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"rhetorically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is intended to make a statement or to produce an effect rather than to get an answer
  2. (formal, often disapproving) in a way that is intended to influence people although it is not completely honest or sincere
  3. (formal) by using the art of rhetoric
"rhetorically" Antonyms

602 Sentences With "rhetorically"

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

Notably, while the 2020 candidates focus rhetorically on expanding Medicare, Obama focused rhetorically on access to private insurance.
It sounds better rhetorically, you know, I wrote their sellers.
Trump was also quite fond of Pruitt, at least rhetorically.
""But when is it bath time?" he asked rhetorically. "Now.
And that's precisely why Trump is tearing it down rhetorically.
"It's a grilled-cheese sandwich rhetorically over and over again."  
"What's he going to do with him," he asks rhetorically.
Now, they've been challenged rhetorically, they haven't been challenged legally.
Rhetorically, this picks up where Trump's inauguration speech left off.
"What does this say about our culture?" she rhetorically asks.
The frontier may have shrunk, but rhetorically it is spreading.
Elizabeth asks this rhetorically and then answers her own question.
Rhetorically at least, he seldom distinguishes between allies and adversaries.
"'No game,' Why did I say that?" she asked rhetorically.
"Is pricing transparency transferable to larger brands?" he asked rhetorically.
"Did he do it?" she asked rhetorically in an interview.
Second, it has the potential to be rhetorically grand and
Rhetorically, she would champion the causes of the right wing.
Ms. Shelton has rhetorically questioned whether America even needs the Fed.
" Bradley then asks him rhetorically, "Who said that to you here?
Certainly there are some key drawbacks to a rhetorically fueled rise.
"What man goes in and out of that?" she asked, rhetorically.
"What the hell is going on here?" she asks herself rhetorically.
Mataiasic asked the judge rhetorically if he had lost a child.
Palin likes to point to the press both rhetorically and literally.
"What is the reason why?" he asked rhetorically at one point.
But rhetorically, the attitudes toward Trump couldn't have been more different.
He didn't seem sharp rhetorically in the way that, say, Sen.
"Will they get there in 2017, 2018, 24?" he asked rhetorically.
Rhetorically, there is little daylight between Mr. Boudin and Ms. Loftus.
"What does it mean to be a gamer?" asks Neidhardt rhetorically.
" Of course, he adds, rhetorically, "How do all bad movies end?
"Who would even need to think about that," he asked rhetorically.
Interestingly, these modern socialists do not rhetorically echo their predecessors' definition.
Russia's support of President Nicolás Maduro is unwavering, rhetorically at least.
"You can't support people just because they're convicted?" he asked rhetorically.
Rhetorically, there hasn't been a more disrespectful administration in 150 years.
"What are people like me going to do?" he asks rhetorically.
"Am I confident I will get it?" he asked rhetorically in December.
"You know what spring is?" rhetorically asked my wife, the accidental poet.
"Where do I exist?" she asks me now at the Barbican rhetorically.
" As she walks away, Khloé rhetorically asks, "You're telling me I'm critical?
"Rhetorically managing that process will be Chair Powell's existential mission," McCulley said.
It's just been cut up to highlight places where she stumbled rhetorically.
"What is the effect of eating too much rice?" she demanded rhetorically.
He became an outsider, at least rhetorically, after flopping as an insider.
" Alex yells-and-rhetorically-asks Alexis, as though saying, "How could you?
"Aren't you supposed to be running the country?" he asked Trump rhetorically.
"Why not have an innovation tab in online stores?" she asks, rhetorically.
"What do black women feel about Women's Lib?" she asks, somewhat rhetorically.
"Can Nucor do well despite what happens with 232?" he asked rhetorically.
"Genocide," however, is rhetorically double-edged, provoking controversy as it invites attention.
Mehta isn't the first to stake this kind of bold claim, rhetorically.
"So does that mean that the water bottle's alive?" he asked rhetorically.
What matters more, they ask rhetorically — your mentions or universal health care?
But what that means rhetorically is different from what it means legally.
What, he asked them rhetorically, would Brexit do for towns like this?
"Incoherence is now a virtue," writes Tobi Haslett, rhetorically shaking his head.
Claire McCaskill of Missouri, the top Democrat on the committee, asked rhetorically.
Trans-Atlantic unity on sanctions is under ever-increasing pressure, at least rhetorically.
But rhetorically, he is channeling a lot of anger against the very wealthy.
"Who in the world is going to be too bothered?" he asked rhetorically.
But I was surprised rhetorically, communications wise, he didn&apost call for it.
"How do we earn peoples' trust?" the CEO asked rhetorically during the conversation.
But that doesn't mean China won't respond, at least rhetorically, in aggressive fashion.
" She called the goal "fair" but asked, rhetorically: "How do you get there?
"Senator McCain, you mean the one who voted against Obamacare," Trump asked, rhetorically.
"What do you think it cost to raise this floor?" he asked rhetorically.
But Clinton has continued to use women and children rhetorically, to justify war.
First, Hogg asked Ingraham (rhetorically, to be clear) who her top advertisers are.
Yet the policy has proven to be more significant rhetorically than in practice.
It's one thing, rhetorically, to say you're going to repeal the entire statute.
"It's sort of infectious, isn't it?" asked the designer, mostly rhetorically, and giggled.
"How many people's moms set fire to their childhood possessions?" she asked, rhetorically.
But we've become rhetorically lazy, and there is plenty to be serious about.
"We've come certainly a long way, at least rhetorically, with North Korea," said.
He treated (and treats) Democrats like the enemy -- rhetorically and in his actions.
"Where did I find this guy Jerome?" the President asked rhetorically on Twitter.
"Why do we need another cafe?" he asked rhetorically on a recent visit.
"What have you got to lose?" he rhetorically asks a hypothetical black audience.
"If you take this away from the law, who wins?" he asked rhetorically.
"The great irony here is that you have one administration north of the border that rhetorically thinks only in terms of enforcement and one south of the border that rhetorically thinks in terms of getting rid of enforcement," he said.
"So here we are: Can he actually close this deal," one aide asked rhetorically.
Pruitt and Trump have appropriated climate moderation to rhetorically soften immensely anti-climate initiatives.
Functionally, if not rhetorically, that puts him squarely in line with his GOP colleagues.
"Should media try to see if this is happening to men?" she asked rhetorically.
I want Obama to karate chop Trump, if not literally than at least rhetorically.
"How do we manage PR and securing gigs for our artists?" he asks rhetorically.
"Just about everybody agrees to that, except very stupid people, OK?" he asked rhetorically.
This is much easier, and perhaps more rhetorically effective, than debunking climate science itself.
"Do you give the money to cancer patients or to addicts?" he asked rhetorically.
They have both supported, financially and rhetorically, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Egypt.
He was a longtime adversary of Mr. Trump, both rhetorically and in the courts.
"I was good — what's one thin layer really going to do?" he asked rhetorically.
So far, the trade fight between the U.S. and China has played out rhetorically.
" Joe Holtz, the co-op's general manager and highest paid employee, asked rhetorically. "No.
"Has she driven off billionaires who would've sided with her otherwise?" he asked rhetorically.
And most of that stuff is rhetorically justified as a form of helping foreigners.
"Does she think she lives in a discriminatory town?" he asked, rhetorically, of Hillary Clinton.
"We have come certainly a long way, at least rhetorically, with North Korea," Trump said.
He said both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have been rhetorically tough on Wall Street.
That is why it's been the darling of those who rhetorically support medication assisted treatment.
"What was the point of going to the police in Toronto?" she asked me rhetorically.
Then, rhetorically, we've heard that they want this to be a middle-class tax cut.
"Well, have we had a systemic financial crisis since World War II?" he asked rhetorically.
Trudeau and Trump rhetorically clashed following the Group of Seven summit in Canada last week.
"Is that a great way to allocate resources in the United States?" he asked rhetorically.
When Trump rhetorically asks whether anyone in the crowd is wearing a toupee. Epic. 29.
"Is that a great way to allocate resources in the United States?" he asked, rhetorically.
Clinton's policies, although rhetorically geared toward the middle class, would probably have a broader effect.
He rhetorically asked Madikizela-Mandela to give him a sign about how to treat them.
Now, the McCains of the world have the power to strike back, rhetorically and substantively.
"But will I ever say that Stone Mountain is a good thing?" she asks, rhetorically.
The US also backed — at least rhetorically — a failed military uprising Guaidó launched in April.
But even there, Trump seemed to move quickly back toward the center, at least rhetorically.
"Could we be running with less experience," Klobuchar asked rhetorically of women in an interview.
Rhetorically, he's the opposite of President Donald Trump: He's not crass and he doesn't yell.
Rhetorically, he focuses on "low-wage workers" being brought to the US by greedy employers.
"What is an e-cigarette?" asks Judith Prochaska, a professor at Stanford's prevention research center, rhetorically.
"If we can't deliver on this, how can we be an economic leader?" he asked rhetorically.
Pence rhetorically asked why there wasn't a conflict of interest when she was Secretary of State.
But some of them have chosen to market themselves by trying to "rhetorically inflate" seafood's challenges.
Art is where the meeting of the social and the subjective is rhetorically presented to us.
People are still politically and rhetorically committed to the Stockholm Agreement as the best way forward.
"If we take a step back, what is the problem we are solving?" says Käärmann rhetorically.
Rhetorically, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has become the national leader who most forthrightly champions refugees.
"Who was the star of 'Stranger Things' before it was on the air?" he asked, rhetorically.
The president rhetorically and in real terms has been fighting them every step of the way.
"The EU was formed, partially, to beat the United States on trade, OK?" he asked rhetorically.
Instead, by refusing to recertify the deal, he rhetorically disavows the pact without directly pulling out.
"We have come certainly a long way, at least rhetorically, with North Korea," Mr. Trump said.
His tendency to continue rhetorically distancing himself from the Democratic Party also helps seal that deal.
"Do we want stasis and rationing or do we want dynamism and growth?" he asked rhetorically.
Rhetorically stomping his feet, as he did on Tuesday, is not just irresponsible; it is dangerous.
"What do you mean, [Schiff] hasn't 'paid the price'?" asked Late Night host Seth Meyers rhetorically.
" Mayweather asked the crowd rhetorically, "You all want me to give it to him right now?
The problem for Republicans is that they have not yet backed away from universal coverage rhetorically.
" When considering the Black Rock building, Bakish asked rhetorically, "Do you really need to own that?
"Why?" he asks rhetorically before proceeding to explain, in convoluted terms, what he expects of her.
"Why?" he asks rhetorically before proceeding to explain, in convoluted terms, what he expects of her.
Apple has been rhetorically attacking Google and Facebook for years over how those companies handle user privacy.
"But why would I want to be alone for the rest of my life?" she asked rhetorically.
How many people are walking around with AirPods in their ears talking to themselves, Cramer asked, rhetorically?
"Did we give Mosul enough advanced notice?" he asked rhetorically during a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
"Do you think there's a real distinction" between Chinese companies and the Chinese government, he asked, rhetorically.
"I asked rhetorically what the audience would put at risk to leave the EU," recalls Mr Huppert.
"Why do customers have to buy, finance or lease a car for several years?" asks Polleti rhetorically.
Attorney Paul Matiasic asked rhetorically if the judge knew the pain of losing a son or daughter.
Political scientists have been saying for years that Americans are ideologically or rhetorically conservative, but operationally liberals.
" Erodgan asked rhetorically to students after the referendum, according to Turkey's state-run Anadolu news agency. "Israel?
"You think about the Kennedy assassination, Carnaby Street, but what is the connection there?" he asked rhetorically.
Rhetorically, the Administration was an aural experience, heard through the radio-style mesh of the TV speaker.
All of this is getting dangerous, Jason, because rhetorically we&aposve exhausted the vocabulary of killing Trump.
"The army has no patriots, and they are all willing to sell their country?" he asked rhetorically.
To the Editor: Matthew Schmitz asks rhetorically why Pope Francis' popularity has failed to reinvigorate the church.
On the one hand, I think rhetorically, we have definitely moved away from this rhetoric after 19863.
Is the membrane of cynicism and apathy too thick for even a rhetorically revolutionary campaign to penetrate?
Further, courts figure that politicians have avenues to battle back rhetorically and to set the record straight.
" He asked Mr. Maher rhetorically, "Is this a political show, or is it a show about jokes?
" Citing Japan's wartime leaders, Churchill rhetorically asked: "What kind of a people do they think we are?
"It was easier, rhetorically to talk about it than to, policy-wise, make it happen," he said.
Over the decades, Gulf states have sparred among themselves, mostly rhetorically, over border demarcation or foreign policy.
These are different ideas, but rhetorically he did his best to blur the difference between the two.
The rhetorically violent reaction by some players bothered them, obviously, but the situation provided hope for the future.
Rhetorically, as on executive pay, Mrs May might appear to be doing something in response to public indignation.
It has expressed itself rhetorically in vicious insults against critics and in his encouragement of violence by supporters.
"Did we give Mosul enough advanced notice?" he asked rhetorically during a Monday rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
He was rhetorically locked and loaded for Mr. Obama's calls this month for modest improvements in gun safety.
Let's face it, and let's say what needs to be said, President Trump has rhetorically crossed the Rubicon.
In response to calls like Adams', right-wing sites began rhetorically asking, What's next, blowing up Mount Rushmore?
However, "middle class" and "bourgeois" allow, at least rhetorically, for the existence of an upper class, an aristocracy.
He was trashed in the press, ridiculed by reporters and rhetorically tarred and feathered by his own colleagues.
"What is 'the Union'?" she asked rhetorically at a press conference on June 28th during the European summit.
Republicans from Trump on down are rhetorically committed to crippling consumer protections and the agency that produces them.
Many are posed rhetorically by an unseen narrator intoning over a wide shot of a rubbly archaeological site.
It's a debate where Democrats have an advantage, and the party has rhetorically battered Republicans on the issue.
Such sophistry might be rhetorically pleasing to Mr. Dershowitz, but his 1998 view is still the correct one.
The intrigue: Trump's rejection of Paris puts him at least rhetorically at odds with some major corporate interests.
" He added rhetorically, "So we have to go through a war to reconsider our relationship and our respect?
Speaker Ryan has also been more focused on poverty alleviation than previous Republican leaders and not just rhetorically.
It strikes me as an amateurish reflection of a belief that we should give as we get rhetorically.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" who is "rhetorically challenged" and lacking restraint that is "expected from a party leader.
She gives us the typical talking heads rhetorically reviving the ghost of the photographer who died in 1984.
The Jacksonian tradition, to which Mead thinks Trump the heir, is populist, nationalist, egalitarian (at least rhetorically) and individualistic.
"More public expenditure ... Can make you popular for a while, but who pays in the end?" he asked rhetorically.
Rhetorically, they're talking about how we have to cover people with preexisting conditions and we have to cover everybody.
Ryan did ultimately make amends (rhetorically, at least) for pitting the wealthy against the underclass most of his career.
"Gold at $1,200 an ounce, what does that tell you?" he asked rhetorically in a CNBC "Squawk Box " interview.
Rhetorically, the senator from Vermont's strategy of running a positive campaign could be borrowed from the Roman general's playbook.
The rhetorically inspired deaths of these police officers need not be if we have a frank discussion on race.
"I think the U.S. is isolated rhetorically, and EU Commission President Juncker laid down a tough line," Gordon said.
However, placing the burden of change—even rhetorically—on these newly-elected congresswomen's shoulders is in no way helpful.
His anti-appeasement speeches were erudite, rhetorically effective, witty and barbed, and reflected a deep understanding of European history.
" Asking rhetorically how far the BOJ might go with negative rates, he said: "I don't have the answer yet.
It is high-minded cultural criticism, concise, rhetorically agile, lit up by Douthat's love for the Roman Catholic Church.
What was new with Trump was his willingness, at least rhetorically, to challenge the market fundamentalism on the right.
I guess it's a question of how much do you have to compromise rhetorically in order to seize power?
Trump seemingly dropped some breadcrumbs about this classified briefing, rhetorically asking supporters why Russia would support him over Bernie.
"Why does it have to be so awkward to do Weight Watchers with friends?" a product designer wondered rhetorically.
The United States made the right decision to support the protests rhetorically without encouraging them or co-opting them.
She luxuriates rhetorically over her haters like some sort of couture supervillain before dipping to collect that next stack.
There was a time, at least rhetorically, when Republicans endeavored to advance the notion of being a "Big Tent" party.
"  He rhetorically asked how can we get along better "if you can't understand each other or share no common values.
"Would Brussels be so tough on big tech companies if they were French or German?" asks one American executive, rhetorically.
" At that, Lisa looked at Harry from across the table and rhetorically asked, "Are you the father of these children?
Osterloh started Tuesday's event by rhetorically asking the same question, noting that it is what he gets asked the most.
If government is society's great force for good, then to resist taxes, even if only rhetorically, is selfish and antisocial.
"Why in the hell should some kid in Baltimore have to compete against a guy in India?" he asked rhetorically.
Until very recently, racial equality was embraced (at least rhetorically) as an aspirational value by those across the political spectrum.
Without federal funding, all states will take from other state priorities to address what is only rhetorically a federal emergency.
Within this mindset, Trump's stereotypically "male" behavior — from extramarital affairs to rhetorically "punching" bullies — is not just forgivable but desirable.
Second, tech companies rhetorically pushing for tech regulation can also be a way for those firms to further shape outcomes.
Cillizza: Does he do anything rhetorically different in a formal speech like SOTU versus a speech at a campaign rally?
In order to effectively counter Moscow's aggression in Baltic states, the United States must bolster NATO rhetorically, politically and militarily.
" When he rhetorically asked a rally how to stop migrants from crossing into the United States, someone yelled, "Shoot them!
" When he rhetorically asked a rally how to stop migrants from crossing into the United States, someone yelled, "Shoot them!
"We have come certainly a long way, at least rhetorically, with North Korea," he told reporters in the Oval Office.
And Iran is Putin&aposs puppet, and he&aposs rhetorically blasting Iran and he&aposs actually bombing their other puppet Syria.
" The researchers conclude by asking rhetorically "if the attention that researchers and clinicians give this immensely popular activity is empirically justified.
In '92, Bill Clinton was economically populist rhetorically, but he talked tough about crime and welfare and had Sista Souljah moment.
"How can it go from being my wonderful happy daughter to she was murdered a few days later?" he asked rhetorically.
And we wonder why (rhetorically) the FCC is now regarded as an "economics-free zone," as an AT&T executive noted?
While leadership has been able to hold a usually fractured conference together rhetorically so far, voting is an entirely different proposition.
Trump is rhetorically effective because he appeals primarily to emotion rather than logic — and it is hard to resist our emotions.
Roll Call: Ryan's leadership era has relied on closed rules and limited debate (rather than the regular order he rhetorically champions).
"You think Hillary would be able to stand up here for an hour and do this?" he rhetorically asked the crowd.
As a scholar of communication, I believe that the president is in a rhetorically advantageous position to spin the Mueller report.
"How could you think there's a universe where you could survive that?" he asks rhetorically, before firing Connerty at maximum volume.
"I think they're going to find rhetorically that the new administration says things and uses language they like more," said Gause.
CRAMER: ALRIGHT SENATOR I'VE GOT TO ASK YOU SOMETHING I ASKED RHETORICALLY LAST NIGHT BUT I THINK YOU'LL HAVE AN ANSWER.
On foreign policy, though, Buttigieg has tried to carve a niche similar to those of Sanders and Warren … at least, rhetorically.
More importantly, does Trump even consider these questions, and will he appoint people of like mind (a term I use rhetorically)?
While their policies sometimes fell short of, or undercut, such aspirations, both men were rhetorically committed to the cause of freedom.
Which means that political figures and business leaders are harder to cancel — even rhetorically — because the threat only goes so far.
"What philosophy, what form of creative expression most defines the era we live in?" she asked me rhetorically during our interview.
To rhetorically shift from solidarity with a movement to a condescending savior stance (implied by "exploitation") removes a recognition of women's agency.
"Today's decision can only cause one to wonder which cases the Court will overrule next," Justice Stephen Breyer asked rhetorically in one.
Instead, it pushed time and time again for a public health response — not just rhetorically, but in terms of policy as well.
I think we need someone who is diametrically opposed to Donald Trump, not just rhetorically but actually in what her values are.
" Asked if the comments might backfire and hurt Mr. Trump, Mr. Miller asked rhetorically, "Do you think anything can hurt Donald Trump?
"Why are we talking about closing the border?" acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney asked (rhetorically) in a Sunday interview on ABC.
The saddest moment in the book for me is when Baker asks a seventh-grade class (rhetorically) why fingers prune in water.
Pelosi can also force votes on popular issues that divide the GOP while uniting, at least rhetorically, Democrats and the White House.
Rhetorically, these maps are lookup tools that enable you to easily match up a state and the value you're trying to show.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions did come out rhetorically with some gusto this weekend, denouncing "white supremacists" and racism well before Trump did.
The less revenue the bill creates, the more Republicans can use that rhetorically to moan about the deficit and push for austerity.
But it's rhetorically incompetent to argue that moments of heroism and community bonding erase the ills of American society, past and present.
Everyone feels the aphrodisiac charge of power; this is newsmagazines' heyday, the era when a Time magazine cover could rhetorically kill God.
"I choose to recite a different pledge," he exclaimed in what might have been the most rhetorically powerful portion of his speech.
Instead of a distraction, he's a welcomed foil to the cynical Kratos, a character who's spent his life rhetorically and actionably unchallenged.
" Mr. Hollande is quoted as asking, rhetorically, meaning, according to the journalists, "Should he not have broken up with Ms. Trierweiler earlier?
But the Trump administration is -- rhetorically at least -- protesting louder, freezing all aid not mandated by law, the State Department said Thursday.
"Even though Cuomo hasn't become anti-Trump rhetorically, he has become the anti-Trump in capital letters by his conduct," Gyory said.
In '92, Bill Clinton was economically populist rhetorically, but he talked tough about crime and welfare and had Sista Souljah moment. 7.
" As one researcher put it to her recently, and rhetorically, "What aspect of normal human behavior are we going to pathologize next?
Rhetorically, at least, he spent much of the interview appealing to ordinary Palestinians to give the Trump administration's proposal a fair hearing.
Moving beyond the confrontational, personal, rhetorically violent and at times divisive tone he has infused in politics will be no easy task.
We rhetorically prioritize general education, or a unified country, and yet put obstacles in the way of genuinely serving students or constituents.
And when the process does start, all the combatants want to do is rhetorically punch each other out and draw political blood.
"It's interesting that the Justice Department rather than the president is leading this, not only operationally but rhetorically as well," he said.
Softly, softly For decades, Chinese foreign policy has been to adopt a light touch (at least rhetorically, if not always in practice).
Jo's marriage to Bhaer, meanwhile, is even more thoroughly reimagined than Amy's marriage to Laurie, but the two are closely rhetorically linked.
The phrase means Breitbart will go to war, "rhetorically speaking," to "defend Americans" from the mainstream media, Hollywood, Democrats and mainstream Republicans.
Elizabeth Warren welcomed Mike Bloomberg to the stage and whacked him rhetorically in a way so far unseen in the Democratic primary.
He then rhetorically asked if the state legislature would call a special session and then pass a four-week or two-week ban.
"Why does Ryan Gosling always look like he's trying to squeeze a fart out without it making any noise?" the tweeter rhetorically asks.
The 71-year-old former mayor promised to use any means necessary to fight his country's drug epidemic, and he wasn't speaking rhetorically.
Here's the deal: Who knows if Dunham (or any other A-lister) was speaking rhetorically about moving to Canada if Trump became president.
Lucky for MJ, this woman means business and can call out her BS, "You've never had a successful committed relationship?" she asks rhetorically.
Politically—or at least rhetorically—there's a freedom that comes with not having to govern, but in terms of policy, it's a disaster.
" At which point Mr. Trump, arms outstretched on the stump, mouth agape, is shown asking rhetorically, "How stupid are the people of Iowa?
"The Clinton campaign is at this point rhetorically committed to taking on our worst problems, but not willing to say how," he wrote.
If that adds up to another long evening for President Trump and his supporters, rhetorically speaking, they might jab back and express outrage.
" During the exchange with Acosta, Miller rhetorically asked what number of immigrants would meet the "Statue of Liberty poem's law of the land.
At least rhetorically, Trump has signaled that he will treat the war on terror as a rebuke to the policies of his predecessor.
The editorial rhetorically asks why "all immigrants brought to this country by family are suspect?" just because one chain migrant attempted this attack.
Trump called for unity in the wake of the bombs but critics point out the president has rhetorically attacked all of the targets.
Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat, took to Twitter to rhetorically ask why Florida was treated differently than Virginia in Trump's offshore drilling decision.
His White House has been chaotic, he is more rhetorically reckless than Biden, and he is also a septuagenarian in middling physical health.
Trump could nominate someone more rhetorically aggressive, like occasional adviser Kris Kobach, but he could face an uphill battle in the US Senate.
" McMahon asked rhetorically at the news conference announcing plans for the original XFL "This will not be a league for pantywaists and sissies.
"Is there any one of the royal family who wants to be king or queen?" he asked rhetorically in an interview last year.
And so I would ask rhetorically, how did it become, if not the show of the moment certainly a show of the moment?
Kamala Harris was a sharp and incisive prosecutor, rhetorically eviscerating Hawaii congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard over her criticism of Barack Obama and other Democrats.
For workers at small firms—the small businesses that American politicians rhetorically prize above all else—45 percent have a deductible above $2,000.
Rhetorically, this is not unlike the argument Gloria Steinem used when someone told her at her 40th birthday that she didn't look 40.
"I've been watching this character on my favorite show for five seasons — now do I hate her because she's bi?" she said, rhetorically.
And HRC gave a speech that was far more progressive, at least rhetorically than anything one would have expected a year ago. 10.
At least on Facebook, when you unfriend or block someone, they can't just start another account, and start immediately rhetorically pissing on your wall.
Political anxiety about being perceived as overreaching by voters means they will likely continue to rhetorically indict Trump but not seek to oust him.
"Do we want him making those calls -- someone thin-skinned and quick to anger, who lashes out at the smallest criticism?" she asked rhetorically.
But the Catalan conflict is far from over: indeed Mr Torra (pictured), an ultranationalist, was chosen in order to prolong it, rhetorically at least.
"What group here in Iran benefits politically from storming an embassy?" a former member of the Iranian National Security Council, Aziz Shahmohammadi, asked rhetorically.
And it overlaps with his claim (factually false but rhetorically powerful) that he is self-financing his campaign, so not beholden to big money.
Reeeeelax ... Donald Trump's mouthpiece says POTUS was only tweeting "rhetorically" when suggesting he should have left LaVar Ball's son in a Chinese jail. Yep.
"The decision is, do we fight for the remaining market share with our competitors or do we grow as a business?" asked Hawkins rhetorically.
There's no indication yet that this dynamic—Trump being Trump rhetorically, while governing like a conservative Republican—is going to change any time soon.
The nuclear bomb was such a powerful weapon that it couldn't be used rhetorically without dangerously escalating a limited situation to a global war.
Ms. Raden studied ancient history and physics at the University of Chicago — "What are you going to do with those degrees?" she asked rhetorically.
But he did shift the US's Syria policy, at least rhetorically, with several administration officials suggesting the US would accept Assad staying in power.
UNITED NATIONS — In my nearly three years covering the United Nations Security Council, I have seen the Russians and Americans brawling rhetorically many times.
"What if you can create a customised art, poetry or recipes book at the same ease you make a Spotify playlist?" he asks rhetorically.
Instead, there is evidence that college students are writing more rhetorically complex essays, and at double the length, than they did a generation ago.
The party showed a striking lack of interest, at least rhetorically, on the social costs imposed by the arrival of over a million refugees.
" Indivisible: "What does that mean?" he asked rhetorically, before suggesting that the country must "be more united than ever" to stop "radical Islamic extremists.
Trump's reality -- where countries can be bought and sold and where it's worth spending a day rhetorically fighting Denmark -- is different from other people's.
"When you have everything you could ever dream of, what do you value?" he asks her rhetorically, addressing the central crux of the show.
He has also vacillated rhetorically between all-caps threats against Iran and its leaders and expressing a willingness to meet with those same officials.
"Why should upstate Republicans, or Democrats, be voting on a plastic bag ban or congestion pricing or mayoral control of schools?" he asked rhetorically.
Republicans in the General Assembly would not have to worry about Mr. Cooper using the controversial law to raise money and bludgeon them rhetorically.
" Ten minutes later, Trump rhetorically asked how anyone could impeach a president who has "done nothing wrong" and "is the most popular Republican in history.
And we&aposre here because you can&apost rhetorically start a trade war like this and then hope to control all of its various implications.
Part of being a young person, maybe especially for a rhetorically gifted one, is testing out ideas and identities — even ones we later find anathema.
"So you're saying somebody with HIV should never get into a fight because there might be blood, and now there's malicious intent?" she says, rhetorically.
The picture was no prettier on the home front, where he rhetorically slashed and burned his way through the last 30 years of bipartisan administrations.
He&aposs really insisting that Russia begin to change its behavior even while he, rhetorically, certainly, in Helsinki, is being very solicitous of President Putin.
Rhetorically, he could learn to use a dog whistle instead of saying things that are outright racist, a shift everyone expected of him weeks ago.
"When was the last time somebody logged into their light bulbs to do a tcpdump to check if there were rogue packets?" he asked rhetorically.
I ask every snarky social media participant, and I ask you rhetorically, who else is going to step up and fight this fight for us?
With western governments under the spell of nationalism, Jinping has emerged as one of the few leaders eager promote further global integration—rhetorically at least.
One of the most distinctive traits of the Trump administration, rhetorically, has been its championing of front-line law enforcement officers as archetypal American heroes.
"You really didn't check anything else when you were down there?" asked Kyle Holthus, rhetorically addressing the Amtrak workers who dealt with the previous derailments.
Or — worse — Mr. Trump's vow to end "political correctness" and make this, at least rhetorically, the same white man's America it was in Jackson's time?
In the last decade, leaders in both parties have turned (rhetorically, at least) against the global trade and financial system, mouthing the frustrations of voters.
Critics of May used Britain's Sunday newspapers to rhetorically savage the British leader, with unnamed rivals using phrases such as "assassination is in the air".
But now that the Trump administration won't have the ability to simply reanimate existing regulations, it will have to, rhetorically, go back to square one.
How can you expect to find talent, she rhetorically asked the room full of men, when the private equity industry excludes 50 percent of the population.
"As a consumer, when you're capturing something, you dont know ahead of time what's going to happen, right?" cofounder Alex Karpenko asks, rhetorically, during my demo.
"What are the limitations?" he asked rhetorically, nodding to the national worry that deferring so much to Japan's armed forces could lead to a future war.
These policy interventions, though, aren't pushed with the same kind of vigor and all-hands-on-deck effort we see with opioids, at least rhetorically, today.
But while other Republicans went to pains rhetorically to emphasize that legal immigration was good and important and part of the American dream, Trump didn't bother.
As we've noted, Trump has been more rhetorically consistent on this issue than on any other he's talked about in his decades in the public eye.
Concerns that Democrats could be rhetorically outmaneuvered on terrorism are shared widely among those at the convention, whether they be elected officials, pollsters, strategists or fundraisers.
Appearing on one of the President's favorite TV programs, Fox & Friends, Johnson asked rhetorically what the US plan would be if Trump decides to opt out.
"If Trump's nominee can't come up here and tap dance rhetorically about how they respect precedent that person would have to be an imbecile," he said.
After awhile dabbling in humble service, the Hound was looking mighty Hound-like on Sunday, vengefully wielding his ax and rhetorically dismantling those he just axed.
Carnage was a strong word, but together with Trump's culture war it rhetorically planted the billionaire president on the side of whites who feel left behind.
Trump has one speed in all of his interactions: Aggressively leaning forward -- and ready to run you over, rhetorically speaking, if you get in his way.
Victory next week would offer a fittingly paradoxical end to this daft campaign: the election of one of our most politically sane and rhetorically mild candidates.
Journalists, like other professionals, try to defend our own — especially when the most powerful people on the planet are attacking us not just rhetorically but physically.
Mr. Biden also struck back at Mr. Booker, asking rhetorically what he was supposed to apologize for, and suggesting it was Mr. Booker who should apologize.
Both campaigns are rhetorically very supportive of tribal self-governance, self-determination, and upholding the nation-to-nation relationship between the federal government and tribal nations.
Donald Trump, after all, won the Republican nomination and the presidency partly thanks to moving his party to the left — albeit only rhetorically — on economic issues.
"We have come certainly a long way, at least rhetorically, with North Korea," Trump said during an Oval Office meeting with Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven.
There's a natural discomfort when detached celebrities, far removed from the struggles, air the dirty laundry of a community constantly under attack rhetorically, institutionally or violently.
This movement has bloomed before a conspicuous backdrop: a reckoning on sexual harassment and assault, in which women's bodies are under attack both literally and rhetorically.
"On the military part alone, I sense that Republicans have the upper hand tactically [and] rhetorically," said Michael O'Hanlon, a defense specialist at the Brookings Institution.
But there is also a counter-argument, expressed to me this week by two U.S. business bigs who aren't separating themselves from Saudi, either financially or rhetorically.
"How can we keep using these devices if we can't actually secure the large amount of personal data that ends up on them?" asked a user rhetorically.
"Where did all the kings go?" the MC asks rhetorically as the man quickly changes his costume, shedding his patriarchal robes for the vestiges of a cowboy.
But I want him -- and the Chinese and anyone else listening -- to know that I am not going to be bullied around, rhetorically or otherwise, by anyone.
Cohen allegedly also asked Lewis rhetorically if he didn't have an agent who could let competitors know he might be on the market for a new job.
Bush was not saying he planned to moon the crowd, but rather speaking rhetorically and saying that even if he did, it would not garner media coverage.
VICE: Were you surprised Jeff Sessions did come out at least rhetorically with a bit of vigor this weekend, and that a federal probe is apparently underway?
He asked rhetorically what should be done about Trinity College in Cambridge, which was founded by King Henry VIII, who had two of his six wives executed.
Faced with a lean year for compensation "and the prospect of effectively winding down the firm over the next quarter, how do they respond?" he asked, rhetorically.
Both sides, rhetorically at least, are preparing for a long trade fight while proudly waving nationalistic battle flags in the face of high political and economic risks.
Politicians who rhetorically and literally fight to defend their biases surely must realize the great harm caused by cruel and racially divisive measures, but do not care.
As the speech winds down, Obama moves on to his praise for Clinton, rhetorically passing the baton to his former primary rival and now would-be successor.
"What if we're getting to the point where we'll say you're not allowed to tell a story about someone who is nothing like you?" he asks, rhetorically.
The sentiment of crisis is perpetuated rhetorically in an attempt to whip up public opinion to then point to public opinion as a justification for radical solutions.
The town hall, meanwhile, is a luxurious opportunity for an articulate speaker and adept thinker like Buttigieg to rhetorically razzle-dazzle, with no interruptions or time limits.
I mean, he&aposs been tough on China rhetorically for decades now, so what I want to see is we have this issue with the ZTE phone company.
Rhetorically, he's a creature as much of the comment section as the canon, having honed his blogging style since the early 1990s, when he moderated CompuServe's Catholic forum.
During his presidential campaign and in office, Trump has invested heavily, rhetorically at least, on resetting U.S. China relations and changing the narrative with regards to North Korea.
"Will the fans need to jump over or take that secret tunnel under wall between USA and Mexico in world cup 2026?" a posting by @footballmood asked rhetorically.
" Indeed, the technical analyst explains that many institutional portfolio managers have been "underinvested" in stocks, leaving him to ask rhetorically: "Who's left to sell when everybody's already sold?
There are a lot of people in business who think that you're chasing Bernie Sanders rhetorically, if not in policy, and think that you are making them targets.
He's thrown them into the fight of their lives, giving them the opportunity to deliver a solid blow to the hatred they'd only rhetorically fought up until now.
In South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, a figure a little like Obama—handsome, intellectual, rhetorically refined, slightly aloof—had been replaced by a far less lofty figure: Jacob Zuma.
It's possible that Kavanaugh could withdraw after publicly losing support of a handful of Republican senators who at times have been at odds with Trump, at least rhetorically.
"Are you at the end and can barely play and are just chasing this number and can barely get there?" he asked rhetorically through an interpreter last month.
And so I will leave you with that and I would say it rhetorically but I would also say it emphatically, that America needs a 25-year plan.
"The EU was formed, partially, to beat the United States on trade, OK?" he asked rhetorically during the interview with the Times of London and Germany's Bild newspaper.
Few Republicans running this year seem to understand what gave Mr. Trump his edge in 2016 — it was not that he was simply combative and rhetorically right-wing.
Republicans have been rhetorically reckless at times, and President-elect Donald Trump has coarsened public discourse and set Americans against one another in ways that were once unimaginable.
Another seems to break the fourth wall to speak to any critics who might be reading: "You know how book reviews always call something 'unflinching'?" she asks rhetorically.
Mr. Bloomberg, a rhetorically challenged political newcomer and longtime Democrat, would be running as a Republican in a Democratic town that had grown weary of its Republican incumbent.
While both parties remain rhetorically committed to infrastructure spending, in practice Republicans have been less willing to support it, especially when it goes toward things like public transit.
Presidents and presidential candidates also have an incentive to address subjects rhetorically — saying what constituents want to hear — even when they can't do much as a practical matter.
Securing spots at those levels for people who represent the diverse identities that Democrats rhetorically embrace will mean that those spots can't go to bright young straight white men.
Downtown Coeur d'Alene Despite the current governor's best efforts to encourage people to refer to the region as "Northern" Idaho, North Idaho remains, rhetorically and philosophically, a region apart.
Where Trump has been a true innovator is in his willingness to rhetorically combine positions from the isolationist right, the far right, the center right and the center left.
Rhetorically, Trump has kicked the can past 2020, just after pushing his administration to dive back into — and escalate — the legal fight that hurt Republicans so badly in 2018.
In the end, it is both more accurate and more rhetorically effective to admit that the bad things around us belong to the same history as the good things.
On Thursday, Paul Matiasic, an attorney reading a statement by a father of one of the victim&aposs, asked the judge rhetorically if he had ever lost a child.
No changes to the status of Grand Staircase could reverse those trends, and, except rhetorically, the decision to redraw its boundaries had nothing to do with the cattle industry.
But rhetorically, the option of finding a way back into the agreement has emerged with more prominence this week as Trump engages in rapid-pace diplomacy with world leaders.
Over the summer, many 2020 Democratic candidates rhetorically toned down their support for the drastic health reform plan as Democratic voters signaled they were concerned about ending private insurance.
Over the summer, many 2020 Democratic candidates rhetorically toned down their support for the drastic health reform plan as Democratic voters signaled they were troubled about ending private insurance.
"When a machine speaks for you, how do you know that the message is being conveyed accurately, if you have no knowledge of the target language?" he asked rhetorically.
But explaining the uncharacteristically blunt Trump is not easy and Pence has regularly been asked to cool tensions and rebut critics for a President known to hold nothing back rhetorically.
According to a transcription of the speech by women's rights activist Frances Dana Gage, published in the New York Independent in 1863, Truth repeatedly asks rhetorically: Ain't I a Woman?
" When the audience chuckles at the anecdote, Sheen asks rhetorically, "Now is that the laughter I can hear across the pond of people laughing at our country about this charlatan?
At least rhetorically, Mr Xi has appeared more ambitious (there are even rumours that he wants to stay on after 2022, when he would normally be expected to step down).
She is determined not to let that happen again, and Thursday night's debate showed that Clinton was willing to move — rhetorically, at least — to try to avoid any such danger.
No, the gold standard is taking responsibility for the culture you as a leader create and doing everything in your power, rhetorically and otherwise, to root out toxicity within it.
Perhaps the finest images, however, are Wojnarowicz's rhetorically powerful screenprints, in which he joins text and image to speak truths about AIDS, as in the 1990s work Untitled (ACT UP).
In short: I no longer think there is no place for mental illness in the horror genre, so long as it's portrayed in the right ways: thematically, conceptually and rhetorically.
He can't get away with it if people know the truth, so he attacks — rhetorically, and at times even physically — people whose job it is is to tell the truth.
"How long before the Fed is looking at its political context and saying, 'We can't stick our heads out as far as we need to,'" Mr. Conti-Brown asked rhetorically.
To be honest, Clinton is not rhetorically gifted and not great at conveying anger, but almost every time she appeared to get angry or upset, she was criticized for it.
"Why is the Nautilus so popular," Thierry Stern, president of Patek Philippe, asked rhetorically in an interview last October in Milan during one of the family-owned house's promotional events.
And, as soon as he was finished, it certainly felt as if the white men's anger had been rhetorically effective, that we had reflexively understood it as righteous and correct.
At the same time, the fitful and at times rhetorically muddled transition from the known (Obamacare) to the unknown ("something terrific") has risked throwing the health care industry into turmoil.
Paradoxically, even in its refusal to be replaced, the "we" depends rhetorically and constitutively upon both an opposition to "you" and an address to "you" in order to assert itself.
Perhaps German voters, as though out of an old instinct that democracy should not be a shoot-out, actually prefer the rhetorically understated candidate when they step into the booth.
" Regarding Trump, Cashin said there is some concern that the president could be "boxing himself in" rhetorically and "that he's kind of got into the line in the sand routine.
"This ultimately begs the question — how do you maintain trust in a digital-based economy when you may not be able to believe your own eyes anymore?" he asked rhetorically.
Now, his nightly leadership in opposition to the GOP healthcare bill has helped convince and rhetorically arm others from the right side of the political aisle to join in that opposition.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer only recently conceded the policy was "on the table," while Nancy Pelosi, his counterpart in the House, has been less willing, even rhetorically, to entertain it.
Though Mr Ortega still denounces American imperialism rhetorically, Nicaragua remains in the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States, which has allowed it to create a large garment industry.
After Mr. Sisi rhetorically offered to ease the crisis by "selling" himself, one Internet user set up an eBay page with his picture, offering a "slightly used field marshal" for sale.
"Instead of getting in a fight, you can work with this magazine — but can you be creative with it?" he asks me, rhetorically, as if he were speaking to the kids.
According to Dr. Poulson, Mr. Dean said that Google complied with surveillance requests from the federal government and asked rhetorically if the company should leave the United States market in protest.
"How can I keep my money with a man who won't kill for it?" he asks Bobby — rhetorically, since to Grigor, this is a question with only one answer: He can't.
When she rhetorically asks that question about who is truly humiliated, the man on his knees in supplication or the woman somewhat distressed in the chair, couldn't the reply be—both?
It makes even less sense to rhetorically commit to "confronting Iran's destabilizing activities," as the previous administration did, while helping Khamenei – the man authorizing those activities – amass additional wealth and influence.
"Being rich must be so boring, right?" he asks me, somewhat rhetorically, as he finally sets up near the Park Street T Station and wonders aloud how fame is actually attained.
It's one thing to get rhetorically in line behind the leader of your party (that Graham doesn't publicly call the president "crazy" anymore may be cowardly, but it's also politics as usual).
Green also said that while Republicans were able to "rhetorically bash Obamacare" in the past eight years, "this will not be politically easy for them" to repeal the health-care reform law.
The civil rights museum project that he wants in Harlem still animates him, too; why, he asks rhetorically, is the nation's history of the civil rights struggle memorialized mostly in the South?
Many of the Arab autocracies have been propped up by Saudi largesse, including Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, Sudan, and Djibouti, all of whom have signed on rhetorically to Riyadh's crusade against Iran's rulers.
But with that option sealed off to even Sanders's most wide-eyed supporters on Tuesday, the two groups — long at odds rhetorically and ideologically — had their first physical separation in real time.
"Rhetorically, Trump's speech brought welcome relief to his Arab audience after eight years of Obama's blindness to Iranian and terrorist threats," Bolton said in an op-ed for the New York Post.
He rhetorically grouped Russia with the menaces of Iran, North Korea, and radical Islamic terrorism, making his one of the harshest messages the Trump administration has sent to Russia in nine months.
So much vacillation on domestic and foreign policies confuses other nations' leaders as well as U.S. citizens and politicians, and a president less imposing physically and rhetorically would be labeled as indecisive.
Since then, US policymakers have generally restrained themselves to correcting market failures (at least rhetorically — in practice, industrial policy never stopped, it just got buried in the tax code or omnibus bills).
He asked rhetorically why the Security Council had not taken up the issue of Black Lives Matter protests in Ferguson, Mo., which were at times also met with a violent police response.
FDR rhetorically endorsed the goal of a right to a job in his second bill of rights, but specifically invoked "the industries or shops or farms or mines of the Nation" — i.e.
But after Amazon&aposs humbling loss to Microsoft for the Pentagon&aposs massive $10 billion JEDI cloud contract earlier this year, Amazon is turning up the heat, at least rhetorically, on Microsoft.
"Did China ask us if it was OK" to take such actions, Mr. Trump asked rhetorically, appearing to counter suggestions that the United States must ask Beijing's permission to communicate with Taiwan.
Rhetorically, he has fogged the air on whether he seeks a wall or something else, whether he needs money from Congress or not, whether the wall is "desperately needed" or already largely built.
Rhetorically, it was a rare show of unified opposition to Trump from the right (and the media and the left), a moment when Republicans on Capitol Hill drew a line in the sand.
It suggests instead that the pro-Russian stance Trump has taken, at least rhetorically, is not paying off — and that US-Russia relations are likely to keep getting worse for the foreseeable future.
But these kinds of actions have not reached the all-consuming fervor, at least yet and at least not rhetorically, that engulfed the nation during the crack epidemic in the 1980s and '90s.
President Hillary Clinton would likely face an adversarial Republican Congress, one that will try to continue rhetorically playing to its hardcore base while not trying seriously to put any of it into practice.
"It'll be interesting to see the state of the place in a year, when everything isn't all new and shiny," she adds rhetorically, before rolling down the ramp on a man's mountain bike.
Only a cloistered group of academics and self-important pundits would miss the fact that rhetorically defusing one of the world's most feared dictators by calling him "Rocket Man" is a winning move.
The election of Bolsonaro — who's expressed fondness for Brazil's military dictatorship and has a history of making racist, misogynistic remarks — might have spelled another cooler period in US-Brazil relations, at least rhetorically.
Clinton and Obama, by contrast, were both far more hesitant about starting major wars — and thus, rhetorically, less prone to playing up the ability of the US military to fundamentally change the world.
" This idea, and the concept of the Shining City on the Hill that has come to define America rhetorically, was inspired by a man Reagan referred to as an "avid student of history.
" Earlier in January, Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg called on newspapers to end their acceptance of fossil fuel advertising, rhetorically asking what would be "the first major international newspaper to lead on this.
He immediately starts laughing and rhetorically asks the audience, "Excuse me, do you like Asian men?" to which he immediately answers, "No, thank you," as if that is the end-all be-all answer.
I was dismayed that he proposed both tax cuts and military increases after taking office while squandering the opportunity to pay down the national debt, an idea that Republicans rhetorically supported during the 1990s.
In her piece, she notes that there has been a shift between how nukes are rhetorically position on the original Fallout games versus how Bethesda have depicted them in their past couple of games.
Given room to roam, rhetorically, Trump does so -- answering hypotheticals, wandering down rabbit holes and exposing the fact that he is simply not terribly well versed in the meat of many of these issues.
Not just rhetorically but the flag, placed an equal footing to the American flag, things like that (END VIDEO CLIP) INGRAHAM: Byron YORK: I don&apost buy that, I just don&apost buy that.
Google and Facebook don't want to be seen as rhetorically linked to sex-trafficking schemes but also worry it opens the door to more legal liability for content on their sites down the road.
In one episode Rick Silva, chief-executive of Checkers, a burger chain, is threatened with a beating by a store-manager, who asks rhetorically if Mr Silva has any fast-food experience at all.
"How do you take the 30 minutes on average that people are spending just browsing, looking for something to watch, and take it out of the equation?" he asks me rhetorically over the phone.
And in doing so, Trump, at least rhetorically, did something the Democrats and Republicans have largely failed to do — he took black citizens into the ranks of "hardworking Americans" worthy of the government's hand.
The question is whether Trump means simply rhetorically tougher or whether he is genuinely in denial about the reality that Nielsen was, in terms of policy, as tough as he is likely to get.
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred has apparently been pressing the team to retire the cartoonish rendition for the past year, and team owner Paul Dolan is now, at long last, at least rhetorically on board.
Zeid has already called the campaign "a textbook example of ethnic cleansing" and asked rhetorically if anyone could rule out "elements of genocide", but his latest remarks put the case plainly, toughening his stance.
" Questionable metaphors aside, Parscale was quickly connecting the dots for those in both parties still stunned by the delays, asking rhetorically, " ... these are the people who want to run our entire health care system?
"Did I ever think those last two weeks I wouldn't really be able to be here on the road?" she asked rhetorically as her bus rolled from the Muscatine airport to her next event.
Educators rhetorically ask whether we understand that many of our 21st century political borders and contemporary ethnic blood feuds were created by four years of carnage that scarred the world some 100 years ago.
Republicans have become increasingly comfortable violating these norms, rhetorically painting Democrats as existential threats to the nation and changing a variety of electoral rules to suppress the Democratic vote and even disenfranchise Democratic constituencies altogether.
" Some of that is backed up by Buttigieg supporters here in Nevada, who cheered the Democrat's debate performance, including when he rhetorically asked the audience at the start of his rally, "Did I do OK?
But if enough Republicans and Democrats felt he was being so easy on Putin that it was endangering American interests, they could push back rhetorically and hold contentious hearings with his administration to apply pressure.
It is rhetorically difficult to oppose those who claim to represent exploited women and children, so various interest groups will tack on their agendas in hopes of flying under the cover of a good cause.
As rallying cries go, "Nature needs half" has a ring to it, but not one that sounds so tuneful in the poor countries where much of the rhetorically required half will have to be found.
Yes, yes, in suggesting that President Obama shouldn't appoint any replacement for Scalia, and that he should just leave it to the next president, I am rhetorically going further than others have in the past.
The financial services giant's CEO spoke with CNBC Saturday on the sidelines of the China Development Forum in Beijing, and he addressed the apparent rise of China as free trade's global champion — at least rhetorically.
BDE as a quality has nothing to do with actual dicks and is valuable regardless of the actual genitalia of its possessor, but our collective cultural impulse is to link it rhetorically to penis size.
Clinton has tried to use her gender to position herself as an outsider: "What could be more 'outsider' than to be a woman running for president?" she has asked rhetorically and repeatedly on the trail.
I ask this (rhetorically, I hope) because I fell off the game wagon this summer for various reasons and I'm finding it a challenge to get my focus back, like exercising out-of-shape muscles.
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office the United States had "come a long way, at least rhetorically" with North Korea and "statements coming out of South Korea and North Korea have been very positive".
And in that failure lay the opportunity that Trump intuited — for a Republican candidate who would rhetorically reject and even run against the kind of corporation-first conservatism that Romney seemed to embody and embrace.
And I also think, I would ask it rhetorically unless you want to answer, do you think that — and this is not meant to be defensive, it's a subject that of course crosses our minds.
Mathew Burrows, director of the Atlantic Council's Strategic Foresight Initiative, said he would describe Trump's foreign policy moves over the last week as "rhetorically aggressive," but added that few had concrete actions associated with them.
Everyone is branded as somehow having attacked the A.K. Party government, and Erdogan rhetorically reinforces his victimhood, even as he assumes more and more power — a manipulation so effective that it seems impossible to stop.
One official said the assumption is the President has had a number of briefings saying ISIS is about to be defeated and that many assume Trump was just rhetorically taking it to the next step.
He is previously the author of two scholarly works, but his prose in "Kurosawa's Rashomon" is energetic, straightforward and free of academic jargon — if rhetorically overheated, at times, seeming to mirror his subject's excitable style.
While Mr. Trump is not the first Republican to propose cutting anti-poverty programs to pay for tax cuts, his bluntness breaks, at least rhetorically, with a Republican establishment that insists it cares about poverty.
One of the many norms that Donald J. Trump has assaulted since taking office is this tradition of aspirational hypocrisy, of striving, at least rhetorically, to act in accordance with moral values — to be better.
And, they deserve an administration working on their behalf, rather than rhetorically masking profiteering by multinational corporations like NAI that seek to violate their own country's labor rights by shopping for the lowest labor standards.
"Does anybody think it's any coincidence that on the eve of potentially my being elevated that that's when this uncorroborated smear comes out," he asked rhetorically in the rotunda of the state capitol on Monday.
In February a tweet by Kylie Jenner, a celebrity with over 25m followers, rhetorically asking whether anyone still used Snapchat, coincided with a drop of 6% in the share price of Snap, the messaging app's owner.
When Trump refuses to denounce white supremacist groups that have endorsed him, the issue becomes less that his beliefs line up with theirs, and more that he has not rhetorically separated himself from avowed white supremacists.
Mr. Trump at one point jabbed at Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska, who has openly called for a third-party candidate to thwart Mr. Trump's chances, asking Mr. Sasse rhetorically if he preferred to have Mrs.
But for the rest of the album, Mr. Legend quickly pivots back to love and pleasure with the rhetorically awkward yet undeniably catchy "Penthouse Floor," which has a touch of Stevie Wonder in its dance beat.
" Schultz went a step further, rhetorically, first by calling any plan to wipe out public insurers "not American," then -- backing off that term -- describing Medicare for all an interview with CNN's Poppy Harlow as simply "unaffordable.
At the same time, the party seeks to be taken seriously as a permanent part of Germany's political landscape—a goal in which it's been helped at least rhetorically by its disproprtionate strength in eastern Germany.
Meanwhile, Breitbart senior editor-at-large Joel Pollak, who tweeted "#WAR" after Bannon's departure was announced, told CNBC on Friday that he meant Breitbart would go to war "rhetorically speaking," defending Americans against the mainstream media.
BRET BAIER, FOX NEWS HOST: Separating the difference between his election win and Russian interference in the election is a difficult thing rhetorically I think for this president because a lot of times it&aposs about him.
The decisions Trump has made from the day he began running for president have proven that he is rhetorically in tune with what many Americans want to hear, which is often the opposite of what they need.
Rhetorically, business leaders sold the glories of free enterprise, devoting considerable resources to making the intellectual case for unfettered capitalism as the policy cure-all: The more government got in the way, the worse the economy did.
During the Cold War, American presidents lashed their Soviet counterparts rhetorically, ordered massive military buildups, sponsored covert action campaigns and proxy wars and pursued policies that several times brought the world to the edge of nuclear armageddon.
This overwhelming airtime superiority allowed liberals to carpet bomb Republicans off Capitol Hill and keep all but the conciliatory Dwight Eisenhower, the shrewd Richard Nixon, and the most rhetorically brilliant Ronald Reagan out of the White House.
And rhetorically, Pressley pushed the idea that she was the new face of a new Boston -- not exactly a racial appeal, but one clearly aimed at suggesting that Capuano represented a Democratic Party that no longer exists.
His father, Don, ran the hate-site Stormfront out of their family home in Florida, and seemed to spend all his free time ferrying his rhetorically-gifted son around the South to speak at far-right conferences.
In it he offered this chilling assessment: The United States will almost certainly remain at least a rhetorically important enemy for most violent extremists in part due to past and ongoing US military, political, and economic engagement overseas.
" And former Upworthy employees are clearly frustrated with Facebook's hold on the site: One asked rhetorically why the platform could act quickly to ban what she referred to as "prestige clickbait" and not get rid of "fake news.
The reformers' refusal to defend a special role and clout for formal party organizations left them rhetorically and politically ill-equipped to resist the rapid proliferation of direct primary systems that followed as an unintended consequence of reform.
Too often in the political conversation about abortion, even supportive politicians give away the moral high ground by rhetorically defending abortions only in cases of rape or incest, or by supporting some restrictions such as mandatory waiting periods.
Brotherly love She then asked -- perhaps rhetorically or perhaps directing her query to Copley -- if it had been white young men skateboarding up and down the street at 1 in the morning, would they have been deemed hoodlums?
The simplest explanation of a Bloomberg candidacy is that billionaires are under attack (rhetorically, not yet from torch-and-pitchfork mobs), and that the candidacies of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren represent a threat to their bottom line.
Thomas B. Edsall The furious fighting in the ranks of Republican opponents of Donald Trump — combat that is growing ever more heated and rhetorically violent — has forced open to public view long-festering wounds in the conservative coalition.
The leader of that party, Devlet Bahceli, has made it clear that he will demand concessions for his support, and that he will push an agenda that is anti-Syrian, anti-Kurd and anti-Western, at least rhetorically.
But the fact is that a vaguely rhetorically gifted guy who is by disposition unable to engage in any kind of populist broadside—much less convey actual anger at elites like himself—isn't going to get very far.
In contrast, Scorsese's fiction films are populated by monumental talkers, wise guys, and bullshit artists who rhetorically fashion their own legends: Johnny Boy in Mean Streets, Henry Hill in Goodfellas, Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street.
While some Democratic governors have at least rhetorically backed single-payer systems, most have used their political capital to put in place and protect the expansions in the A.C.A. while also enacting measures aimed at controlling insurance costs.
Whether it was taking care of vets or respecting cops or reopening coal mines or getting Americans jobs in steel mills, wherever there was a stereotypically male occupational category, Trump was there to rhetorically elevate its social status.
"Everybody can be smart, everybody can find facts, everybody can maybe even put the story together, but can you actually then spit it out and then regurgitate it so someone can do something with the information?" he asked rhetorically.
It is worth asking, at least rhetorically: If the Republicans had a robust superdelegate system and a largely proportional awarding of delegates, like the Democrats, would Donald Trump be the Republicans' nominee at this juncture of the election cycle?
So I think in the short term, ten to 20 years, will probably see a worsening of the political climate and more polarization, more (rhetorically or otherwise) violence, more populism, more movement at the margins and at the fringes.
" Esty's decision not to seek reelection comes on the same day that she took two steps clearly aimed at stopping the political bleeding: She issued a "Dear Colleague" letter in which she asked rhetorically: "How did I not know?
"I think the Ukrainians are very concerned that Europe is not willing to up the pressure on Russia the way the United States has been, at least rhetorically," Olya Oliker, Europe & Central Asia Director for Crisis Group, told me.
Sifting through the 2018 Democratic primary results looking for clues for what the 2020 Democratic primary voter will want suggests they want a fighter, someone who will push President Donald Trump in the nose (rhetorically speaking) every single day.
Rhetorically, anyway, Mr. Trump has raised the temperature many more degrees by declaring the news media to be nothing less than the enemy of the people, a phrase more familiar coming from the likes of Stalin and other despots.
I ask this rhetorically, and tweeted about it last weekend (this essay is adapted from that thread), because the method of legal analysis used in the Mueller Report is known as IRAC, a method widely known to lawyers and law students.
"And then there are those like Germany that will follow Macron to a degree rhetorically, but when it comes down to difficult decisions about how much to spend on defense, how assertive to be on sanctions, holds back," he said.
Many environmentalists say that despite oil executives rhetorically supporting carbon prices for years and backing groups that do, the companies don't push for the policy on Capitol Hill or anywhere else where it's a live issue — like in Washington state.
If what we get is a new defense secretary who aligns rhetorically along Trump's impulses — especially if he is reelected — there will be long-term damage that may set us back a generation when it comes to building trust with Mexico.
BDE is as fascinating as it is frustrating, in that you don't need to be a man or have prodigious genitalia to possess it, nor does it necessarily refer to anything sexual, but rhetorically it's still very much dick-dependent.
But now we're watching his successor govern in sloppy finger paints—and the ongoing explosion of dark money in politics (which Obama rhetorically opposed but failed to reverse) means Trump will be almost impossible to keep out of a second term.
President Putin has followed Mr. Xi's lead, at least rhetorically — except that in his nearly 17 years in power, not a single political "tiger," to borrow Mr. Xi's term, and only a few "flies" have been brought down by corruption charges.
This has included a new assertiveness on the international stage, as evidenced by Xi's ambitious economic and trade initiative -- the One Belt, One Road plan -- and his attempts, rhetorically at least, to take up the mantle of globalization and environmentalism.
" Likewise, a recent Wall Street Journal video segment asked rhetorically, "Now imagine how helpful it would be to detect the onset of concussion just moments after injury to make an objective determination about whether that athlete should return to play?
London Theater Reviews LONDON — "Antony and Cleopatra" may be the grandest and most rhetorically heightened of Shakespeare's doomed romances, but Simon Godwin's electrifying new production for the National Theater is the first I've seen that does justice to both title characters.
The declaration from Mr. Spencer, in an interview late Saturday, was typical of the man who has rhetorically elbowed his way into the national conversation with his use of Nazi language and his unalloyed contention that America belongs to white people.
But by rhetorically lowering the bar to American action, Mr. Trump could cause Mr. Kim to misinterpret carefully limited United States military moves — like flying B-1 bombers over the Korean Peninsula — as the start of a regime-ending attack.
" If Ms. Warren, with a "net worth 100 times mine," decided to donate to his campaign, he asked rhetorically, neatly casting his regular-person-championing opponent as rich herself, "would that pollute my campaign because it came from a wealthy person?
Richard Harris, chief executive at investment manager Port Shelter, echoed the sentiment that the chances are low, but said it's not inconceivable Hong Kong could, rhetorically at least, end up in Trump's cross hairs the more protracted the conflict becomes.
Sure, Netanyahu has rhetorically accepted a two-state solution (a nod to international diplomatic consensus), although that acceptance was immediate qualified by publically making clear to his rejectionist base that this had been a purely rhetorical statement for international consumption.
On guns, he seems to go a bit further (at least rhetorically) in supporting new regulations than his father, who famously voted against the Brady Bill requiring background checks and for lawsuit immunity for gun companies while in the House.
And now, people are leaving Twitter In favor of safer spaces — not just away from people who completely disagree with them, or trolls, but from people who will pounce on any opportunity to rhetorically suckerpunch anyone or anything that gives them an opening.
"The court cannot ignore the circumstances of one of the most rhetorically mold-breaking, violent, awful, hateful and contentious presidential elections in modern history, driven in large measure by the rhetorical China shop bull who is now our president," his attorneys said.
Rhetorically, it claims it's sympathetic to immigrants who grew up in the US and are "terrific people"; as a policy matter, it's made it difficult for many of them to stay on the right side of the law by retaining their DACA protections.
At least rhetorically, he has lurched between wildly different approaches to North Korea, at times suggesting that he could resolve all his differences with Kim Jong Un over a hamburger and at others implying he was ready to launch a pre-emptive attack.
CONVERSATIONS AT THE International Meeting on Origami in Science, Mathematics and Education often pause for a hand to dart into a pocket, emerge with a square of plain paper and fluently fold it up to make a point—both geometrically and rhetorically.
Rhetorically, it's a big shift — the fact that HR 40, merely a mandate to study the idea of reparations, has languished without a vote for decades shows that there's long been little political will to look at reparations at the federal level.
The droid asks Woman, rhetorically, if she ever wondered why she never knew her birth parents or why she was able to survive for so long when everyone else around her had died or been killed by droids, or what her purpose was.
"The first 16 pages of this 'brief' seemed designed solely to generate adverse pretrial publicity for the defendants, giving the media a rhetorically florid preview of prosecutors' opening argument," said Raymond Brown, one of Menendez's lawyers, in a letter to the judge Wednesday.
"This is massively appreciated in most African countries, especially by the political elites, the way in which China quite uniquely in some respects treats all countries at an equal level ... at least rhetorically and in the diplomatic process," he said. Neo-colonialism?
During the campaign, he promised to "bomb the shit out of" ISIS , which holds territory in Syria, but he also said that it was foolish to become mired in the civil war, or to target Assad, who has opposed ISIS —at least, rhetorically.
"The first 16 pages of this 'brief' seem designed solely to generate adverse pretrial publicity for the defendants, giving the media a rhetorically florid preview of the prosecutors' opening argument," wrote Raymond M. Brown, one of Mr. Menendez's lawyers, in a response.
As Ruth Langmore, the spitfire foil turned partner to Jason Bateman's slick money launderer Marty Byrde, she is the most captivating part of "Ozark," routinely smacking down — literally, strategically or rhetorically — derisive men who mistake her delicate features and springy curls for weakness.
This Turkish offensive appeared -- rhetorically at least -- to be linked to the US announcing it would train a 30,000-strong Syrian Kurdish force in the Syrian northeast, and then swiftly downplaying the precise nature and role of that force when Turkey responded negatively.
But it is also the case that this is a way of rhetorically displacing the victim — if the wife and family are the injured parties, the woman who has brought forth the charge is understood as victimizing a woman and children too.
"Do I consider myself part of the casino capitalist process by which so few have so much and so many have so little by which Wall Street's greed and recklessness wrecked this economy?" he asked rhetorically in 2015 during a Democratic debate.
Audience member: My question is, if there's a politician that starts getting rhetorically and legislatively very tough on tech, do you believe that the tech companies will kind of resort and hunker down like the hydrocarbon companies did in the '80s and '90s?
" But I remember when that story started getting around and people would just quote me from this one interview rhetorically, and I was like, "Oh shit, I don't know if I should keep telling this story 'cause I'm pretty close to this person now.
But they also immediately faced questions about whether their embrace of unabashedly liberal positions during the sessions -- in particular, banning private health insurance, though Harris, as she's done before, rhetorically obscured her position in the aftermath -- had made them less competitive in a general election.
"And I assumed he was asking that rhetorically; I didn't answer that, and I just moved on and explained, 'Sir, I'm not saying that we credit this, I'm not saying we believe it, I just think it's very important that you know,'" Comey told Stephanopoulos.
"One of the problems the French have, is that it's quite hard to make a pitch saying we want to be the home of financial services when you have spent 20 years making a virtue of being rhetorically hostile to financial services," Browne said.
And rhetorically, the notion of locking criminals up is an easier sell to many people than confronting the many contributors to urban crime: poverty, vanishing economic opportunity, easy access to guns, gang warfare (some of which is, in fact, drug-related), and even boredom.
"We have not just rhetorically discussed a break-the-glass scenario, a Plan B, but we have laid out in detailed terms what that would look like, and we're working with legislative leaders to advance it in real time," Mr. Newsom said last week.
" Moore asked rhetorically, before excoriating that very notion: "After all, we are not our own but are part of a church — a church made up of all nations, all ethnicities, united not by blood and soil but by the shed blood and broken body of Jesus Christ.
"In our view, the movement in the stock rhetorically illustrates how many investors were/are long MSGN on the thesis that Kevin Durant would sign with the NY Knicks sometime this summer, which was never a guarantee," Imperial Capital analyst David Miller said in a note Wednesday.
Late 21871th-century conservatives increased budget deficits, defanged government regulators, and used the mechanisms of mass incarceration to plunder the poor and stifle mobility, but they rhetorically resisted outright discrimination on the basis of race — particularly in George W. Bush's "compassionate conservatism" in the early 22012s.
And while the environment remains a major issue, with water pollution and smog particular concerns throughout China, Xi's government does appear to be taking action, and he has positioned himself, rhetorically at least, as something of a global climate leader, in contrast to US President Donald Trump.
While the United States "will almost certainly remain at least a rhetorically important enemy" for many foreign militant groups, "homegrown violent extremists ... will probably continue to pose the most significant Sunni terrorist threat to the U.S. homeland in 2016," he said, referring to Sunni Muslim jihadists.
"Sorry, didn't get the latest memo after 1,000 experienced and qualified journalists of all stripes were let go w/o warning a few weeks ago and still looking for work: are we still pretending that hires like these are evidence of a meritocracy?" she asked rhetorically.
"From the beginning of his candidacy through the general election, Donald Trump rhetorically positioned himself as a vehement opponent of endless war, inveighing against both parties when doing so," The Intercept's founder Glenn Greenwald argued last week, and that could have been to his benefit electorally.
After the meeting, and after receiving some encouragement for his view that China would put pressure on a North Korea threatening nuclear war, Trump shifted once more, asking rhetorically why he would be rude to China on currency manipulation when it was assisting him on North Korea.
During the early stages of the 2020 campaign, he has relentlessly attacked private insurers, arguing that their presence is a malign influence on the whole of American health care -- a step, both rhetorically and on the policy front, that his opponents have so far refused to match.
That doesn't mean there won't be a greater investment in security at legal ports of entry, but it does seem like this type of security isn't a big priority, at least rhetorically, for the Trump administration — or in the public dialogue about drugs and border security.
Conversely, Obama was often quite rhetorically critical of America's allies, telling Jeffrey Goldberg that the Saudis had to "find an effective way to share the neighborhood" with Iran and speaking famously of a desire to "pivot to Asia" and have less American engagement in the Middle East.
But Trump spent a good deal of time acting as a Putin spokesperson in the American press: The eagerness to make excuses for Putin's conduct seemed linked, rhetorically, to a somewhat half-baked notion that under Trump the United States and Russia would enjoy warmer relations.
Wiener is planning to bring back the legislation next year, but despite encouraging polling, the bill realistically may need clear support from the governor — who has made housing a signature issue rhetorically and then failed to back the most ambitious housing initiative around — to have a chance of advancing.
" "At a time when Islamophobia is growing thanks to hateful demagogues like Donald Trump, it was heartening to see the Democratic party give a prime-time slot to the father of a fallen Muslim-American soldier who rhetorically slapped Donald Trump in the face with his pocket-size Constitution.
An effort to make them illegal at the federal level may or may not eventually go somewhere—President Trump has rhetorically embraced a ban—but Washington (which Democrats took full control of in November) became the latest state to ban bump stocks less than a month after Parkland.
Representative David Harris, who was among the 10 Republicans who voted to overturn the tax hike veto, rhetorically asked Rauner from the House floor how he willingly could take the state into the "financial abyss" considering the governor's long-established business acumen as a former private equity investor.
Representative David Harris, who was among the 10 Republicans who voted to overturn the tax hike veto, rhetorically asked Rauner from the House floor how he willingly could take the state into the "financial abyss" considering the governor's long-established business acumen as a former private equity investor.
What's new is our response: rhetorically tougher language, even beyond what the president said Tuesday; naval deployments in the waters off the peninsula; nuclear-capable B-1s flying from Guam in full view of North Korean radars and seriously threatening, punishing secondary sanctions against Chinese banks and industries.
Kilmer claimed that a "spiritual guide" told him that suicide is the "most selfish act a human can execute" and rhetorically questioned the Emmy Award-winning host of "Parts Unknown" star about the circumstances and methods of his suicide, including asking if he cheated on girlfriend Asia Argento before killing himself.
The nascent Trump administration, extolling a law-and-order message that suggests places like Chicago just need more cops, has been rhetorically hostile to any new form of gun control—and that probably includes funding for local programs or research into alternative solutions to gun violence gone horribly out of control.
The Fed remains at least rhetorically inclined to push the higher rate argument, but given the current global growth malaise, raising U.S. rates against a backdrop of negative rates in the EU and Japan would swing massive capital flows to U.S. dollars and be counterproductive to U.S. growth, Hug said.
I know there's certain circumstances where there's no expectation that the participants are going to have their minds changed on the stage and it really is theater and it's about changing the minds of the audience, but I'm not using debating tricks to win rhetorically in front of an audience.
In the case of Hunter Biden, Maloney asked rhetorically: "What information would Hunter Biden have" about President TrumpDonald John TrumpGOP senators balk at lengthy impeachment trial Warren goes local in race to build 2020 movement 85033 Democrats make play for veterans' votes MORE's phone call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky.
As Southern Redeemers worked to put down burgeoning alliances between Blacks and whites—a coalition that foreshadowed precisely the class-based politics now rhetorically championed by left and liberal critics of "identity politics"—Black bodies served as the scapegoats; their ritual sacrifice permitted postbellum whites to reunite across class and region.
Progressives who support programs like "Medicare-for-all" and other policies likely to increase government expenditures worry that the rule would create a self-imposed obstacle with limited political upside -- and come across as a sign that Democrats are committed to the austerity economics championed, at least rhetorically, by conservative groups.
When it comes to dealing with regional threats, Israel's government needs the flexibility to do what is necessary; this is especially important at a time when the Trump administration backs Israel rhetorically and diplomatically but has left it largely on its own when it comes to countering the Iranians in Syria.
When former President Barack Obama was in office that became the central issue, at least rhetorically, for most conservatives, but now that the GOP has the White House there's only one panel officially focused on the topic out of the dozens and dozens of sessions scheduled for this three day long affair.
Greenberg also asked rhetorically: Do you really think the Democratic nominee is going to be running on Medicare for All and do you really think that will be the dominant health care filter when the president is running on abolishing protections for pre-existing conditions and failed to rein in prescription drug costs?
He has a fairly encyclopedic knowledge of Senate history, and he's very clever at finding these precedents from the other side — points of historical comparison that don't always hold up to much scrutiny, but do allow him to rhetorically present himself as the voice of institutional continuity while achieving his desired political ends.
He was also the only Republican candidate to speak directly to the economic uncertainties that many downscale Republican voters have been feeling, and the only Republican candidate to stand up, at least rhetorically, for Social Security and for taxing the wealthy (even if his campaign platforms have not always reflected these details).
Rhetorically, the trope of widespread, pernicious "catch and release" should be understood as a new variation on Trump's favorite themes: that immigrants are infiltrating the homeland and importing violence and crime, and border agents can't be as tough as they need to be because of feckless politicians — Democrats, mostly — who don't believe in borders.
And now that the phrase "Chinese virus" has, predictably, become a fixture of his statements, we're being treated to an equally predictable set of excuses—that the phrase, for instance, is nothing more than an attempt to hold the Chinese regime rhetorically accountable, given its efforts to suggest America is responsible for the disease.
In her memoirs, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Reagan's political soul mate, described the same problem as she encountered it in British politics:  At the level of principle, rhetorically and in Opposition, it [her own Conservative Party] opposed these [Labour Party/socialist] doctrines and preached the gospel of free enterprise, with very little qualification.
"The court cannot ignore the circumstances of one of the most rhetorically mold-breaking, violent, awful, hateful and contentious presidential elections in modern history, driven in large measure by the rhetorical China shop bull who is now our president," said attorney Jim Pratt in a sentencing memo filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Kansas.
And so we posit rhetorically, if MSGN can grow advertising in a year when both teams were not particularly competitive, imagine what happens when the Knicks become instantly competitive, which starting on 7/1/19, is a scenario that could play out with the Knicks exercising its option on the two max slots as previously stated in this report.
Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE appears poised to rhetorically defend Israel against its many enemies and to do nothing to prevent Israel from defending itself.
Rather than focus on the existential macroeconomic cause of the disappointing data, my profession's town barkers immediately jumped to the conclusion that the Federal Reserve had "egg on its face" in the wake of its forward guidance in the weeks prior to the data's release, rhetorically "preparing the markets" for a hike in its policy rate this summer.
He took his concerns to Jeff Dean, the tech giant's head of A.I. What happened, according to Kate Conger and Cade Metz of the NYT: According to Dr. Poulson, Mr. Dean said that Google complied with surveillance requests from the federal government and asked rhetorically if the company should leave the United States market in protest.
In an effort to preempt that destructive process, which was getting rhetorically uglier by the day, Dole — the former Senate majority leader and acknowledged expert on congressional procedure — drafted the elements of a tough but fair censure of the president in the form of a "joint resolution" to be approved by the House, the Senate and President Clinton himself.
"This is the 13th week with no orders out of the Pacific Northwest and you know you want to be patriotic and you want to do the right thing but you wonder, why am I suffering so that Apple can grow bigger, so that tech can get the advantage of what we're doing," Heitkamp asked rhetorically.
And in not just representing, but rhetorically casting in with the loudest, least sympathetic, and least sincere people to claim the firstness of the First Amendment — people whose speech is totally unthreatened by the current federal government — Marc Randazza may be helping to hurry the process by which young Americans come to see a guiding cultural principle as a cynical tool.
"While Trump is trying rhetorically to insulate himself, talking about [how] the system is rigged, and set stage for a contested — potentially contested — Republican convention, Ted Cruz has been out there actually finding delegates, and he's been doing it all around the country," said Feldman, a former aide to Vice President Al Gore and now a partner at Glover Park Group.
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 has rhetorically snapped a padlock around the Russia investigation more than once, only to revisit disputes and events he insists are settled and in the past.
It's unclear why she can't simply say, "It was a huge mistake, I've rethought my views on the use of force and learned from my mistake," but in lieu of that kind of fully honest reckoning, her burn at Sanders — "A vote in 2002 is not a plan to defeat ISIS" — was rhetorically effective if not particularly reassuring to more dovish Democrats.
STACY, NEW YORK So the same Roseanne Conner that stood up to an overtly misogynistic factory boss, who treated women laborers as objects and used his power to curry sexualized and behavioral compliance, now supports a man who wields the highest amount of power in the world who both personally and rhetorically embodies the exact same behaviors and male privilege?
These types are the ones who spew the most vile and bigoted rhetoric 24/7 on social media and traditional media comment sections about racial and religious minorites, but when said minorites speak out or fight back rhetorically, they retreat to the "Go Back to Africa, Asia, or the Middle East" slights that are signature phrases of the unenlightened and deplorable.
I had asked rhetorically what the reaction would have been if President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE attended a memorial for a country singer and sat right next to David Duke.
But by any measure, the international community's decision to act last week was a bold move, led at least rhetorically by the U.S., with President Trump twice calling Guaidó, Secretary of State Michael Pompeo presenting the case to the UN Security Council, and Vice President Mike Pence meeting with the Carlos Vecchio, Guaidó's ambassador to the U.S. Yes, but: For the U.S. and the Trump administration, the move also has electoral ramifications.
"The question to me is do we want to somehow limit ourselves in terms of access to foreign intelligence in a way that could make us less safe?" asked John CornynJohn CornynThe Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy O'Rourke says he will not 'in any scenario' run for Senate MORE (Texas), the No. 85033 Senate Republican, rhetorically.
It allowed the Trump administration to implement the ban for anyone who didn't have a "bona fide relationship" with someone or something in the US. That standard didn't previously exist in immigration law (which is why there's been so much attention to how the Trump administration defines it), and rhetorically, it sounded like the Supreme Court was saying that people were only likely to be terrorists if they didn't know anyone here.
We focus on the parents a lot, but in order to get TANF, like you got to have a kid and just rhetorically, the conversation focuses on the decision of the parents, but we know through, you know, things like the child tax credit that this tends to be pretty effective and it does, it boosts the number of calories that kids are eating, it keeps them in school for more days and it tends to make the environment in the house better.
In the wake of GOP nominee Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE's latest controversy — this one being lewd comments about women he made in 2005 while waiting to appear on a soap opera — you can count me among the millions of Americans wondering: What took some Republicans so long to condemn their rhetorically vile presidential nominee?

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