and fair use.
|
|
But Washko says these distinctions in intent can illuminate why these pick-up artists have become so popular among certain men.
|
|
What are the cognitive mechanisms by which their abilities to think clearly, make fine-grained distinctions, apply moral principles consistently, etc.
|
|
" Schuyler notes that these small distinctions are important because, "It really is each individual who has to judge their own circumstances.
|
|
Distinctions by policymakers between "economic migrants," typically believed to be Africans, and "refugees," like those fleeing Middle Eastern conflicts, don't help.
|
|
I know also that in this country we employ terms like "socialism" with wanton indifference to historical details and conceptual distinctions.
|
|
On one side, women who called themselves feminists backed the Equal Rights Amendment, which would erase legal distinctions between the sexes.
|
|
At an event in Orient, Iowa, on Sunday, Sanders made distinctions between his criticisms of the media and Trump's outright attacks.
|
|
But small distinctions — the specific selection of communist leaders whose images adorn the walls, for example — stand out upon closer inspection.
|
|
But I was raised as an American girl; I'm hyper-attuned to even small distinctions in the appearances of other women.
|
|
He drew stark policy distinctions with the left on Thursday, even as he seeks a strong turnout from the Democratic base.
|
|
The distinctions are more than stylistic; they should force every voter to ask which policies they think are the best ones.
|
|
But sustainable engagement requires us to do at least three things: make fine distinctions, leverage allies and amplify islands of decency.
|
|
What unfolded in late January 1999 does bear some resemblance to where we stand now — even if there are key distinctions.
|
|
Now, the very distinctions that once prompted urbanites to mock the valley's rural inhabitants have become sources of interest and pride.
|
|
And distinctions between states and districts provide an additional means to give disparate perspectives that can enhance deliberation and improve legislation.
|
|
Unfortunately, many commentators on the legal profession have overlooked the crucial distinctions between legal services employment, lawyers and law school graduates.
|
|
At its core, the sports world — rigidly separating men and women — will perpetually struggle to adapt to increasingly nuanced gender distinctions.
|
|
Warren started to try to draw distinctions between herself and fellow progressive Sanders, but eventually turned her fire on Bloomberg, again.
|
|
For supporters, though, the hunt is a statement of rural identity, transcending distinctions of social status or concerns about animal cruelty.
|
|
My world, the media world, is trying to cling onto these distinctions, too, even as they become less and less clear.
|
|
And while I thought I could figure out what made the filling so singular, I couldn't puzzle out the crust's distinctions.
|
|
While they all have different names and some have different distinctions, BB, CC, and DD creams are all interchangeable terms now.
|
|
The capricious workings of the Nigerian political space make it difficult to make distinctions among the contenders and their political entities.
|
|
But those distinctions might not matter given how even primitive drones are force multipliers, or tools that increase military prowess significantly.
|
|
The immigration hawks were partly right: On the ground, those distinctions looked a lot blurrier than they did in Democrats' rhetoric.
|
|
Plus he's the only person who can claim those types of distinctions who has also appeared on multiple DJ Khaled songs.
|
|
Lima intends for viewers to question the distinctions and points of origin between these elements, thereby creating a complex visual experience.
|
|
As I tried to reconcile my belief in God with my growing knowledge of the natural world, I drew arbitrary distinctions.
|
|
Because Trump appears to have won the Electoral College but not the popular vote, his win is defined by geographical distinctions.
|
|
These are the world's unrivaled organizational and logistical experts — they could have made the distinctions clean and clear if they wanted to.
|
|
These elements have a lot of overlap with the truly radical groups, but there are distinctions in terms of beliefs and tactics.
|
|
These are forms of bravery, faith, and fidelity that neither Snowden, Manning, nor Winner had, and these distinctions have not gone unnoticed.
|
|
And Silicon Valley donors say they draw some distinctions between the two, particularly that Biden lacks the cool factor that Obama channeled.
|
|
"We are at another level where we need draw distinctions and differences with other candidates," Mike Schmuhl, Buttigieg's campaign manager, told CNN.
|
|
Tuesday's ad is not the first time Buttigieg has put money behind ads drawing distinctions with Democrats who support Medicare for All.
|
|
I mean that in a very positive way, of course — Mario games feel great, and each generation comes with its own distinctions.
|
|
More than one of our comparison shots exhibits distinctions that appear more a matter of aesthetic preference than hard, objective, photographic facts.
|
|
Others—including Western governments that have resisted calls to brand the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organisation—think there are distinctions worth making.
|
|
These distinctions mean the new opioids could decrease the risk of addiction and eliminate a leading cause of overdose death: respiratory depression.
|
|
The Communist Party has long sought to narrow economic differences and erase local political distinctions because it is terrified of regional challenges.
|
|
People make distinctions between grown-ups' films and kids' films, but I think the emotional impact is so universal, it's for everyone.
|
|
"We're a small team, a total of six, we all do everything with no distinctions," van de Merwe said, according to CNN.
|
|
As distinctions between sources of information have been flattened online, we as a society no longer effectively judge and marginalize fringe ideas.
|
|
If desperate, displaced people will keep coming, regardless of whether state powers deem them "refugee" or "economic migrant," distinctions lose their usefulness.
|
|
Yeah, but you and I are grown men who can make these sorts of distinctions, but certainly teenagers are much more impressionable.
|
|
Kevin Kwan's 2013 novel Crazy Rich Asians is practically a manual on the distinctions between Good Rich People and Bad Rich People.
|
|
What made the alliance brittle, however, was a pronounced conservative tendency to collapse these distinctions in order to blame Trump on liberals.
|
|
There's also distinctions in the policy regarding the officer's judgment, like if they believe a recording would interfere with an investigation somehow.
|
|
For decades, there was no formal hierarchy within cannabis collectives, blurring distinctions between employees, managers, and everyone in between, according to Chlala.
|
|
But the burden is on them, she added, "to make the distinctions" between the parties for the sake of attracting more voters.
|
|
"But when you ask people what their most special objects are, a lot of the class distinctions dropped out," Halton told me.
|
|
His monologue is at once rambling and riveting, his words backed by music that blurs distinctions between jazz and contemporary classical styles.
|
|
But the disaffected voters hear something else: an assault on the limits and distinctions that give structure and meaning to their lives.
|
|
"So I think there are some important distinctions there but yes, it appears hypocritical and it looks bad, for sure," he added.
|
|
Their only path to viability is to repeatedly draw the starkest possible distinctions between their policies and the policies of Donald Trump.
|
|
The distinctions between cable and broadcast have mostly eroded to sports fans — they're all just channels on a long menu, aren't they?
|
|
A vast majority of drug-dealing charges end in plea deals, so there are few trials during which such distinctions might emerge.
|
|
What is revolutionary about the Bolt is that it bridges category distinctions — it brings luxury car electric range at mass-market prices.
|
|
It's tough for AI to make distinctions between, say, nudity for the sake of art and politics or nudity that is pornographic.
|
|
That is the setting for " Howards End ," Forster's famous novel about culture, property, gaping class distinctions, and the narrative importance of umbrellas.
|
|
What he considered a late creative stretch was actually shrinkage; toward the end, he ceased making many distinctions between art and junk.
|
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"If everything seems to be the same and no distinctions are made, then we won't know what to protect," Mr. Obama said.
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She starts simply, sparely, but she and her dancers exaggerate each motion, using the eye to direct the ear to tonal distinctions.
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The deduction is complicated, makes capricious distinctions and provides an overwhelming share of its benefits to households with incomes above $39.63 million.
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Facebook's guidelines suggest that moderators appraise content about different types of murderers differently, although it's not entirely clear what these distinctions mean.
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By failing to attend to any of these distinctions, Zuckerberg's new communitarian language is as vacuous as his old talk of connectivity.
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But I don't think the Board that it would come before would be in any mood to be drawing those fine distinctions.
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A web of wealthy think tanks, lobbying groups, and organizations that seem to blur the line between such distinctions are behind them.
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The only visual distinctions are the sesame seeds on the bun and the lettuce, which is torn rather than shredded or whole.
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Mazars is distinct from past presidential investigations in superficial ways, but it is unclear why any of those distinctions have legal significance.
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Mr. Doerries, who last year was named a public artist in residence for New York City, doesn't believe in such formal distinctions.
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Frank Bruni We don't talk a whole lot about class in America, where we prefer to pretend that we transcend such distinctions.
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But a bedrock principle of First Amendment law, she wrote, is that the government may not draw distinctions based on speakers' viewpoints.
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Worse, we create artificial scarcity by giving out awards — distinctions manufactured out of thin air specifically so that some cannot get them.
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Yet in a sprawling field of Democratic contenders who agree on many major issues, trade presents a chance to draw some distinctions.
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Especially as transnational terrorism continues to blur longstanding distinctions between the military and civilian spheres, preserving a constitutional stopping point is crucial.
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Their third and final debate drew sharper distinctions between the candidates than the first two, which had highlighted their similarly progressive stances.
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For starters, it's a true ensemble piece, meaning there are no clear distinctions among which performers are lead and which are supporting.
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Although it may be unintentional, the Met's new policy draws distinctions between visitors, prioritizing certain races, ethnicities, classes, and places of origin.
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Workers, employers, investors, entrepreneurs — and all American consumers — deserve clear legal distinctions so that everyone knows their rights, obligations and economic opportunities.
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Sammy also heard it in school, where distinctions among Japanese, Chinese and other Asians were lost in a blur of angry abuse.
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But in Pyongyang, where the nuances of American politics and personalities are less familiar, those distinctions are likely less front-of-mind.
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And it can muddy the distinctions between various technologies, as Crispr, gene editing, gene therapy, and genetic engineering all get thrown around.
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And when he mapped out his recordings as sonograms, he could see clear distinctions in wavelength and amplitude among the different calls.
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"Frantz" is something of an anomaly in a series where the most controversial and acclaimed films push boundaries and blur genre distinctions.
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While embracing Islamic leaders as a centerpiece of its counterterrorism strategy, however, the Kremlin did not avoid drawing distinctions along religious lines.
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Jameson was thinking less about "narratives" and more about how market ideology flattened culture and obliterated distinctions between high and low art.
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Within the constraint of a limited palette, there is the possibility of myriad distinctions and differences, and Meyer takes advantage of them.
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Summed up, the results revealed, as the authors put it: No real distinctions at the level of language, themes, or even syntax.
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Cooperation between agencies has increased but this has not kept up with globalisation, which has blurred the distinctions between foreign and domestic medicines.
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Here are the important distinctions: A pregnancy is not a person, I did not murder my patient, an abortion is not an execution.
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AMONG the world's megacities, Delhi, India's capital, has a good claim to several dubious distinctions: foulest air, hottest summer, most precarious water supply.
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He further flattened the usual distinctions by creating "collaborative" compositions, in which his own paintings served as backgrounds for sets of found ceramics.
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MADDOW: And we do hope that the candidates will take this opportunity to show us the distinctions — show us the differences between them.
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Transgender, transsexual, third gender — for centuries in India, the many subtle distinctions of the trans community have fallen into one category: the hijra.
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Cooperation between agencies has increased but this has not kept up with globalization, which has blurred the distinctions between foreign and domestic medicines.
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All of these subtle distinctions, the authors said, could mean there are ways to tell apart the mostly unaware from the fully unaware.
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The results: The Great Recession and slow recovery period are instructive for understanding ethno-racial elements of citizens' political attitudes beyond partisan distinctions.
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These distinctions may make a difference for the two conservatives who voted one way last June and (perhaps) the other way last Friday.
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When a drone operator was charged for dangerous flying behavior, it was under the careless and reckless distinctions used for large scale aircraft.
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Wayfair CEO Niraj Shah drew some clear distinctions between his company and online retail behemoth Amazon, he told CNBC's "Closing Bell " on Wednesday.
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Paternostro says it might be challenging to find experimental methods capable of identifying the rather subtle distinctions between the predictions of these theories.
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The newly revised Xbox One S launched today and offers HDR video support as one of the primary distinctions from the original model.
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And now it is so cool to be here presenting the first acting award ever that celebrates performance free of any gender distinctions.
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"These distinctions in regulatory oversight complicate efforts to improve the efficiency and resiliency of the fixed income electronic trading markets," the group said.
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And, of course, Trump built his political career on making distinctions based on race, sometimes directly and sometimes through dog whistles and retweets.
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Chan, who helps organize the Independent Lodging Congress, has gathered from attendees that the distinctions between hotel chains and independent hotels are blurring.
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People say they hate partisan conflict, yes—but they vote for people who draw sharp distinctions between themselves and their (negatively defined) opponents.
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But there are several ways, dear friend, to identify them: Emotionals are also often extremely polarized, unable to see nuance or make distinctions.
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Today, I find myself making a lot of defensive distinctions between the people in state government and the people who actually live here.
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An essay could be written on the semantic distinctions, which Owens had just elided, between mistakes and accidents, and between accidents and pratfalls.
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The music has formal rigor and forward pull, but it doesn't provide an orienting framework, or any clear distinctions between composition and improvisation.
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Even the commonalities — in all three works, dancers sit and watch one another — hold lessons in making distinctions: of technique, tone and taste.
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So if silicon, metal and complex circuitry were to generate an emotional repertoire equal to that of humans, why should I make distinctions?
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Yet the festival is likely to be less about how the City Center years were distinct than about distinctions among the participating troupes.
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But the new generation of Islamist terrorism, conducted by individuals citing far-off inspiration, has blurred the distinctions between terrorist and disturbed loner.
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Postmodernists made an infamous show of confusing distinctions, and the idea that an artist's work could also include chairs and tables became commonplace.
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Under Elizabethan poor law, the job of making these distinctions went to church wardens and parish overseers, people who lived in the community.
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So these distinctions going forward may not be as significant, but it is an important issue in thinking about net neutrality to date.
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"It is problematic that individuals and groups within our Church demonstrate the same inability to make distinctions and to exercise charity," he said.
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The campaign, he said, plans to draw more aggressive distinctions in upcoming weeks, including over the former vice president's relationship with credit companies.
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But it does make explicit one of the distinctions between Dolemite Is My Name and similar outsider-art narratives like The Disaster Artist.
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But a new breed of start-ups that caters to corporate travelers and focuses on user behavior may be making those distinctions obsolete.
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In answering his title's provocative question, Mr Dixon finds that requiring distinctions (formal or informal "you", inclusive or exclusive "we", evidentiality), is useful.
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Typical of Scarpa, the outer concrete invades the interior, muting distinctions between inside and out; almost every room opens onto a private garden.
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We are not equal in the eyes of God, because He was the one who created social classes and other distinctions among mankind.
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Although we express no opinion as to other professions, the distinctions, historical and functional, between professions, may require consideration of quite different factors.
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Mr. Trump's takeover of the Republican Party has blurred the bright-line ideological distinctions that defined the right for the past eight years.
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The party at times allowed ethnic minorities some outward expression of cultural distinctions, but territorial integrity and party supremacy were the red line.
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Located in Southern Italy's Gagliano del Capo, the 158-year-old Palazzo Daniele earned two distinctions: best guesthouses and hotel of the year.
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For more information on the distinctions between our brokerage and investment advisory services, please speak with a financial advisor or visit our website.
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While it may feel as though the Air Force Space Command is simply getting a new name, there are a few key distinctions.
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The residents aimed to dismantle the distinctions between art forms, using poetry as a starting point for an architecture that was also sculpture.
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But they don't seem to align very closely with the region definitions used in this paper, suggesting that more granular distinctions are necessary.
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There are common-sense distinctions here between fact and fiction, and simple-to-understand nutritional workarounds for all sorts of real-life situations.
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We have to develop the kind of practical wisdom of both the broader conversation and then the ability to make very careful distinctions.
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Yes, in the public debate about Ansari most people are making important distinctions between Ansari's behavior and what Harvey Weinstein is accused of.
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As time has gone on and customs have changed though, fewer and fewer individuals remember the distinctions between the various species of flora.
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On the Strategerist podcast, the Alliance for Securing Democracy's Laura Rosenberger made three distinctions between U.S. democracy support and authoritarian efforts to undermine it.
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The distinctions between their respective celebrity statuses notwithstanding, Maradona's tale marries the two most critical forces behind the other two leads in the trilogy.
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Southern Accent erases distinctions between insider and outsider, regional and national, documentary and abstract, densely weaving them into a mesh of stories and themes.
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Clever algorithms already make finely graded distinctions about the price each consumer pays for an air ticket, or which advertisements or news he sees.
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Sandro Gozi, a junior minister for Europe, says that 25% of the decisions of Italy's Constitutional Court have been aimed at clarifying such distinctions.
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I will admit to being skeptical that the distinctions drawn by Kennedy in that case would ever make a difference, but today they did.
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If we're going to make sense of how elections are being distorted in the digital age, we need to start by making some distinctions.
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The third layer then made distinctions between different instruments, and was highly activated by voice and piano, but not by hi-hats for example.
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Jules Polonetsky, CEO of the Future of Privacy Forum, says in an interview with CNBC that the distinctions between devices create misunderstandings among users.
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David Ortiz is not Mexican, but Dominican, and MLB has a history of not really caring about the cultural distinctions among Latin American countries.
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Corbyn's humane reaction to the Grenfell Tower tragedy has only sharpened the distinctions between Labour and the Tories, to the detriment of the Tories.
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There was a lot of propaganda in the media that the LGBTQ community recruits children... there's no distinctions between what is homosexuality versus pedophilia.
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And old distinctions, like that between wired and wireless access, have become less meaningful as mobile networks move toward wider availability and higher performance.
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" More recently, George W. Bush joked at a Yale commencement: "To those of you who received honors, awards and distinctions, I say, well done.
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Clinton stretches her lead, she stands to gain some voters who pay less attention to distinctions and end up voting a straight Democratic ticket.
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But he often speaks with disdain about feminism generally, and in unguarded moments he is liable to comment on essential distinctions between the sexes.
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When we look at things as they are, it gives us a better sense of the commonalities and wonderfully rich distinctions we all have.
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Generally, I think this approach could help bring together the user experiences of Feed and Stories, while preserving the distinctions that make each useful.
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That implicit standard means that Taycan and Tesla occupy different cognitive regions, beyond the basic distinctions of a $188,000 EV versus a $115,000 one.
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And comic book villains lack the dark distinctions in Milton, whose devils personified specific sins — Satan (pride), Mammon (greed), Belial (wickedness), Moloch (child sacrifice).
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Making things more complicated: Many new tools will increasingly make nonsense of our current regulatory distinctions between "genetically engineered" crops and "conventionally bred" crops.
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Fans of the first series should appreciate the subtle ways the story has changed to reflect the fine distinctions between two countries' political systems.
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In the 1950s and '20113s, the leading political movement in the Middle East was Arab nationalism, for which Sunni-Shia distinctions were largely irrelevant.
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It manages all this while staying fully situated within a natural black American vernacular spanning distinctions of class and color — a deeply impressive feat.
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On our side, it means legitimizing Parliament members who have supported terrorism, or who make these tortured distinctions between killing Israeli soldiers and civilians.
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He rejects distinctions between right and wrong for an ethos of explicit self-interest that Americans have never before seen from the White House.
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To some extent, these kinds of distinctions, between East and West, are undetectable — Western culture has long been embedded, interpreted and augmented in Japan.
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Rao did a better job laying this groundwork, giving a clearer and deeper description of the logical distinctions between legislative, executive, and judicial powers.
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Here are some key distinctions and similarities: Puerto Rico's overall debt burden is nearly seven times larger than Detroit's was when it entered bankruptcy.
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Only in the race's final days did he begin offering sharper distinctions, foreshadowing how he could soon confront Sanders, Warren and Buttigieg more aggressively.
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Justice Stephen G. Breyer suggested that two distinctions mattered: whether the state program concerned health and safety and whether it was universal or selective.
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But in the two most exciting paintings, "Electric Blanket" and "The Unbelievers," distinctions between foreground and background or center and edge are gone completely.
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There is no indication that he will start making distinctions between isis and al-Nusra and the groups that are party to the agreement.
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Some fans worry that genre distinctions will eventually erode completely and all forms of music will blend together into a bland, undefined mono-genre.
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The way for any collection of neighborhood profiles to succeed is to make fine distinctions between places that casual observers tend to consider similar.
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Even after several debates, he said he has "no idea" how he's more progressive than Pressley, and declined to point to any key distinctions.
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Words/Matter is divided into six rooms, each approaching this intersection from a different angle — and a few troubling ingrained distinctions along the way.
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Officials in Nashville, which landed a smaller development project from Amazon, with about 5,000 jobs, also drew distinctions between their approach and New York's.
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Rather than following fads, the important distinctions these days among the wines were in interpretations of ripeness, a producer's preferred style and in terroir.
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In ektor garcia's exhibition in Mexico City, sculptural assemblages that evoke altars, everyday tools, and sex toys blur conventional distinctions between types of artifacts.
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On Sunday, Sanders campaign co-chair Nina Turner, retweeted and quoted in part from Washington Post opinion columnist Elizabeth Bruenig's recent piece addressing those distinctions.
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Now that every device you own contains enough connectivity and power to function for work, gaming, and entertainment, the distinctions between them are becoming meaningless.
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But now the former FBI director can add "New York Times best-selling author" to his resume, alongside his Purple Heart and other military distinctions.
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Although he has pretty limited qualifications, he is bright enough to be gaining merits and distinctions in the FE college business course he is studying.
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According to a recent survey on investor trust, investors are not able to make clear distinctions between the different parts of the financial services industry.
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The important distinctions here are two; how high is the "active share" of a portfolio and how long does it tend to hold its investments.
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Economists, mustering equal precision, worry that the dampened "spirits" of investors can transmit a crisis across countries, undeterred by the fundamental economic distinctions between them.
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Now, I was fortunate — I had parents and teachers who never made distinctions, at least that I can recall, between the boys and the girls.
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This debate highlights the bright-line distinctions between America's political parties and the rigid expectations that increasingly guide their positions and those of their candidates.
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Those distinctions are key to iron out as researchers continue investigating the effects of screen time, says Marc Potenza, a professor of psychiatry at Yale.
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From the beginning, the striving for reconciliation has overlapped with distinctions of race, although that is hardly surprising in light of South Africa's tortured history.
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"When it comes to whether someone qualifies as a whistleblower, the distinctions being drawn between first- and second-hand knowledge aren't legal ones," Grassley said.
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But the Supreme Court has made distinctions in the past based on the trimester of pregnancy, or whether the fetus is "viable" outside the mother.
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State-of-the-art algorithms and sensors can make obvious distinctions, like between squirrels and cyclists, but they can't be much more subtle than that.
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Over time, Zuckerberg hopes Facebook's AI will learn to make nuanced distinctions, such as between terrorist propaganda and a news report about a terrorist attack.
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In turn, lack of overlap gave party leaders even more power to draw sharper distinctions between the two parties by shaping agendas and controlling messaging.
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LOTTER: Well, I think there is always this tendency to try to draw distinctions between the vice president and the president on any given issue.
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If my own grasp of these many distinctions have mixed you up a bit, perhaps this article serves as the catalyst for your financial education.
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Rocky's continued detention highlights one of the main distinctions between the Swedish criminal justice system and the American one: its lack of a bail system.
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In the United States, December was both the warmest and the wettest on record -- no other month has ever held both distinctions for the country.
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Naturally, the model's not nearly as feature-rich as its paid counterpart, though the company's removing one of those key distinctions as of this morning.
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Plato was the first theoretician to make a system out of the distinctions between what he regarded as the main forms of the city-state.
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As it moves further into this sphere, one of the few remaining distinctions between Europe's low-cost carriers and their full-service forebears will disappear.
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Birch, who specialises in the philosophy of the biological and behavioural sciences, created a helpful guide to academic letters of recommendation to illustrate the distinctions.
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It falls upon us, in other words, to make distinctions between business practices that we as a society condone and those that we do not.
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Here we see how seemingly insignificant differences in ways of killing a fish create noticeable distinctions in the way it tastes once we eat it.
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The writers — all accomplished scholars — support the 19th-century idea that legal distinctions between children and adults may be determined using a single, magic birthday.
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Mass communication—television and, especially, internet access—has eroded some regional distinctions, and Democrats have seen the country move toward them on many social issues.
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Garton Ash invokes recent work by lawyers and philosophers but sees that fine distinctions and tight reasoning get you only so far in public argument.
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Party leaders, he said, will have to work hard to highlight Trump's controversial statements and draw distinctions with Republicans when it comes to minority issues.
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Dimaya, No. 15-1498, said the Ninth Circuit, which hears appeals from federal courts in nine Western states, had overlooked distinctions between the two laws.
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As I saw during my trip, the government's inability — or refusal — to draw such distinctions has already had a profound impact on Turkish civil society.
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Trump has never understood the distinctions between being the head (figurehead, some would say) of a company and being the President of the United States.
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Leaders from Asia, Europe and Latin America offered congratulations to Mr. Trump or to the United States, but the distinctions in their messages were noteworthy.
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But while there are some obvious connections to be made, the distinctions between Ms. Goldin's work and the average smartphone diarist are just as illuminating.
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For them, resistance was vital and could be enacted on many different levels and in many different ways, including their own writing, which challenges distinctions.
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If competition is having the opposite effect — pushing parties further apart as they seek to draw distinctions with each other — where does that leave us?
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He describes Superflatness as a sort of tool that Murakami uses to flatten these distinctions that people in the West can get caught up on.
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But in the case of many other writers, the distinctions in public identity between proceduralist and non-proceduralist camps can feel arbitrary, if not misleading.
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"Because they failed to provide those distinctions and caveats, now trade gets tarred with all kinds of ills even when it's not deserved," he said.
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Make the Road New York, an immigrant rights group that is working with the Silva family, is trying to help cardholders navigate those tricky distinctions.
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It is important to keep these distinctions in mind, both to avoid unnecessary panic and to get a clear picture of the likelihood of transmission.
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These distinctions are not arbitrary — it really does take about 365 days for the Earth to orbit the sun — but their creation was not inevitable.
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The juxtaposition feels casual rather than deliberate, perhaps because Mr. Adjei-Brenyah finds distinctions between literary and genre fiction, and between fantasy and reality, meaningless.
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These are skills and distinctions I have learned over the past five years as an assistant to my dad in his one-man plumbing business.
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Those distinctions don't reflect national security or economic concerns — they are the result of long-past lobbying campaigns intended to protect or exempt certain manufacturers.
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So far in negotiations, Republican leadership has been unwilling to make any public distinctions between what they really need and what they'd like to have.
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Her scarves bearing reproductions of her original artwork hang in an art museum, once again blurring cultural distinctions between art, design, and practical everyday objects.
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At the time, Dillon opted for actor, but said in the interview that making distinctions by gender identity or assigned sex is arbitrary and discriminatory.
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I have been unable to speak to Kirana despite multiple attempts to reach him, so I do not know if he cares about these distinctions.
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Hurricane recovery has been no different, revealing that distinctions in culture and governance have had a significant bearing on progress during the past two years.
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She smashes the distinctions that structure contemporary debates about feminism and women — between power and submission, objectification and empowerment, sisterhood and individualism, victimhood and vengeance.
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Washington (CNN)French President Emmanuel Macron has honored three American World War II service members with one of France's highest distinctions, the Legion of Honor.
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By affirming the plasticity of nature ("everyone can be anyone"), a Marxist could hope to eradicate such innate distinctions and achieve a radical collective good.
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Where Western cuisines were always granted minute distinctions (Tuscan versus Piedmontese, say, or the thousand gradations within American barbecue), "foreign" cuisines were perceived as monoliths.
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Teasing apart these distinctions requires vocabulary that varies between experts, but there are roughly three categories: venting, problem solving and ruminating, otherwise known as dwelling.
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There are key distinctions between the talks taking place now and the 2007 discussions between producers and writers that led to a 100-day strike.
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Teasing apart these distinctions requires vocabulary that varies between experts, but there are roughly three categories: venting, problem solving and ruminating, otherwise known as dwelling.
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With fewer competitors "the distinctions among the various platforms and platform capabilities become much clearer, and the contrasts between them are much sharper," he said.
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These are noteworthy distinctions, and it's certainly not unheard of for two authors to be simultaneously, and unintentionally, working on books about the same topic.
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Leaving aside the distinctions between these various formats, anything other than a typical caucus will tend to have a higher turnout that resembles a primary.
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The Visa investment could create the first of two market distinctions for Interswitch — as it shouldn't change the Lagos-based company's plans to go public.
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In any case, do you really believe that a national identity is capable of subsuming all the differences I mentioned above without destroying the distinctions?
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But the school funding mechanism has been litigated in Kansas courts for years, and there are sharp regional distinctions in how the issue is viewed.
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These distinctions are well-founded in brick-and-mortar world criminal and civil law – and they should transfer into the digital world of information security.
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But others predicted Sanders would make it more of a focus than Warren or that there are other distinctions between the candidates on the issue.
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Mr. Kitajima, who goes by the name Takubo, said he believed men and women were fundamentally different in spite of any blurring of style distinctions.
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The cleverness of this structure only gradually becomes apparent as Ms. Buirski slowly obliterates skin tone distinctions to land on a perfectly calibrated final section.
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It concluded that distinctions that may seem small to Christian-American ears make a big difference to the mainstream Muslims we need on our side.
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The celebratory palette of the work belies the stark distinctions levied by numerical values: weight, height, age, how fast one runs the 40-yard dash.
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Some criticisms of the #MeToo movement have implied that women can't be trusted to have complex conversations or to make distinctions between different types of behavior.
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Given the longstanding critiques of Google, it would be wise for Facebook to mark some clear distinctions from the company in the way it does business.
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They add up, like pieces of a puzzle, to reveal a man of many distinctions: a black man who succeeded despite the obstacles of racial injustice.
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But because the law makes no meaningful distinctions between traffickers and those engaging in consensual sex work, its impacts have gone well beyond its ostensible targets.
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In recent years she also blurred distinctions between media, from ceramic wall installations meant to evoke wallpaper to still life paintings incorporating bas relief clay sculpture.
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Donald Trump's tendency to ignore the carefully manicured distinctions other Republicans have made, between encouraging paranoia and embodying it, leaves no quarter for reality in policymaking.
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Its adversaries are more attuned to conflict somewhere between war and peace, and to blurring distinctions between civil and military assets in pursuit of their goals.
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As the world around enterprise software shifts and the tools for building it advance, do we really need such stark distinctions about what can run where?
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Since 212.4, the index of large-cap stocks has been cut into 211 broad sectors, with the distinctions critical for investors trying to create diversified portfolios.
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You might even say that health—at least physical health—has become our national religion, complete with moral distinctions between good and bad, virtue and sin.
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It used to be a lot easier to pull together a sufficiently large coalition of voters to win an election, when you had clear class distinctions.
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As distinctions become cloudy, Mr. Singh said, partisans invent ever-more-intricate definitions of revolution or coup to fit complex events into black-and-white narratives.
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But I made distinctions: I became impatient if there was theme music with a logo, or if the instructors did any playacting shtick at the start.
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"Tis the season for these bizarre FEC distinctions on campaign committees," said Michael Toner, a former chairman of the FEC under former President George W. Bush.
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You're right, and I find it so vital that people and places be seen as they are and be embraced for their distinctions as they are.
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And even then it's not clear if those distinctions are real or simply the result of too much time spent rereading a text for possible insights.
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In moments like these, Hiller breaks down the purported distinctions between rational and irrational behavior, confronting us with the instabilities and double standards of these divisions.
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The policy does not make distinctions about the cause of death, the relationship between the video's creator and its subjects or the involvement of law enforcement.
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That is possible, but practically speaking, if we are eating fruits and vegetables that grew on the ground, the ability to make these distinctions breaks down.
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I told them that the beauty and majesty of citizenship is that it draws no distinctions of race or class or faith or gender or background.
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The rule of law depends on these distinctions — to hold governments officials to the law, we need to be able to acknowledge what the law says.
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Abdul El-Sayed, a Sanders supporter who ran for governor in 143, said he believed that Michigan Democrats would see clear distinctions between the two candidates.
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The immediate effects of the pandemic on blurring the parties' ideological distinctions have been acute — and the virus' toll still remains far from reaching its peak.
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Leaving few remains, save the type of objects I've noted, the pieces that endure are more archive than art, as far as these distinctions are useful.
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But since the show first aired, these certainties have been wilting in the face of new political forces and Mr. Macron's strategy of bridging old distinctions.
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Though there are distinctions, men's tennis and women's tennis are viewed as the same product by many who tune in only during the year's biggest tournaments.
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The documents obtained by Motherboard do not make distinctions between the agencies under DHS, which include ICE, the Transportation Security Administration, the Coast Guard, and others.
|
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Similarly, feminist metaphysicians have argued that metaphysical distinctions between superior and inferior categories (mind/matter, essential/contingent, self/other) were often used to express male superiority.
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Such blurring of the distinctions between expert reviews and explicit ads provides a ripe circumstance for the rise of advertising that is less than totally transparent.
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It is surrounded by mountains and desert that offer few clear distinctions as to where the city in Texas ends and the one in Mexico begins.
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At this point, I've come to regard my consistently messy quarters as a deliberate act of rebellion against the evaporated distinctions between public and private space.
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This work is a call for coexistence, for an ideal world in which individuals can unite in celebration of our distinctions and of our common humanity.
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From trade deals to the Iraq War, the health-care system and the social safety net, Sanders aimed to draw distinctions between his record and Biden's.
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A lawyer for Mr. Zarda, however, said that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation inherently involved sex distinctions in a way that violated federal law.
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Higher Powers Jia Tolentino makes important observations about the connections between drug use and the experience of faith, but she overlooks crucial distinctions ("Ecstasy," May 27th).
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Leonardo's great accomplishment was that he erased the distinctions between art and ideas, putting a positive, endgame value on long-term exploring over short-term arriving.
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As candidates made their final push across New Hampshire on Monday, they sought to sharpen the distinctions with one another, especially Mr. Buttigieg and Mr. Sanders.
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The basic realities of public health—how similar our needs are, how interconnected we are in daily life—defy these distinctions to the point of insignificance.
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If Sanders continues to dominate the Democratic primary field, these distinctions could begin to make a big difference in Sanders' long-term prospects for the presidency.
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Most of her stand-up focused on drawing distinctions between the person she seems to be on television and the person she is in real life.
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But compared to traditional weapons, biological threats have a host of unsettling distinctions: Germ production is small-scale and far less expensive than creating nuclear arms.
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If parsing the language has proved difficult for diplomats, average readers have often found themselves sinking in a swamp of seemingly meaningless distinctions and incomprehensible verbiage.
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It focuses on those serving sentences for marijuana-related offenses, as well as those with disparate sentences because of old distinctions between crack and powder cocaine.
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I feel there is some risk of getting caught up in the distinctions, and gender is just one of many markers we use to identify ourselves.
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Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions.
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"There are no hard distinctions between what is real and what is unreal, nor between what is true and what is false," Hiddleston said in the clip.
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"But at the same time, I want to start drawing the starkest distinctions, between what I know America stands for ... and what Donald Trump is standing for."
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"But at the same time, I want to start drawing the starkest distinctions between what I know America stands for ... and what Donald Trump is standing for."
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"It [pluralism] does not mean that we want to eliminate our differences or erase our distinctions," the Aga Khan explained in his speech at the centre's opening.
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But fine distinctions have been blurred amid a climate of anxiety and insecurity in Europe that has widened divisions in politics, the news media and society alike.
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But his reference to the Boston Marathon bombers, who were influenced by al Qaeda, suggests he didn't have a clear understanding of the distinctions between the groups.
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I agree with the distinctions made by Steven Fletcher between suicide, euthanasia and dying with dignity or assisted dying, and the following is rooted in that context.
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"There are no hard distinctions between what is real and what is unreal, nor between what is true and what is false," Hiddleston says in the clip.
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Despite its well-known challenges, Nigeria has become a testbed for e-commerce startups attracted to its dual distinctions as Africa's most populous country and largest economy.
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I think in many ways those distinctions, the way politics is covered, the binary choice between more government and less government is as outdated as the VCR.
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He didn't know why he had a right to make what he called invidious distinctions between his beans and these weeds, which is kind of crazy. Yeah.
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This lets extremely fine distinctions be made, such as whether a reflected image comes from one page or the next one a fraction of a millimeter down.
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Thus Climats Artificiels is a somewhat troubling consideration — or "poetic" evocation — of the Anthropocene within the context of increasingly imperceptible distinctions between the natural and the artificial.
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In this way, Diviner provides a thermal method for dating craters up to one billion years old, which is when weathering makes age distinctions harder to spot.
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Their non-aggression pact has held throughout the early months of the campaign, with both routinely pivoting away from opportunities to draw sharp distinctions between their candidacies.
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" The trolls didn't care for such semantic distinctions: Alawa told CNN she'd received a message reading "I hope you die slowly in a pool of pig's blood.
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Their rigid class distinctions, false religious piety, sexual aggression, oppression of children, spouses, and siblings—all reveal themselves to derive from the most primitive and idiotic impulses.
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The "points system" can be seen as exemplary of neoliberal government in action, and highlights a number of critical distinctions between political liberalism, economic liberalism, and neoliberalism.
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Despite the Academy's previous announcement regarding steps toward global inclusivity, it's clear that the group's distinctions are arbitrary and based on an America-centric point of view.
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It's one thing to carve out a special policy for political speech in general; it's another to make distinctions within that category between politicians and everyone else.
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Opponents reply that to give animals rights would not only be unprecedented but, by erasing distinctions between them and people, would undermine something fundamental to being human.
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Importantly, their challenges cut across typical ethnic and geographic distinctions: 85033 percent of these residents nationwide are white, 30 percent are Hispanic and 37 percent are black.
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They will say that President Trump means only the "fake news" media, and they will parse his statements, will take cover and find justification behind those distinctions.
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Free market thinkers very consciously thought and presented their arguments in terms of class consciousness, aware of class distinctions and contemplating a separation of politics and economics.
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But Ms. Brooks has a larger ambition: She wants to explore exactly what happens to a society when the customary distinctions between war and peace melt away.
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But there's a more elemental question here: What is an opposition party for other than drawing distinctions between its agenda and that of the party in power?
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But as new types of prosthetics become available, and the integrations between man and machine become more intimate, the traditional distinctions the law makes are being questioned.
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While we may watch 'Love Is Blind' because we're aching for a world where social distinctions don't matter, ultimately it highlights how very much they still do.
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But the simplified format actually allowed for the candidates to draw clear distinctions between their philosophies of government, and give substantial explanations of their policies and plans.
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Several, including "The Left Hand of Darkness" — set on a planet where the customary gender distinctions do not apply — have been in print for almost 22002 years.
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Of course, many Creoles have held themselves apart from darker-skinned blacks, have made judgments and drawn distinctions based on poisonous but pervasive notions of white superiority.
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Much of the animosity lay in the enduring distinctions between the majority Shona people, who supported Mr. Mugabe, and the minority Ndebele people, who backed Mr. Nkomo.
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He punctured the snobbery and rituals of the concert hall, and showed music as something that could be gobbled whole, without prissy distinctions between high and low.
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It is a singular failing of German Holocaust education that Germans still draw national distinctions with the use of this ideology, for example between Germans and Greeks.
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Despite taking place within the art world and invoking ideas around the philosophical distinctions between "real" and "fake," The Goldfinch fails to locate any thematic resonance therein.
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Bret: I think we've got to do better at making some common-sense distinctions between Barr-level offenses, for which she was rightly fired, and lesser sins.
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There are distinctions to be made between "good debt" and "bad debt," but the greatest impact of all may be whether you manage whatever you borrow effectively.
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Taking calculated risks is part of the mindset successful people cultivate, according to "The Top 10 Distinctions Between Millionaires and the Middle Class, " by Keith Cameron Smith.
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The six women — all of them naked — are equally god and muse, taking turns in leading and supporting roles (not that the distinctions are always so clear).
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However, while we might make neat distinctions among Iran's nuclear and conventional capabilities, Iran does not — all these capabilities are elements of the same Iranian power strategy.
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