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20 Sentences With "rugged individualist"

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

If trust in a central authority could be replaced with trust in computer code and mathematics, users could cut out the middleman and deal directly with each other, rugged individualist to rugged individualist.
Delegate more instead of being the rugged individualist who goes at it alone.3.
Freelancers are 2020's rugged individualist frontiersmen, living off the fat of corporations, owing nobody anything.
Or a rugged individualist who follows the beat of their own heart and is willing to live off the grid.
Because of the traditional "rugged individualist" sensibility among ecologists, researchers often developed their own ways of studying a species or habitat, Hampton said.
If ever there was a rugged individualist, if ever there was someone who embodied everything good about Texas and feminism both — If that's possible!
He is a rugged individualist with a wild temper and a host of demons, a charismatic storyteller, a former artist, and a depressive alcoholic.
Frederick's spurning of the family business helped fuel the disappointment that Fred Chase Koch, a self-made man and rugged individualist, felt toward his oldest son.
Fundamentally, this is a clash between the rugged individualist view of self-sufficiency and a collaborative view of the responsibility of the group for shared objectives.
Tender and affable though the sendup was, the myth being evoked — that of the rugged individualist galloping to the world's rescue — remains as politically potent as any in America.
Though our culture mythicizes the rugged individualist ethos of the Wild West, about half of all land west of the Great Plains is actually owned by the federal government and controlled by Washington agencies.
The branding of the Hollywood conservative as a rugged individualist has been used to great advantage by Hollywood's most famous conservatives, including John Wayne, Ronald Reagan, Charlton Heston, Dennis Hopper, Jon Voight, and Clint Eastwood.
By doing that, the Moms have not only shown how society's deepest conceptions of what it means to be a "good mother" are always anchored to the presumption of material and racial privileges; they have also revealed (and rejected) the harmful prescriptions of capitalism's rugged-individualist model of motherhood.
Abbey, Edward. 1990. Hayduke Lives! Boston: Little, Brown. Hayduke is portrayed as a rugged individualist in the books by Abbey, and has a predilection for working independently when protecting the environment.
He said the New York school was "too removed from man" and "did not speak to the people I was born and raised with. ... John Wayne spoke for these people ... he was a wonderful embodiment of the timeless strength of the rugged individualist, the one-man majority I believe in with my entire being." From the late 1990s to 2006, Jackson returned to painting. His work harkened back to his abstract expressionist experiments and military experiences, and also include "more peaceful, even transcendental registers of feeling" in the "Quartet" paintings.
The Men title card The Men was an umbrella title for three crime/adventure dramas aired in the United States by ABC as part of its 1972-73 lineup. The Men comprised Assignment Vienna, Jigsaw, and The Delphi Bureau. The common element in each of those hour-long series was that its hero was a rugged individualist, working essentially alone with little or no supervision on matters of vital significance. The program originally aired on Thursday nights, with each element appearing in a regular rotation, every third week.
The Field is set in a small country village in southwest Ireland. Rugged individualist Bull McCabe has spent five hard years of labour cultivating a small plot of rented land, nurturing it from barren rock into a fertile field. When the owner of the field decides to auction it, he believes that he has a claim to the land. The McCabes intimidate most of the townspeople out of bidding in the auction, to the chagrin of auctioneer Mick Flanagan, but Galwayman William Dee arrives from England, where he has lived for many years, with a plan to cover the field with concrete and extract gravel from the adjacent river.
During the early 1920s Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall was principal spokesman for the obscurantist element. The former senator from New Mexico was a staunch advocate of the business community’s unhindered access to mineral and petroleum resources on reservations. Fall choice for Commissioner of Indian Affairs was Charles H. Burke, former congressman from South Dakota and author of the Burke Act which chilled Native American citizenship hopes and emasculated the trust features of allotment in severalty by making access to restricted allotments a matter of administrative discretion. The New York Times described Burke as a "rugged individualist" with a "frontiersman’s" attitude toward Indians. Hubert Work, Fall’s successor in 1923, was as honest as Fall was corrupt but just as ethnocentric.
The promotional copy on the back of Time Enough for Love, the second book featuring Lazarus Long, states that Lazarus was "so in love with time that he became his own ancestor," but this never happens in any of the published books. In the book, Lazarus does travel back in time and is seduced by his mother, but this takes place years after his own birth. Heinlein did, however, use just such a plot device in the short story "—All You Zombies—", in which a character becomes both of his own parents. A rugged individualist with a distrust of authority, Lazarus drifts from world to world, settling down periodically and leaving when the situation becomes too regimented for his taste-—often just before an angry mob arrives to capture him.
Trott believed that both capitalist democracy and Communism were flawed systems that had dehumanised society, and Germany should follow neither. Despite Trott's reputation as someone oriented towards "Western" values, based on his education at Oxford and Anglo-American friends, Trott was in fact deeply hostile towards the American "pioneer" ideal of a rugged individualist on both moral and practical grounds, believing that such individualism promoted selfishness, greed and amorality. Trott came to find his political idea in the mir ("commune") of Imperial Russia. Germans tended to have two contradictory pictures of Russia as either a primitive and savage "Asian" country that was threatening Europe or to see it in idealised and romantic terms as a place where the people were simple, but more spiritual than the people in the West.

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