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192 Sentences With "inclined toward"

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

Catholic doctrine is inclined toward the social conservatism of Ted Cruz.
Even in a system inclined toward dehumanization, the human spirit survives.
I have inclined toward it, but sometimes I turn from it.
"We are still very positively inclined toward risk assets," she said.
It's no wonder the wealthy are less inclined toward charitable giving.
Even today, governors generally are more inclined toward problem solving and bipartisanship.
And they were still inclined toward something new rather than something old.
He was preternaturally inclined toward a law-and-order point of view.
Anyone inclined toward cynicism about these advances still has grounds to be unimpressed.
Authoritarian leaders, or elected leaders inclined toward it, are bullies, deceivers, selfish cowards.
OS people are not inclined toward an object due to a sexual attraction.
Sischy was inclined toward oddballs, or took an oddball approach to familiar subjects.
Secondly, many woman are inclined toward socially minded investments (such as impact investing).
Conservatives are more inclined toward a narrower, more personalized, overwhelmingly psychological conception of racism.
But there was a certain personality type that inclined toward that kind of work.
"For someone who is not inclined toward exercise, just walking is great," he says.
Most of his classmates were neither skirting gang involvement nor inclined toward military service.
So neither party's voters were inclined toward the candidate who drew the brightest line distinctions.
In northwestern Italy, the Piemontese would be inclined toward a barbera with a mushroom risotto.
But McConnell, who did not seem inclined toward that approach, gave a more cautious response.
So of the three — and I suspect I'm not alone in this — I inclined toward Toscanini.
Perez is seen as more inclined toward reform than other factions of the ruling Socialist Party.
The Western-educated Rouhani is less inclined toward Russia and has an uneasy relationship with Putin.
The point is: My mind was already inclined toward scatterfocus, but I wasn't using it strategically.
He seemed to me very much as one who is inclined toward a binge, a binger.
As the debate played out, even moderate red state Democrats temperamentally inclined toward bipartisanship, like then-Sen.
If these voters were also inclined toward Mr. Trump, it would help explain the bias toward Mrs.
She avoids familiar harmonic signposts and is inclined toward spectacularly vivid eruptions of instrumental and electronic sound.
Not inclined toward rhetoric and panic, Australian farmers are now on the front line of climate change.
Nearly as important is the policy signal this sends to Democrats less inclined toward the Sanders view.
Negative feelings toward Trump's products transcended party lines, though Democrats were much less favorably inclined toward his businesses.
For those less inclined toward axe-throwing, Kick Axe also has a variety of board games on hand.
One Democrat not inclined toward impeachment asks what if the President refuses to comply with a binding court order?
There are variations on the spectrum of what's normal — people can be naturally more inclined toward morningness or eveningness.
It's perhaps common in our culture to critique young people or recent generations as being overly inclined toward medicating.
The fact that black Democrats are more favorably inclined toward the public option than the average Democrat makes sense.
This work requires the effort of far more people, including those who are not inclined toward active self-defense.
The support: A senior White House official told the Hill that Trump is "positively inclined" toward the compromise proposal.
Most humans are heliotropic, or inclined toward the sun, but New Yorkers are especially adept at tracking its movements.
Why it matters: While K Street is directionally inclined toward deregulation, there can be colliding interests below the surface.
You can be sure that leaders of potential future administrations that may be inclined toward corruption are taking notes.
That is why established manufacturers are more inclined toward incremental development and the desire to change as little as possible.
Finally, curl your hair (unless it's naturally inclined toward Raven-esque corkscrews, that is), and gather it into a ponytail.
Reuters reported on Tuesday that the company was inclined toward selling control of BR Distribuidora to garner a higher valuation.
While the animated Bojack was sardonic, Flaked looks more inclined toward heartwarming moments, colored pastel shades by the California sun.
Each night's marathon included at least one agile vocalist inclined toward soul, like Taylor McFerrin, José James and Kandace Springs.
While Mnuchin is more inclined toward the typical GOP support for free trade, he has fiercely defended the president's tariffs.
Maybe, rather than strategically bent on deconstructing the international order, he is temperamentally inclined toward actions that have that effect.
Houck, who is 41 and based in Los Angeles, is naturally inclined toward mathematical order and has never lacked discipline.
She and her husband are both highly creative, but she has "zest" and James is more inclined toward analytical thinking.
Beijing's strategy of giving Taiwanese economic benefits so that Taiwanese will become more inclined toward unification has not been successful.
On "Armchair Expert," as in real life, Mr. Shepard is inclined toward self-analysis of his insecurities, motivations and shortcomings.
Reese Witherspoon's Draper James provides a preppy J.Crew aesthetic for those inclined toward Etsy cursive and sweet tea in mason jars.
The idea was that judges wouldn't have excess discretion and might be less inclined toward discrimination or bias, conscious or otherwise.
A senior White House official earlier this month described the president as "positively inclined" toward the combined House and Senate bills.
Sixty-seven percent admired leaders who make compromises, while just 22019 percent were inclined toward those who stick to their positions.
With all the fuss over artisanal liquors and bespoke ambience, drinking establishments in New York can be inclined toward the overserious.
After that animal's death, Americans who are not inclined toward big game hunting were forced to consider why some people are.
Brooklyn Brew Shop also offers sparkling white wine and sparkling rose‎ kits for those more inclined toward a refreshing bubbly beverage.
In the background was London—a city of disease and murders, and perfect material for a mind inclined toward the gothic.
Their role is collective self-regulation, some imposition of S2 thinking on groups naturally inclined toward a variety of S1 -isms.
Left-wing and progressive parties are increasingly made up of whites inclined toward difference and change, as well as ethnic minorities.
The son of a prosperous textile manufacturer, Zweig was the elegant embodiment of the assimilated Jew — urbane, instinctually tolerant, inclined toward pacifism.
So far, few of Trump's fellow conservatives have appeared inclined toward his removal, though there have been some cracks in their support.
Mr. Dunn, who had characterized Mr. Hooker as inclined toward "socialistic evils," became the state's first Republican governor in half a century.
Let me hasten to stress that I'm not an OS partisan, or, to the extent that I am, I'm inclined toward Google.
Amid suggestions of a larger societal collapse, the one-percenters on the upper floors are snobbish brutes inclined toward drunkenness and debauchery.
Those of us inclined toward this view couldn't have asked for a better demonstration than Laura Ingraham's Thursday night Fox News show.
Leo told "Fox News Sunday" earlier this month that Trump will likely select a judge inclined toward originalist interpretations of the Constitution.
That means if your species as a whole is already inclined toward using less energy, then you are more likely to survive.
Let me be clear on this point: I do believe President Trump's instincts are absolutely inclined toward the America First populist agenda.
Democrats, more inclined toward robust diplomacy and cooperation with the international community, have preferred to keep the position at the Cabinet level.
Are they more inclined toward bold, optimistic grabs at the future, or to recoil at the potentially devastating possibilities of its being unleashed?
The survey participants might be weighted toward consumers and businesses more positively inclined toward believing in the imminent benefits of President Trump's initiatives.
Mr. Ryan is speaker because his predecessor, John A. Boehner, was considered too inclined toward making deals and resigned under pressure from conservatives.
This was true, but it risked overlooking the most immediate dilemma: People inclined toward lawbreaking increasingly thought they could do so with impunity.
The department also retains two very large, placid rabbits, Clovis and Lily, who pay visits to patients not inclined toward potting and pruning.
A stronger dollar also reduces inflation in the United States, which in turn makes the Fed more inclined toward caution on rate increases.
Unsurprisingly, therefore, tech companies tend to be more enthusiastic about jumping straight to full autonomy, while car companies are more inclined toward gradualism.
Yet this conventional scene seems to fade away when you see St. Joseph, kneeling in the foreground, his head inclined toward the Christ child.
And Moscow may assess that few congressional candidates will be as favorably inclined toward Russian interests as the Kremlin likely believes Trump to be.
Wearing glasses and no makeup, inclined toward modest cardigans, she doesn't come across as someone who chats up gang members about their sex lives.
Barry, an Irish composer inclined toward manic musical surrealism, strips the Wilde play of its debonair veneer and exposes a core of punkish rage.
As Hanoi prepares to host the second U.S.-North Korea summit in late February, experts believe Kim may be more inclined toward Vietnamese-style liberalization.
The Democratic preference question was asked of a 440-person subset of voters who identified as Democrats or independents who were inclined toward the party.
If we were judged solely by our representation in literature, humanity would score as an entertaining, oversexed, overly talkative lot, inclined toward learning our lessons.
Men were more inclined toward favoring pot for any use with 47 percent favoring complete legalization and 37 percent supporting it only for medical treatments.
"As the baby boomers are getting to their twilight years, they're less inclined toward this 'see if the doctor approves' euthanasia strategy," Nitschke told me.
But Mr. Erdogan, who doesn't seem inclined toward compromise, apparently believes as did many before him that the Kurds can be defeated by military force.
"Many people seemed inclined toward a predisposition to experience his work as almost deliberately marginal, perhaps even minor," Dan Cameron writes in the exhibition's catalogue.
In the balance is a population of 80 million, mostly young, Iranians who have in recent years elected relatively moderate leaders inclined toward evolutionary reform.
Eric Olson, who has a Ph.D in psychology from Harvard, does not come across as temperamentally prone to obsession, or intellectually inclined toward conspiracy theories.
But in making the case for a military populated by scions of the elite as well as the working class, he does not mention an additional payoff to universal service: The power brokers who run this country would probably be a lot less inclined toward war, and more inclined toward diplomacy, if their own family members were at risk of death on the battlefield.
While biographers have made hay out of that outsider status, it does not seem to have fazed Nevelson, who appears temperamentally inclined toward never quite belonging.
Republican pollster Frank Luntz started the night of the first presidential debate with a group of undecided Pennsylvania voters who were favorably inclined toward Donald Trump.
He'd heard others call the new guy "untrusting," but Juan understood that people from their part of the country were simply inclined toward a solitary bearing.
When asked why it appears feminine guys might be more inclined toward bottoming and masculine guys toward topping, Hart, the Canadian researcher, has a few theories.
All we can surmise thus far: Mr. Powell is slightly more inclined toward deregulation, and he will continue Janet Yellen's dovish approach to raising interest rates.
All three are fiery speakers inclined toward economic populism, and they have urged the Democratic Party to shift in that direction since its defeat in November.
The same poll, of Democrats and independents inclined toward Democratic candidates, suggests that the Trump presidency has not expunged a taste for billionaires among working people.
Lately, he says he's been especially inclined toward using text as a kind of of ready-made form for manipulation, exploring ideas of mutability and legibility throughout.
For Raya 2016, they tapped into customer data to decipher that Malaysian citizens that identify themselves as Malay were more inclined toward a particular range of Maybelline.
Democrats were always somewhat less inclined toward presidential nominees without political experience and since 1900, all of their nominees have held at least some previous elected office.
Switching between the two cameras is super quick, and together with LG's established strength in imaging and camera software, I feel very positively inclined toward this change.
After World War II, Mr. Buckley adopted an exaggerated approach to postwar American liberalism (which was hardly inclined toward socialism) because he thought the stakes were high.
"But when investors are inclined toward risk-aversion, safe liquidity is a desirable asset, not an inferior one, so creating more of the stuff doesn't encourage speculation."
Indeed, Conservative candidates who are challenging a troubled Labour Party in close-to-call urban heartlands may not be nearly as inclined toward fox hunting as Mrs.
She's always been inclined toward neatness, a crisp Ikea aesthetic, even if she isn't as cheerfully ruthless as Marie Kondo ("Spark Joy"), the Japanese anti-clutter guru.
Mashable's own Chris rankings branch out of the Big Four Chrises, while The Ringer has an ongoing intense deep-dive for those inclined toward hard-hitting scientific research.
We tend to be more exploratory when traveling to a new country, whereas we are more inclined toward exploitation when returning home after a hard day at work.
On foreign policy, Mr. Kushner is more inclined toward intervention in the Middle East while Mr. Bannon would prefer that the United States remain as uncommitted as possible.
Those inclined toward the safe and logical would probably look beyond the millennial former mayor of a midsize city as the candidate best suited to assume the presidency.
Perhaps the bigger issue is the fact that none of the major parties are pushing for reforms and almost all of them are inclined toward looser fiscal policy.
Several donors and other Democrats inclined toward Mr. Biden have privately expressed jitters about a fourth-place finish or worse in New Hampshire, and are closely watching the result.
But there's never been a better time to revisit its contents, especially if — like me — you're inclined toward skepticism when it comes to Ocean and Boys Don't Cry hype.
If you're inclined toward paranoia, Alex Gibney's sobering documentary "Zero Days," about the spread of malware, exposes a whole arena of potential terror and calamitous destruction surrounded by secrecy.
If you're inclined toward paranoia, Alex Gibney's sobering documentary "Zero Days," about the spread of malware, exposes a whole arena of potential terror and calamitous destruction surrounded in secrecy.
On Friday, however, Ker Gibbs, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, sounded more favorably inclined toward the Trump administration's policies and less tolerant of Beijing's.
Dostoyevsky was likewise inclined toward clemency, writing approvingly of the acquittal of a pregnant woman named Kornilova who threw her 6-year-old stepdaughter from a four-story window.
Politicians looked for feedback from their constituents on Bush's plan, and what they heard was so negative that even moderate red-state Democrats temperamentally inclined toward bipartisanship, like then-Sen.
Takahata was less inclined toward adventure stories, big action sequences, or overt visual flourishes, though he could and did pull off all of them at various points in his career.
The advice-and-consent rule exists, Mr Hamilton wrote in 1788, to secure top federal officers who are inclined toward the public good rather than the president's "private inclinations and interests".
Even when Star Trek aliens are culturally and even biologically inclined toward the duties of their rank, humans dismiss and ignore them as regularly as they wave off the Prime Directive.
The latter mostly manifests itself in him spending too much time at bars late at night—as you might expect, this part is also deeply depressed and vaguely inclined toward suicide.
For those inclined toward comfort, the 1880 House is in the center of town on the banks of the river — the inn's smart, professorial décor evokes a more elegant sporting weekend.
He resuscitates games when the Orioles' homer-and-strikeout bunch is inclined toward the latter, putting together at-bats far more responsible than those from players a half-decade his senior.
It can set trade policies, use diplomatic pressure on trading partners, make public statements and appoint people to the Federal Reserve who are inclined toward either looser money or tighter money.
But millennials' lack of funds could wind up making us culturally distinct from our parents and children over time—maybe we'll be more responsible and frugal, less inclined toward hedonism and waste.
One of the main reasons Trump stands such a good chance at re-election is that Democrats right now do not look like a party inclined toward moderate outreach toward persuadable voters.
Among political wives, few have been as favorably inclined toward fashion and its designers, whom she championed and befriended, and whose profile she raised during her time in the White House. Mrs.
Soon after, the stock market plunged and bond yields rose, as investors evidently concluded that the Fed was inclined toward a somewhat faster rate of interest rate increases than had been assumed.
This tactic could potentially work when you're bargaining with someone— instead of meeting in a conference room, consider convening in a coffee shop so your partner is less inclined toward aggression. 21991.
But doesn't "queer" (combined with nonbinary pronouns) automatically unravel the term "straight," which has historically meant being sexually inclined toward people of the opposite sex, "square" (in 1950s parlance) and prone to conformity?
Nézet-Séguin, who will become the Met's music director next fall, is not the ideal conductor for this opera; he favors a brisk, clear-cut approach, and is not inclined toward Wagnerian mystery.
Having spent years criticizing America's involvement in Afghanistan, he now appears inclined toward an open-ended commitment, but with no real ways to measure success and no hint of a timetable for withdrawal.
As recently as last season, the Hawks were a symphony conducted by a nebbish secret genius or, for those less inclined toward metaphor, a really good basketball team playing fun, fast, free-flowing hoops.
Kennedy is perceived to be the swing vote between the bloc of justices inclined toward allowing some judicial regulation of partisan gerrymandering and the bloc that would leave such matters to the political process.
" He was inclined toward the East Village, he said, as it had "more of a younger culture, which was a cool thing for me because I am going to be 22 in the city.
Warren and Buttigieg took veiled swipes at Biden at the event with the Massachusetts senator implicitly denouncing his recent declarations that Republicans would become more inclined toward bipartisanship if President Trump is defeated in 2900.
In fact, his real-life aesthetic is not so far off that of the villain in his latest film, although Mr. Guadagnino is less inclined toward public displays of nudity than Mr. Fiennes's character is.
Your Money For people even mildly inclined toward tax nerddom, the continuing discussions in the Senate and the debate that already took place in the House of Representatives are the best kind of spectator sport.
First, most mainstream media types are philosophically inclined toward anti-establishment organizations from the start; they see little wrong with crypto-fascist violence if the stated goals are in line with their own values systems.
Others more inclined toward rate increases, like Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren, have redoubled their case, noting the Fed has never successfully nudged unemployment up from a super-low level to a more sustainable state.
Neuropsychiatry studies show that girls are inclined toward subjects and activities that involve communication and connection-making, and therefore often reject STEM-related careers that they view as individual contributor roles, with little interaction and teamwork.
Mr. Baker, the ultimate, indefatigable pol, was more inclined toward political failings: Our representatives don't live in Washington anymore or socialize with one another; gerrymandering, which guaranteed safe districts for members of both parties; the media.
It's part of an overarching strategy he has for identifying and mobilizing communities — as he did with bikers, in general — who might be inclined toward Trumpian politics but have never been targeted as a group before.
"It is not a stretch to expect that voters who supported Secretary Clinton would be predisposed against Mr. Manafort or that voters who supported President Trump would be less inclined toward the Special Counsel," Manafort's attorneys wrote.
Regions with a greater understanding of their own mixed-up, multiethnic past — parts of Sicily, Portugal, even postwar Bosnia — are more inclined toward pluralism than the parts of Europe where people define themselves through blood or soil.
But the North's aggressive rhetoric and continued ballistic missile tests — to say nothing of a possible nuclear test — are making the international community inclined toward far-reaching sanctions that could destabilize North Korea by crippling its economy.
This has left the matter in the hands of local police departments, which are inclined toward secrecy and could end up withholding video information from the public or restricting the times when cameras are to be used.
"It is not a stretch to expect that voters who supported Secretary Clinton would be predisposed against Mr. Manafort or that voters who supported President Trump would be less inclined toward the Special Counsel," Manafort's lawyers wrote.
At a time when Southern fiction inclined toward the Gothic, Ms. Lee, with a keen eye and a sharp ear for dialogue, presented "the more smiling aspects" of Southern life, to borrow a phrase from William Dean Howells.
A senior White House official described the president as "positively inclined" toward a compromise proposal presented by Senate Republicans that would add some sentencing reform to a prison reform bill that overwhelmingly passed the House earlier this year.
The constraints on Iran's nuclear program embedded in the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action weren't good enough for those in Washington, Israel, and Saudi Arabia inclined toward regime change and "kinetic" options — otherwise known as military strikes.
European agencies, analysts say, have often been quicker to give licenses for public or commercial purposes, mostly because officials, more inclined toward regulation than in the United States, have been eager to control the use of the new technology.
It's part of the human condition (through the idea of original sin, human beings are automatically inclined toward sinful acts, inheriting the guilt of Adam's first sin in which he ate the forbidden fruit in the garden of Eden).
If you appoint FTC and DOJ leadership who are inclined toward stricter enforcement, back leadership up politically if they come under attack, and enhance agency budgets so more work can be done, then you will end up with more enforcement actions.
If one were inclined toward armchair psychoanalysis, one might suggest this could be because, on some level of his psyche not entirely contaminated with KFC and misogynist rally chants, he understands his own intense, burning, black hole-sized lack of qualification.
Irma (Samara Weaving) is still a glamorous socialite, but in the series she is inclined toward sexual fluidity; she tenderly kisses Miranda on the mouth in one episode, an act of teenage provocation but also a testing of sexual boundaries.
"The Iraqi - considered violent and inclined toward criminal activity - had celebrated after the recent terrorist attack in Manchester," they said, referring to a suicide bombing last month at a pop concert in the northern English city that killed 22 people.
Known as a pragmatist and centrist inclined toward economic liberalism and political authoritarianism, Mr. Rafsanjani was accused by critics of corruption in amassing his fortune and of a readiness for harsh tactics to deal with dissent at home and abroad.
Catherine Hardwicke directed the teen drama Thirteen and the teen vampire/werewolf drama Twilight, so when her agents brought her the script for Quibi's Don't Look Deeper—part girl-coming-of-age and part sci-fi—she was inclined toward it.
The party ought to have a bit of fun with this last agenda item, given that polls have shown for months now that a strong majority of voters are favorably inclined toward congressional candidates who will provide a check on this White House.
But in an article in The New York Review of Books in 20003, Michael Casper wrote that the paper, founded by an ultranationalist underground group, the Lithuanian Activist Front, was more favorably inclined toward the Germans and rife with anti-Semitic polemics.
"You want to get as much shit as you can while you're alive," he'd said, standing in his 5,000-square-foot house, while my father and I, more inclined toward caution (him) and being evasive about the state of your finances (me), laughed and nodded.
What they found: Mice with the fired-up neurons in that part of the brain acted more like alpha males (pushing back, fighting, resisting, etc.), while those that had those neurons suppressed were more passive and less inclined toward social dominance behavior that characterizes "winning."
While Trump receives overwhelming support from his party members, Democratic-leaning respondents were even more strongly inclined toward voting for their party's eventual nominee, with 6900 percent saying they'll go for the Democratic presidential candidate and only 2628 percent saying they would back Trump.
The political motivations of the Sánchez government to remove Franco's body at this time appear less-inclined toward goodwill toward the Spanish people than to finishing a decades-old PSOE agenda item that will shape the historical memory of Francoist Spain for years to come.
In response, and apparently to demonstrate his competency in his assigned position, the noncommissioned officer had taken it upon himself to approach the person he considered inclined toward committing a similar offense in the future: me, the only openly gay soldier in my unit.
"I learned this in graduate school in macro — anti-union stuff from people who were highly inclined toward government redistribution," said the economist and columnist Noah Smith, who earned his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan and has written about economists' suspicion of unions.
Until recently, Simeone has been constantly mentioned as a possible manager for Chelsea in the Premier League, though the word now is that Chelsea's owner, Roman Abramovich, is looking for someone more inclined toward adventurous soccer than the uncompromising Simeone, whose teams fight and scrape for points.
Robin goes on to offer a range of quotations, from Reagan, from Goldwater, even from the U.S. Army field manual, each of which is more overtly inclined toward the possibility of nuclear holocaust than Donald Trump refusing to escalate should Russian President Vladimir Putin annex Latvia.
"It is not a stretch to expect that voters who supported Secretary Clinton would be predisposed against Mr. Manafort or that voters who supported President Trump would be less inclined toward the Special Counsel," they argued, adding that the split is more balanced in places like Roanoke.
All too inclined toward military action, all too cozy with business interests, all too amenable to retrograde causes when she finds them politically convenient (take welfare reduction, mass incarceration, the Defense of Marriage Act, capital punishment, George W. Bush's war in Iraq or Israel's apartheid policies), Mrs.
These were men and women who, in some cases, were professionally inclined toward facts — many of them were scientists, a vocation they adopted, even before they embraced dissidence, out of a conscious effort to move away from any field that could be distorted by Communist ideology.
Biden's insistence that his GOP counterparts will experience an "epiphany" and become inclined toward compromise is a dangerously naïve idea for someone who had a front-row seat during the Obama administration to possess, and someone should disabuse him of the notion sooner, rather than later.
But then when it comes to the specifics of his strategy, Bannon always seems more inclined toward seeking out racialized cultural fights, or linking himself to substance-free resentment vehicles like Roy Moore, than toward pursuing the economic-policy shift he's officially in favor of accomplishing.
The reason for this correlation, the authors argue, may be that people inclined toward delusional thinking are "more emphatic in their endorsement of NDE phenomena as they view it as less at odds with their pre-existing belief systems" or even as "evidence" of the validity of those beliefs.
News Analysis LONDON — For those blithely inclined toward the view that Britain would somehow find a way to sever its relationship with the European Union free of drama or financial consequences — like canceling a car rental reservation, with a tad more paperwork — Friday was a sobering day of reckoning.
" Controversy over the design of seasonal Starbucks cups is just one front in an annual culture war over the role of religion and liberalism in the five-week period between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day, a period that people inclined toward interfaith outreach might call "the holiday season.
She also frames the issue in some unusual and provocative ways that could end up hurting her with feminists or, more optimistically, broadening her political appeal to reach swaths of working-class America that are open to a progressive economic agenda but more inclined toward traditional views on family life.
Democrats are more inclined toward the first theory, especially since many believe that Obama took nonpartisanship to a fault by failing to respond when FBI Director James Comey upended the final days of the campaign by publicly reopening, and then closing, the dormant investigation into Clinton's use of a private email server.
MOSCOW — The Baltic state of Latvia, governed since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union by political forces inclined toward Europe and wary of Russia, on Sunday became the latest country whiplashed by rising populism with the announcement of election results that showed strong support for pro-Russia and anti-establishment parties.
Annette B. Clawson Lakewood, Ohio Alternative Facts Elizabeth Kolbert makes passing mention of demographics in her article on conspiracy theories, noting that, according to the research of Joseph E. Uscinski and Joseph M. Parent, the poor and the uneducated tend to be more inclined toward conspiratorial thinking ("That's What You Think," April 22nd).
Democrats in early-voting states are more inclined toward impeachment than leaders in Washington, but the numbers have dipped notably since polls earlier this year, according to a new poll from Republican firm Firehouse Strategies, along with Øptimus Data Analytics, that polled 1,695 likely caucus/primary voters in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
In addition, anyone who attended looking for answers or a comment on whether Raicovich's increased focus on immigration activism following Trump's election contributed to her resignation from the Queens Museums would have been disappointed; she did, however, mention briefly that the Queens Museum's board seemed less inclined toward expanding their existing community programs than she was.
The judges on the list are traditional conservatives with varying interest in the Scalia originalist method; while it is difficult to assess such tendencies in lower court judges, a few of Trump's possibilities could be inclined toward Scalia's approach on criminal cases, including Michigan Supreme Court Justice Joan Larsen, who was a law clerk to Scalia in the 1994-95 session.
But having met Marlinspike and seen what the team has done over the last few years (not to mention the good work that originally established WhatsApp), I'm far more inclined toward the more charitable interpretation, which is simply that that there's a way to make Signal pay for itself without compromising the principles that led to its creation in the first place.
Although younger crowds will argue (and rightfully so) that the category of lesbian can alienate trans people and doesn't fully reflect the fluidity of female sexuality (and as such should be relegated to the dustbin), I see an another reason they're less inclined toward the term: Women lose a lot of social and cultural currency by being sexually uninterested and unavailable to men -- queer keeps that possibility intact.
"It is not a stretch to expect that voters who supported [former] Secretary [of State Hillary] Clinton would be predisposed against Mr. Manafort or that voters who supported President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE would be less inclined toward the Special Counsel," the attorneys wrote in a court filing arguing for Roanoke's more even distribution of Republican and Democratic voters.
"It is not a stretch to expect that voters who supported Secretary Clinton would be predisposed against Mr. Manafort or that voters who supported President Trump would be less inclined toward the Special Counsel," the document reads, highlighting the high percentage of Alexandria residents who voted for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE over Trump in the 2016 election.
"His mind was freshly inclined toward sorrow," Saunders writes of Lincoln, "toward the fact that the world was full of sorrow, that everyone labored under some burden of sorrow; that all were suffering; that whatever way one took in this world, one must try to remember that all were suffering (none content; all wronged, neglected, overlooked, misunderstood), and therefore one must do what one could to lighten the load of those with whom one came into contact; that his current state of sorrow was not uniquely his, not at all, but, rather, its like had been felt, would yet be felt, by scores of others, in all times, in every time, and must not be prolonged or exaggerated, because, in this state, he could be of no help to anyone and, given that his position in the world situated him to be either of great help or great harm, it would not do to stay low, if he could help it."

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