Mages can wield magical spells and throw fireballs, for instance, while hunters can wield bows.
|
|
You can wield power, you can wield taste — in excluding other people, demonstrate a different kind of power.
|
|
While I am certainly aware that men wield power over women in this society, what I find more difficult to accept is that they wield power over me, specifically.
|
|
Dumping the problem on China and expecting it to wield
|
|
They nevertheless wield vast political power, however, because of institutions.
|
|
JUDGES WIELD more power than almost anyone else in Guatemala.
|
|
Individual immune systems wield the weapons in very different ways.
|
|
Ditch the flimsy wheel and wield some sturdy scissors instead.
|
|
In short, today's cards reflect the players who wield them.
|
|
No one knows how the newcomers will wield their power.
|
|
Big profits are a sign that companies wield market power.
|
|
His tendency to wield bizarre conspiracy theories against his opponents.
|
|
But established political families will continue to wield great power.
|
|
They're still symbolic of the immense power that women wield.
|
|
And, because of how they work, they wield extraordinary influence.
|
|
Here's the thing: No one should wield the Infinity Gauntlet.
|
|
Her tone suggested she would happily wield the machete herself.
|
|
Everyone assumed that he would wield power behind the scenes.
|
|
Rather, creators should be aware of the power they wield.
|
|
The magic they encounter and wield is equally as exciting.
|
|
Super PACs and interest groups wield tremendous influence on legislators.
|
|
Others will wield toy chainsaws and bundles of felled timber.
|
|
It looks like he will wield it against the leakers.
|
|
That constrains firms' and workers' ability to wield bargaining power.
|
|
Writers and producers were deemed to wield too much power.
|
|
That's because they are the way to wield power safely.
|
|
But the administration has yet to wield its new powers.
|
|
The Hill: Women wield sizable power in "Me Too" midterms.
|
|
Congress can wield its power to secure its own priorities.
|
|
Clinton would wield power in two ways he found problematic.
|
|
Zuma has denied suggestions the Guptas wield undue political power.
|
|
So, how would a bipartisan caucus wield any real influence?
|
|
We use our own traumas and wield them as weapons.
|
|
The power their platforms wield over public discourse is enormous.
|
|
And finally, those who wield all the power: the judges.
|
|
It remains unclear how willing she is to wield them.
|
|
Like prima ballerinas, she could wield influence beyond her father's.
|
|
Yet Ms. Foster will now wield disproportionate influence over Mrs.
|
|
Only time will show if and how she'll wield influence.
|
|
To wield such influence, economic narratives must first become popular.
|
|
And that they might loosely wield their power of influence.
|
|
The California Girl is beautiful, but she doesn't wield it.
|
|
As a result, they wield disproportionate influence on legislator behavior.
|
|
There's also the issue of how much power officers wield.
|
|
Cruel leaders find new ways to wield downsizing as a weapon.
|
|
If Beijing wields a knife, we should wield a knife too.
|
|
The trendy plants are an affordable luxury that wield tiny powers.
|
|
You wield flimsy firearms instead of magical incantations or ancient swords.
|
|
Proceed gently and wield a calming, but ultra-hydrating eye product.
|
|
Go deeper: Conservatives wield alleged media bias as a political weapon
|
|
But, some of them wield eggs as their weapon of choice.
|
|
Amazon now looks set to wield even more power over manufacturers.
|
|
Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor wield it, as does Angela Merkel.
|
|
But Sanchez says, beyond parties, these new voters will wield power.
|
|
Now scientists are learning how to wield this formidable force themselves.
|
|
And, given such great power, the FTC must wield it judiciously.
|
|
Now it's Trump's turn to wield an increasingly lethal unmanned force.
|
|
Meanness is one of the few weapons that anyone can wield.
|
|
These powers wield more influence in southern Syria than the north.
|
|
Many of these leaders wield considerable political influence and escape prosecution.
|
|
But then she saw the potential opportunity to wield more clout.
|
|
We do have some control over how we wield these things.
|
|
It is important, however, that we know how to wield it.
|
|
To wield influence, Russian online operators must first build an audience.
|
|
Ghosts wield no political influence, but they do have staying power.
|
|
And second, it demonstrates how hardliners wield power over Iran's economy.
|
|
We should put some thought into how best to wield it.
|
|
Here's your guide to dirty emojis, and how to wield them.
|
|
This is the power that America and the West can wield.
|
|
The people who wield power, like the supreme leader, are inaccessible.
|
|
She understands how to wield the powers of the regulatory state.
|
|
A carousel turns; vitrines slowly levitate; cheerleaders wield sparkly pom-poms.
|
|
A knowledge of power and how to wield it is mandatory.
|
|
Mr. Bannon can still wield influence from outside the West Wing.
|
|
In skirmishes with police, Hongkongers wield street signs to protect themselves.
|
|
You need to earn the right to wield the Master Sword!
|
|
Still other unelected bodies, like the Revolutionary Guards, wield tremendous power.
|
|
Voters clearly did not trust Mr. Renzi to wield greater power.
|
|
That and a woman or man who can wield two swords.
|
|
As Marling points out, heterosexual white men wield the power in Hollywood.
|
|
Already these actors wield enormous power, but have had to deal with
|
|
Having Nancy wield a gun a handful of times doesn't hurt, either.
|
|
Words can wield power for a long time after they've been spoken.
|
|
Zoning boards and homeowners' associations wield as much power as local governments.
|
|
To wield it is to reinscribe what "American MONUMENT" seeks to combat.
|
|
"Companies like Amazon wield immense power, both economically and politically," she said.
|
|
Reformers retort that bribery exists because officials wield excessive power over business.
|
|
Even in normal times they wield a great deal of subtle power.
|
|
He does wield actual power, particularly when it comes to foreign policy.
|
|
Granted, there are limits to the power a wildcard governor can wield.
|
|
We implore all staff to wield their tool/voice with extra care.
|
|
It is not clear whether the Avengers wield influence over other groups.
|
|
But power over humans is often awkward and sometimes painful to wield.
|
|
There is no one who can wield her starpower like Lady Bey.
|
|
It's an unusual way for a vice president to wield his influence.
|
|
Rebecca Traister: Fury is a political weapon and women must wield it.
|
|
So how did Donald Trump wield that sword at his own roast?
|
|
At the state level, attorneys general similarly wield major influence over policy.
|
|
White voters in Washington already wield significant power in the city's elections.
|
|
Do you even realize the power you would wield with one more?
|
|
I'm elated to see someone so pure of intention wield that power.
|
|
But insiders like the Smiths have real access and wield real clout.
|
|
But Ma will still wield huge influence at the $420 billion company.
|
|
Mr. Sievers is not alone in his reluctance to wield a paintbrush.
|
|
Governments wield tariffs, import quotas and other instruments to protect sensitive industries.
|
|
They are not brandishing pitchforks; they are more likely to wield cellphones.
|
|
Our gender editor, Jessica Bennett, looks at the power those women wield.
|
|
India and Pakistan have feuded for decades, and both wield nuclear arms.
|
|
But why wield the court's decision as a weapon for social change?
|
|
Did he wield an iron late at night, in his hotel room?
|
|
And that you can wield all kinds of things with a list.
|
|
Others wield mandatory minimums only when they believe the sentence is warranted.
|
|
We have long known that celebrities wield a powerful influence over consumers.
|
|
Corporations have enormous power on YouTube if they choose to wield it.
|
|
But, the populist party looks very likely to wield a strong influence.
|
|
How did it come to wield that control in the first place?
|
|
He's a human being who will wield actual power if elected president.
|
|
Meet three congressmen who will be deciding how to wield this authority.
|
|
Ramsey's trade returned draft capital, but it's unclear who will wield it.
|
|
But she learned through trial and error how to wield humor well.
|
|
But when average citizens support something, they wield virtually no influence over lawmakers.
|
|
His willingness to wield political influence over business matters isn't limited to trade.
|
|
On the other hand, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, WeChat, and Snapchat wield more influence.
|
|
If you've ever volunteered to wield the tongs, you know the pressure's on.
|
|
In practice, states wield most power and little happens that big countries dislike.
|
|
"International scientists have leverage and power," that they can wield without being complicit.
|
|
In places where the federal government does wield power, Congress often stymies progress.
|
|
"Law enforcement members wield incredible power in their ability to detain individuals," Rep.
|
|
She had no idea how to throw a flogger, wield a single-tail.
|
|
We get to see Rey (Daisy Ridley) undergo training and wield a lightsaber.
|
|
Major powers including North Korea's ally China wield a veto in the forum.
|
|
"I'm flattered that people seem to think we wield such power," Mikkelson said.
|
|
For one, the US continues to wield preponderant power in the international arena.
|
|
Elderly ex-chairmen and chief executives often wield considerable power even after retirement.
|
|
When it comes to setting trends, it's no secret designers wield the influence.
|
|
He is being punished for his reluctance to wield the knife more aggressively.
|
|
Threatening to leave is not the only way the rich can wield power.
|
|
Pharmaceutical companies, in particular, continue to wield some of the largest lobbying budgets.
|
|
"It was them trying to wield power as a governing body," Hendrix said.
|
|
National labor unions wield a great deal of influence in the Democratic primary.
|
|
Device makers wield considerable influence with Congress, contributing to lawmakers of both parties.
|
|
No is a powerful word that you should not be afraid to wield.
|
|
The weapons stand clearly apart from each other and feel great to wield.
|
|
"No" is a powerful word that you should not be afraid to wield.
|
|
Apple may yet find ways to wield AI to reinforce the App Store.
|
|
Now more than ever, Britain must wield its positive influence to the full.
|
|
Transnational organized crime groups now control multibillion-dollar "industries" and wield unprecedented influence.
|
|
How willing is Twitter to wield verification as a weapon against user behavior?
|
|
But a weapon is only as effective as the ones who wield it.
|
|
Fringe secessionist movements in Alaska, California, and Vermont wield virtually no political influence.
|
|
Pharmaceutical companies, in particular, continue to wield some of the largest lobbying budgets.
|
|
He suggested those who undergo training to wield a firearm could receive bonuses.
|
|
Her boy-toy can wield an arakh and a guitar with equal aplomb.
|
|
He has power and he likes to wield it, often in crass ways.
|
|
Others wield Nerf dart guns or use a megaphone for ad hoc announcements.
|
|
The founders control the company and wield influence more or less with impunity.
|
|
And that gives tremendous leverage to any parent who chooses to wield it.
|
|
Advocates have struggled to wield influence over the Senate's secretive health care process.
|
|
Their fame and riches mean they wield a lot of power and influence.
|
|
It's a powerful weapon that you can wield to instantly dissolve sociocultural barriers.
|
|
But the entrenched players turned out to wield a significant home court advantage.
|
|
The crushing loss means parliament may now wield greater control over the process.
|
|
That means that roughly the same swing states have continued to wield influence.
|
|
Conservatives, traditionally supporters of patriotism, have come to wield Barnette in their defense.
|
|
What better training ground to learn that you have power and wield it?
|
|
The problem, in other words, is not just politicians who wield stupid slogans.
|
|
The report gave a detailed account of Mr. Trump's bids to wield power.
|
|
Presidents have failed before in their duty to wield the pardon power responsibly.
|
|
Hall does not, in "A Carnival of Losses," wield much of a cleaver.
|
|
Opponents of the merger say the combined company would wield too much power.
|
|
In a deregulated free market, they ask, what power do we individually wield?
|
|
The lessons are raw ones about power and who gets to wield it.
|
|
There are plenty of billionaires in the US who wield incredible political power.
|
|
In Alabama, we saw the incredible electoral power that minority communities can wield.
|
|
Both are popular in their districts and wield plenty of influence in Washington.
|
|
These views represent competing visions for how progressives should wield power in Congress.
|
|
Ironically, the victors shouldn't be in a position to wield such lobbying clout.
|
|
It would exercise the subpoena power that House Intelligence Republicans refused to wield.
|
|
As every adolescent knows, certain people wield much greater social power than others.
|
|
The socially vulnerable cannot wield it effectively precisely because of their social vulnerability.
|
|
Few believed the government would allow those elected to wield any significant power.
|
|
Now they face pressure to wield it in order to save the planet.
|
|
They traditionally wield one potent tool, their influence over short-term interest rates.
|
|
And most importantly of all, if elected president, Trump would wield incredible power.
|
|
Artists will also not be allowed to wield loud machinery or welding tools.
|
|
It is true that coal and oil companies — the oilygarchy — wield tremendous power.
|
|
If Stories are our new favorite tool, we must learn to wield them judiciously.
|
|
They wield baseball bats, not firearms or knives, to avoid felony charges, he said.
|
|
Then President-elect Donald Trump and Israel had urged Washington to wield its veto.
|
|
Europe, it is said, is too divided, complacent and weak to wield power decisively.
|
|
But Lamborghini's real problem is that very few people know how to wield it.
|
|
Braun MultiQuick 9You must wield a wicked scepter to rule the Land of Smoothies.
|
|
Other times you'll need to wield a blade and silently infiltrate a criminal stronghold.
|
|
The power that we used to wield has been handed over to the fandoms.
|
|
It's pretty brazen for what should be a subtle intelligence operation to wield influence.
|
|
That is because the king is supposed to wield the authority of both gods.
|
|
Soon after, Ronan stole it away and attempted to wield its power for himself.
|
|
When players are human, they move slowly but wield a gun loaded with ink.
|
|
They are groups of people that remain hidden, yet wield serious influence and power.
|
|
Labour leaders wield powerful influence over Thyssenkrupp, controlling half of the group's supervisory board.
|
|
Firms at every stage of the process are highly specialised and wield advanced technology.
|
|
There is this guy that wants to wield a metal cage live on stage.
|
|
The clout that countries wield with economic largesse is sometimes described as "hard power".
|
|
The company head, Ari Emanuel, will wield a lot of power over the organization.
|
|
Letting professions wield the power of government against potential competitors is foolish and costly.
|
|
Why it matters: Money matters in politics — and CEOs wield significant power in America.
|
|
The second reason is that outfits such as the Independence Party wield great power.
|
|
You can even wield an electric whip and eat turkey legs to regain health.
|
|
Its political commissars often wield as much power as commanders who are genuine soldiers.
|
|
What is clear, however, is that she has the potential to wield enormous influence.
|
|
It's nice to see from people who wield influence, but seriously folks: Do better.
|
|
Unquestionably, and the owners still wield almost all of the power in the NFL.
|
|
Playing Observation is a process of learning to understand and wield your own form.
|
|
Strength and intelligence can be weapons, so do not wield them against the weak.
|
|
But we don't wield these figures to convince you to get on this bandwagon.
|
|
The most influential vice-presidents wield power only at the pleasure of the president.
|
|
Yet how willing is Twitter to wield verification as a weapon against user behavior?
|
|
No is a powerful word that ultra-productive people are not afraid to wield.
|
|
His hands seem naked without a bayonet to wield or a ball to bowl.
|
|
She became the first female speaker by understanding power and how to wield it.
|
|
More than a few stories take place in kitchens, where women habitually wield knives.
|
|
Despite the film's lukewarm reviews, people just liked watching Sandra Bullock wield a machete.
|
|
They wanted to wield the FEC as a sword to slash their political opponents.
|
|
Wiki Ed is trying to convince scientists and educators to wield the Wikipedia firehose.
|
|
This means a few senators can wield a lot of power in this process.
|
|
Heather is a big, tough chick who can wield a chainsaw like no other.
|
|
Then banks could wield influence based on their own competence, not government-granted privilege.
|
|
These are the managers who wield a big stick and keep everyone on edge.
|
|
But political observers had expected the mayor to wield less influence this time around.
|
|
Critics don't wield the authority of experts so much as the credibility of devotees.
|
|
Sovereignty's a double-edged sword, which the Celtic nations will wield to great effect.
|
|
And they are the latest test of Facebook's ability to wield that power responsibly.
|
|
I hope and believe that women can wield power more responsibly and more justly.
|
|
In the United States, local prosecutors wield immense power over the fate of defendants.
|
|
"Congress can wield these political weapons without dragging judges into the fray," Griffith wrote.
|
|
Meanwhile, our rulers readily wield accusations of contempt against any who refuse to cooperate.
|
|
You tear off pieces and wield them like spoons, bringing earthiness to every bite.
|
|
The Russians and the Chinese could not wield a veto in the General Assembly.
|
|
And legislation is not the only tool presidents can wield to enact their agendas.
|
|
A key element is the training each teacher would need to wield a weapon.
|
|
Trump positions himself as a knife fighter more than willing to wield the weapon.
|
|
They were later folded into Iraq's official security structure and wield major political influence.
|
|
The pair continue to wield considerable influence despite both living in self-imposed exile.
|
|
They wield tremendous power as the leading "referrers" of news content on the web.
|
|
But they understood how to wield political power and made two critical strategic decisions.
|
|
Anastasia Beverly Hills, Kat Von D and Natasha Denona all wield social media might.
|
|
Our federal law enforcement officials just need to wield the powers they already have.
|
|
But Politico reported she will wield immense influence over the selection of his replacement.
|
|
They wield a position of influence, and we give them a seemingly appropriate label.
|
|
For Ntilikina, the goal is to wield those tools with more aggressiveness and consistency.
|
|
Darkly humorous, existential, erotic, trance inducing — these comics wield a rare and innovative power.
|
|
If you can get senators behind you, you can wield a lot of power.
|
|
In our times, however — our Gilded Age of weirdness when some individuals wield the wealth of nations and some corporations wield the power of gods, to track us, manipulate us and sway our minds — he's something of an exemplar, a type, a paradigm.
|
|
In our times, however — our Gilded Age of weirdness when some individuals wield the wealth of nations and some corporations wield the power of gods, to track us, manipulate us and sway our minds — he's something of an exemplar, a type, a paradigm.
|
|
He also hopes his campaign will shed light on the immense power district attorney's wield.
|
|
But some researchers believe there may be specific characteristics to the way women wield power.
|
|
And still the US prefers to wield a big stick, rather than focus on diplomacy.
|
|
So too did the organizations that most seriously wield the moral weight of the Holocaust.
|
|
Research in political science gives substance to the impression that America's rich wield outsize influence.
|
|
They are also some of the biggest fans of CCM, and they wield economic clout.
|
|
Strident nationalists wield power in Italy, Hungary, Poland and Austria, and have gained influence elsewhere.
|
|
That it took this long shows just how much sway Verizon and AT&T wield.
|
|
All of which raises the question: why doesn't every team wield the willow so aggressively?
|
|
Mary is a young woman confident in her power, and her ability to wield it.
|
|
Prince Harry doesn't need to draw a sword to wield a powerful display of chivalry!
|
|
Power with few constraints enables those who wield it, or their friends, to get rich.
|
|
People who wield state-sanctioned power also have to be willing to follow the laws.
|
|
The first thing Anderson noticed was that smaller chameleons wield tongues with higher peak accelerations.
|
|
Forty years on, Iran is nominally democratic, but unelected mullahs still wield the real power.
|
|
Wield the Thor Hammer Hoodie for $49.99 See Details With great power comes great style.
|
|
Understanding the behavioral patterns of young Asian travelers is crucial given the clout they wield.
|
|
Gorsuch will wield enormous power and help shape the country's laws for generations to come.
|
|
If Jon Snow (Kit Harington) is Azor Ahai, it means that he will wield Lightbringer.
|
|
She has just chosen to wield that power in a way in which everyone wins.
|
|
The first illuminates the level of creative control Kanye attempts to wield over his wife.
|
|
Republicans, increasingly, wield power only because America's political system insulates them from the public's judgments.
|
|
We're not ending racism—we're reducing the number of tools by which to wield racism.
|
|
Facebook and Google still wield advertising clout but aren't growing as fast as they have.
|
|
"You just have to be willing to wield it, and far too few people do."
|
|
Dalits make up more than a fifth of the state's population, but wield little power.
|
|
American presidents wield a tremendous amount of power when it comes to launching nuclear weapons.
|
|
Darth Vader might wield the force, but that doesn't mean he can't be roadkill too.
|
|
Protestors will wield flowers as they march from Portland Place to Trafalgar Square on Jan.
|
|
Groups like the Hollywood Foreign Press Association wield a lot of power in these situations.
|
|
Perhaps, in meeting with DeVos, Weingarten is hoping to wield influence over these potential moves.
|
|
The software used to wield this type of automation is more accessible than ever before.
|
|
Tom Rogan: Trump is offering Netanyahu a big carrot; he must also wield a stick.
|
|
So how did the Kochs come to amass astounding wealth and wield such great influence?
|
|
As Romans, he implied, we wield incredible power with our wallets, tax dollars, and votes.
|
|
In the years since 2628, Sanders has come to wield significant influence in Democratic circles.
|
|
These tools were created to help companies wield more control over where their ads run.
|
|
Under the current constitution the government and prime minister wield greater powers than the president.
|
|
Practically speaking, to wield influence commensurate with its collective power, Europeans needed to act collectively.
|
|
My personality was very big and I did not know how to wield it yet.
|
|
It is nothing but a tool, and those in power will wield it against you.
|
|
Critics say Facebook did not wield proper oversight of third parties' handling of user data.
|
|
As chairman of the Armed Services Committee, he will wield tremendous influence over Pentagon policy.
|
|
They also remind us that senators can wield authority even when they are not legislating.
|
|
To save Roe, Ms. Collins and Ms. Murkowski might need to wield a bigger stick.
|
|
When it comes to marketing against foreign competitors, they wield their holiness like a club.
|
|
It allows a minority of Americans — white Americans — to wield the power of a majority.
|
|
Taken as a whole, millennials do wield an incredible amount of economic and cultural power.
|
|
With such a weapon, an attacker can wield essentially the same firepower as American soldiers.
|
|
In North Carolina, Republican legislators wield margins enormous enough to override a veto by Gov.
|
|
The power brands wield over their suppliers can be oppressive to the point of tyrannical.
|
|
That's because such policy issues are handled by unelected institutions that wield far greater influence.
|
|
These costume appurtenances are essential devices in the toolkit used to wield and perform femininity.
|
|
How much power will a president with such tenuous claim to it get to wield?
|
|
Its opposable thumb allows it to wield tools, flash symbols and now, type out texts.
|
|
But you can't wield fear against an enemy that doesn't feel it, like a virus.
|
|
Smaller startups are increasingly critical of how big tech companies wield power in Silicon Valley.
|
|
"Of course, I don't believe that artists really wield any significant power," he once said.
|
|
Diana's mother tells her she's not fierce enough to wield a sword from the gods.
|
|
There is a quiet tension between Democrats who wield cultural power and those who don't.
|
|
After all, Warren created the CFPB not to protect consumers, but to wield political power.
|
|
It is a weapon that landlords wield primarily against poor black and brown New Yorkers.
|
|
Together, those countries could wield significant power in the region and in global energy markets.
|
|
The less power you wield within society, the stronger your case for your personal privacy.
|
|
Neither takes a salary, but both wield significant power as senior advisers to the president.
|
|
And yet the most influential corporations in this sphere wield extraordinary power from a distance.
|
|
It's rare for novelists to wield this much influence over screen adaptations of their work.
|
|
But appropriators, who wield the power of the purse, are wary of the proposed model.
|
|
The desire to create, maintain or wield power over others destroys the possibility of friendship.
|
|
Democrats wield majority control in the House, but Republicans hold a majority in the Senate.
|
|
But he's spoken frequently about his desire to wield that wealth and power for good.
|
|
People with a lot of money have more political power, and they wield it irresponsibly.
|
|
Yeah, which we know now why he was so keen to wield power over journalists.
|
|
In Christopher Bear, they wield arguably the most underrated indie rock drummer of that generation.
|
|
And then there is the problem of how legs wield force in the first place.
|
|
Trump had denounced the resolution and called for the United States to wield its veto.
|
|
Ivanka remains the sole beneficiary of the trust and continues to wield power over the brand.
|
|
Zuma has denied numerous allegations from opposition politicians that the Guptas wield undue influence over him.
|
|
That strategy has allowed the far-right to wield Berkeley's history of progressive activism against it.
|
|
Vilsack preferred to wield the carrot rather than the stick in trying to protect the environment.
|
|
This means families often wield undue influence over group companies in spite of small direct shareholdings.
|
|
His government can't directly force the contract's cancellation, but he seems to wield some influence here.
|
|
"If you can get senators behind you, you can wield a lot of power," Jentleson wrote.
|
|
Did writing this book make you rethink beauty — the power it can wield for a woman?
|
|
We're told that our sexuality is our power, and that we should wield it as such.
|
|
When it's collapsed like that, do you have to hold both handles to effectively wield it?
|
|
Mr Nye argued that hard power alone was not enough to wield influence in the world.
|
|
Rebecca Hall and Jason Sudeikis wield the zingers in this comic story of love after grief.
|
|
The ayatollahs who wield power in Tehran have fallen out with those who study in Qom.
|
|
Even if Clinton wins the White House, Warren will wield considerable influence on her legislative agenda.
|
|
Swamp Watch: Government contracts Government contractors wield enormous power at both the federal and state level.
|
|
To fight back against the kill-zone, regulators must closely consider what weapons to wield themselves.
|
|
Second, little says more about a candidate than how they plan to wield America's power abroad.
|
|
They're never given the chance to develop beyond their preference for the signature weapons they wield.
|
|
Pakistan's Central Board of Film Censors continues to wield enormous power over which films are seen.
|
|
And it's the committed partisans who are most likely to vote and wield influence over policymakers.
|
|
It's about the companies and institutions who wield influence over what does and doesn't appear online.
|
|
And to assimilate with those who wield power, we often feel pressured to be like them.
|
|
Because it lets you actually wield Thanos' Infinity Gauntlet and — spoiler alert — it's rad as hell.
|
|
"Online platforms like Google, Facebook and Amazon wield tremendous power," said Matt Wood from Free Press.
|
|
Economic power now trumping human rights Economic progress also allowed China to wield greater international influence.
|
|
Only to tell her, the one who will wield the greatest sword will not be her.
|
|
No deliberation received more extensive attention than the discussion of the powers the Congress would wield.
|
|
The big question, then, is how Ivanka will wield this outsize influence within the Trump campaign.
|
|
Bits China has shown time and again the power it can wield over American technology companies.
|
|
The larger question is how willing Twitter is to wield any defense against abuse and harassment.
|
|
And states wield great power, regardless of what a straight majority of US voters vote for.
|
|
Finally, Congress must wield its oversight powers to ensure that implementation moves forward effectively and efficiently.
|
|
No, I'm obsessed with the easy, elegant way in which The Sopranos' patriarchs wield their power.
|
|
This strategy may satisfy his desire to wield leverage over his opponents in the short term.
|
|
It feels like a short, fat tablet, and I definitely needed two hands to wield it.
|
|
Kraninger, if confirmed, would wield enormous power to regulate and police financial markets as CFPB director.
|
|
Gritty offers a perfect example of the power these strange creatures wield in our modern society.
|
|
Committee Democrats will have access to the information and could wield anything negative against the president.
|
|
In turns muted, enraged, and utterly engrossing, here, they wield that delicacy like a sharpened blade.
|
|
The vagueness of the language does seem to give Unity broad discretion to wield the hammer.
|
|
The negotiating power a city can wield when it goes toe-to-toe with their utility.
|
|
She's well-positioned to wield internal power in the administration -- perhaps more than she even realizes.
|
|
The countries guaranteeing the truce — Russia, Iran and Turkey — also wield considerable might on the battlefield.
|
|
As a cutter, he will wield a machete and slice bunches of bananas from the trees.
|
|
Although Congress determines the number of justices, that hasn't prevented presidents from trying to wield influence.
|
|
Unfortunately, his is a faction that has come to wield enormous influence within the Republican Party.
|
|
The art world had offered them proximity to power, but never a chance to wield it.
|
|
Its members wield machetes, kill with abandon and terrorize — for the most part in immigrant communities.
|
|
The Finishers aren't identical people whose similarities led them to wield this special power of composition.
|
|
The soups here range from brothy to creamed-spinach-thick, and wield bitterness to varying degree.
|
|
So each could benefit from being the only person on stage who can wield military credentials.
|
|
The country's millions of shopkeepers and small traders wield tremendous power in votes and campaign donations.
|
|
In the enormous world of misdemeanor processing, the police quietly wield a lot of prosecutorial authority.
|
|
"Humor is such a powerful tool, but one you have to wield very carefully," says Bennett.
|
|
These executives wield enormous influence over not just policy, but the inclinations of their own employees.
|
|
When it comes to financial consumer protection state attorneys general wield an additional potentially powerful weapon.
|
|
Recently unionized workers urge the Guggenheim's trustees to wield their influence on the museum's "reluctant" management.
|
|
Shadows, too, have fallen across the sporting goods companies, which wield great influence over the sport.
|
|
If we don't admit that and wield it ourselves — with humor, ideally — then someone else will.
|
|
Incarcerated gang members, who sometimes engage in bloody violence, often wield vast powers in Brazilian prisons.
|
|
These newly formed behemoths also wield outsized political power, which only serves to exacerbate the issue.
|
|
I dressed up in my finest Sith boots and trench coat, ready to wield a lightsaber.
|
|
And when the overseer declined to wield the lash, a constable stepped up, Mr. Norris said.
|
|
The problem for creators remains the same: they are the ones with less power to wield.
|
|
But the unique power that corporations wield can be used both for good and for bad.
|
|
To them, violence was the only solution, and the only question was how to wield it.
|
|
The bureau desperately needs a director who can wield enormous power with restraint and good judgment.
|
|
How does a person wield the Internet as a force for growth and good, like Hughes?
|
|
Now they are less certain that individual federal judges should be able to wield such power.
|
|
From the start, his opponents predicted its demise, questioning only which scandal might wield the axe.
|
|
But Qanon followers wield outsize influence because of their presence on other social media, particularly Twitter.
|
|
This is even truer given congressional abdication of the foreign policy responsibility it ought to wield.
|
|
Yet they may prove hard to resist for a president eager to wield his protectionist pen.
|
|
They keep enough of their profits to live in luxury, wield influence and acquire social status.
|
|
This time the weapon will be in the hands of those who want to wield it.
|
|
But like it or not, the presiding officer will likely wield immense power in the trial.
|
|
I think they have a responsibility in all of this because of the power they wield.
|
|
Brokers can also use the relationships they wield to make their case for more shelf-space.
|
|
Alas, it would also involve those who wield power deferring to the rights of individual workers.
|
|
These men know exactly what's going on, and they wield their power to get their way.
|
|
Few want to risk falling out of favor with the men who wield power over them.
|
|
But Trump was able to successfully wield misconduct accusations against Bill Clinton to muddy the waters.
|
|
Dual-wield weapons in Raw Data Dual-wield weapons in Raw Data Thanks to the HTC Vive VR headset and its motion cameras you place in the corners of a room, you can actually run around a 15-foot by 15-foot space inside Raw Data.
|
|
It states that Azor Ahai will wield the sword Lightbringer to save everyone from the Long Night.
|
|
The East African nation has several kingdoms, whose kings wield considerable social clout but little political influence.
|
|
We have to learn how to obtain it and wield it to create the world we want.
|
|
A Pakistani barber who somehow manages to wield 15 pairs of scissors simultaneously is making waves online.
|
|
More importantly, Locke said, the people must be careful in how they wield the right to rebel.
|
|
That in turn may encourage Turkey to wield its influence among Muslims in Bosnia, Kosovo and Albania.
|
|
But he was often frustrated by the countries on the Security Council, which wield the real power.
|
|
Rank-and-file members, like Johnson was in 1940, wield little power vis-à-vis party leaders.
|
|
Many political observers believe she'll never again be able to wield power effectively due to the scandal.
|
|
It's sort of like Thor's Mjölnir in the sense that only those deemed worthy can wield it.
|
|
Given Jesse's poor showing, it's no surprise that various powers think he's unfit to wield Genesis' power.
|
|
The main characters might wield powers reserved for wizards, but they're really stockbrokers, lawyers, or urban planners.
|
|
The early years of photography were formative for establishing many of the ways we wield photographs today.
|
|
It does, however, come with adjustable straps so you can wield it just like the Cap' does.
|
|
He's fascinated by power and knows that Peter is a means by which he can wield it.
|
|
Instead, we should consider the different kinds of formal and informal power that individual presidents can wield.
|
|
Future advocates of such schemes will be able to wield more convincing data to make their case.
|
|
LPs, especially, wield an out-sized amount of leverage over VC firms in the current Valley structure.
|
|
Nonetheless, EAGLE's favourites for the US Open are mostly familiar faces, many of whom wield potent drivers.
|
|
That said, the full moon at the end of the month will wield an entirely different influence.
|
|
As his investigation progressed, Fisten said he saw Epstein wield power to try and silence his accusers.
|
|
It found that Florida had given judges powers that juries should wield in determining eligibility for execution.
|
|
Equally, these states wield violence in a manner which is often indistinguishable from that of terror groups.
|
|
Marketers and much of the media tend to be quite careless in how we wield generational labels.
|
|
The added scrutiny puts him in a position to wield tremendous power on this and all issues.
|
|
Unlike on the Security Council, however, the U.S. does not wield veto power in the General Assembly.
|
|
Our top trade partner last year, China, is also likely to speak loudly but wield no stick.
|
|
Still, he acknowledges the tenuousness of his status in a country where religious conservatives wield great power.
|
|
These companies can wield their buying relationships with suppliers to convince them to go green, he says.
|
|
They wield wide discretion, including over what charges to bring and whether to enter a plea negotiation.
|
|
Excess liquidity has prompted a supply and demand imbalance, leaving the biggest funds to wield less power.
|
|
But to reverse environmental loss, we need to change some of the ways we wield those tools.
|
|
You will die if you don't figure out the right strategy, or wield your battle axe strategically.
|
|
You have the power to make this happen, and I trust you to wield that power responsibly.
|
|
The latter could allow Mr. Xi to continue to wield power behind the scenes after he retires.
|
|
American presidents, of course, can't dictate global trends on their own, but they nevertheless wield enormous influence.
|
|
I am furious that a few small states can smugly wield their power to weed out candidates.
|
|
The move by GOP leaders severely hamstrings King's ability to wield influence as a member of Congress.
|
|
In that world, the ability to creatively wield the powers of the executive branch will matter enormously.
|
|
Mr. Richburg said worries about how the government would wield immigration laws would reverberate beyond the media.
|
|
In many states, governors will wield a veto pen over the new House and state legislative maps.
|
|
But it is about power — and the magnetic figureheads who wield it, young and handsome or no.
|
|
It turns out that machines don't have to be superhuman or superintelligent to wield power over us.
|
|
And subnational governments often wield a substantial amount of soft power that can help America's image abroad.
|
|
As both a writer and a performer, Ms. Peterson knows how to wield tenderness to leaven despair.
|
|
It previews a possible line of attack that Democrats would wield against Trump during the general election.
|
|
Reformers who know how to wield power within the system can sometimes succeed — revolutionaries almost always fail.
|
|
But his announcement on Sunday means he can continue to wield such power in the intervening period.
|
|
It is important to remember that the IRS does not wield ultimate authority in America -- taxpayers do.
|
|
On Sunday, Park denied Choi was allowed to wield undue and wide-reaching influence over state affairs.
|
|
While Mr. Kim may wield tremendous power, his longevity as North Korea's undisputed leader is not guaranteed.
|
|
Teen girls wield a large amount of cultural capital, often determining which brands and celebrities become popular.
|
|
Those elected or appointed to government positions wield significant influence as the custodians of our nation's authority.
|
|
Several Taliban sources said Akhundzada did not wield the same influence over Helmand that Mansour once did.
|
|
It comes as Democrats prepare to wield new investigative power after winning a House majority in 2018.
|
|
In every era, there are leaders who wield fear and greed like an instrument to play people.
|
|
Yet, Pelosi's longevity has increasingly exasperated newer lawmakers who want to wield more power within the caucus.
|
|
It also has barely dented the president's appetite for material he can wield against his domestic rivals.
|
|
But probably where "gender critical" feminism has the potential to wield the most influence is in government.
|
|
Eroding confidence in voting, elections and representative bodies gives them a freer hand to wield more power.
|
|
Lawmakers in Punjab wield huge power over education, law enforcement and billions of dollars in development funds.
|
|
But the most consequential leaks — many of them more like floods — are those that wield political power.
|
|
Polk's willful self-deception is linked to her ability to wield power while denying she possessed it.
|
|
The temptation to wield whatever power one has to humiliate perceived inferiors sadly knows no political bounds.
|
|
Republicans who fight above all for a balanced budget no longer wield the power they once had.
|
|
And yet within the walls of California's high-domed capitol, tobacco companies continue to wield surprising power.
|
|
Obviously, states and major institutions still wield a tremendous amount of power, but the balance is shifting.
|
|
The bottom line: Women wield an incredible amount of voting power, but it still comes down to turnout.
|
|
Tech dynamos like Google and Facebook delight consumers, but these companies increasingly wield unsettling economic and social power.
|
|
The establishment and their media neighbors wield control over this nation through means that are very well-known.
|
|
The establishment and their media neighbors wield control over this nation through means that are very well known.
|
|
When we wield spiritual power rather than political power, Christians become a force for good – in any country.
|
|
Conway and Spicer have to wield more credibility in the coming years for the good of the country.
|
|
And US ambassadors to China do typically wield real influence, especially when it comes to bilateral economic ties.
|
|
But Trump's willingness to wield these diplomatic tools are also a painful reminder of Britain's diminished global clout.
|
|
The PSD might therefore opt for a less divisive figure, leaving Dragnea to wield influence behind the scenes.
|
|
China is passing through it, too, but its one-party state can wield a big stick at polluters.
|
|
Apple, along with other tech giants, have increasingly faced complaints about the amount of power they now wield.
|
|
Necromancers wield powerful death magic to raise armies of zombies and channel the dark forces of the netherworld.
|
|
With either the greens or the liberals, the old EPP-s&D alliance would still wield a majority.
|
|
But few investors dare inject money into a country where sheikhs and militias wield more influence than judges.
|
|
The more influence voters exerted over any single issue, the less they would be able to wield elsewhere.
|
|
By squeezing the grips on the Vive's hand-held motion controllers, you can grab and dual wield them.
|
|
In learning to recognize legitimate shame from toxic shame, we can wield shame as a tool for growth.
|
|
They wield an enormous megaphone as they argue that advertising companies aren't aligned or concerned with user privacy.
|
|
Link, for instance, now wears his tunic from Breath of the Wild, and he can wield remote bombs.
|
|
"Big tech companies like Amazon, Facebook, and Google wield enormous, monopolistic power," Elizabeth Warren tweeted following Barr's statement.
|
|
South Korean presidents wield huge authority with little oversight—a legacy of a long period of military dictatorship.
|
|
He doesn't wield the Force and he lacks hands, so he mostly just rolls around and makes noise.
|
|
In a region where governments wield political and financial power over producers, television is a bellwether for politics.
|
|
To build a web app is to wield these libraries and architectural patterns, usually several at a time.
|
|
Any man that can wield a hammer like he does as "Thor" can absolutely kick some spy tail.
|
|
Pennsylvania-based Democratic strategist Aren Platt said that farmers may wield an outsize influence for Trump's conservative base.
|
|
By April 2008, he was extolling the powers that a "superregulator" might wield over Wall Street one day.
|
|
Fortunately, Donald lacks the complex understanding required to wield these powers to their full extent, if at all.
|
|
A new director would wield immense authority in setting the agency's agenda and could narrow its mission overnight.
|
|
Global sporting organizations like FIFA and the IOC wield immense power -- but with that power comes great responsibility.
|
|
On Twitter, Mark Hamill—Luke Skywalker himself—jeered at Pai, calling him "profoundly unworthy" to wield a lightsaber.
|
|
Together they wield an arsenal of tanks, ballistic missiles and, at one point, even the odd fighter-jet.
|
|
The scary part of the game isn't the zombies, not when you can wield a sword like Michonne.
|
|
The two nations often vote in tandem at the UN Security Council, where both wield permanent member vetoes.
|
|
If everyone begins using that app, it starts to represent power Apple can wield against companies like Netflix.
|
|
They typically vote in a bloc, which has enabled them to wield outsized political influence in the state.
|
|
This suggests that Doomfist isn't a single person, but a title given to people who wield powerful gauntlets.
|
|
She will wield more authority than the president—her ally, Htin Kyaw—in the new, more democratic, government.
|
|
She took her character's trademark swordplay to the extreme, leaning how to wield and handle a weapon herself.
|
|
We would have a president not empowered to declare emergencies and wield powers given to him by Congress.
|
|
Exactly how the police will wield power under this law will become known when it goes into effect.
|
|
Questions continue to swirl about the degree of autonomy and influence he will wield in the White House.
|
|
" Bearded protesters behind Wilders wield signs reading, "Infidels, Know Your Limits" and "Freedom of Speech Go To Hell.
|
|
Will he wield his Twitter account for building up others and not just himself or tearing down others?
|
|
Iran would wield far greater influence than Somali pirates if it were allowed to threaten Bab-el-Mandeb.
|
|
Girls are cut during initiations into powerful secret societies – known as the Bondo - which wield significant political clout.
|
|
Perhaps he believes that he can regain control of the situation and wield the power he once had.
|
|
It is difficult to overstate the power that partisans wield when drawing district boundaries for seats in Congress.
|
|
Captain America got to save the universe, wield Mjolnir, and managed to get the girl in the end.
|
|
Celebrities wield huge power on this platform and often use it to advocate for charities they care about.
|
|
As the coasts, Asia, and Europe concentrate their power the Midwest is finally learning how to wield it.
|
|
How could a person wield that weapon so beautifully, so delicately, as to make such a wonderful sculpture?
|
|
If his party and its coalition partners win a majority in Congress, he could wield even more power.
|
|
They no longer wield the red pen just on the basis of what they see in the accounts.
|
|
Chappell also said that Green continued to wield control over the business through a 35 million pound loan.
|
|
Unlike any other American city, brokers in New York City wield near monopolistic power over the rental market.
|
|
Unlike any other American city, brokers in New York City wield near monopolistic power over the rental market.
|
|
"How much influence they wield, it's unhealthy," said Frank Pangello, Mr. Xenophon's media adviser in the recent election.
|
|
Iran's system still privileges authoritarian elements alongside and often above democratic elements; hard-liners still wield tremendous power.
|
|
Some Iraqi media outlets said the attack came from there, where Iran-backed paramilitary groups wield increasing power.
|
|
Some Iraqi media outlets said the attack originated from there, where Iran-backed paramilitary groups wield increasing power.
|
|
They are wealthier and therefore wield tremendous economic power and all of the influence that comes with it.
|
|
I was nervous about the amount of power the stranger behind the door might wield over my future.
|
|
Indeed, we are well aware that private developers wield enormous influence on the everyday lives of the public.
|
|
At City Hall staff meetings, Ms. McCray often remains quiet, presumably preferring to wield her opinion in private.
|
|
Your son may prefer to let these comments slide, or he may want to wield the zinger himself.
|
|
Putin has shown his intention to wield this weapon, and we have not yet found a good defense.
|
|
Typically, though, lawmakers do not wield this leverage quite this publicly, particularly on such a highly charged issue.
|
|
If he can't get House Democrats to cooperate, he'll wield his executive authority to demonstrate his personal power.
|
|
Electing more women to office normalizes the idea that women and other marginalized groups can wield power effectively.
|
|
And as such, NRA members do show up to vote and wield extreme influence in closed Republican primaries.
|
|
By April 2008, he was extolling the powers that a "superregulator" might wield over Wall Street one day.
|
|
Insurers should also be free to wield their clout by refusing to cover high cost, low benefit drugs.
|
|
They encouraged viewers to wield a golf club and strike an imaginary ball from atop a baby mannequin.
|
|
It is one of the main reasons why armed groups no longer wield the power they once enjoyed.
|
|
Take those trappings you resent so much — cooking, gardening, bearing children — embrace them, then wield them like weapons.
|
|
For all the power CEOs wield, they can't add hours on the clock or days to the calendar.
|
|
"That was like, OK, you've got some real power here that you can wield," Jayapal said last month.
|
|
Allowing Syria to wield such weapons with impunity risked normalizing them and might embolden others to use them.
|
|
Does he long for the power these men wield — or does he long to yield to their power?
|
|
What are the moral responsibilities of performers with huge fan bases in terms of how they wield them?
|
|
So now Alsup wants them to prove it with documentation of just how much control these companies wield.
|
|
His detention has led to scrutiny of the power that prosecutors wield in the Japanese criminal justice system.
|
|
Just because pot may pack hidden health benefits doesn't mean science has figured out how to wield them.
|
|
However, Bilawal's father, former President Asif Ali Zardari, is thought to wield the real power within the party.
|
|
But what really irks them is how Qatar has used Al Jazeera to wield outsize influence in the region.
|
|
Often these women wield tools for horticulture or harvest, their shared generative efforts highlighting the general absence of men.
|
|
During the lengthy Hollywood Reporter interview, Oprah was asked how she would wield her influence in the 2020 election.
|
|
Internet-connected devices are oftentimes marketed as a cheap and easy way to wield more control over your home.
|
|
Yet stars continued to work for the producer, who also knew how to wield his temper in their favor.
|
|
They deftly wield a blade too large to be useful and ride a black steed made entirely of muscles.
|
|
I have always been about the power that we wield as female emcees — our drive, our strength in numbers.
|
|
I'm not exactly sure how long hosts have been able to wield such disconcerting power over their invited guests.
|
|
Most importantly, women capable of fostering sweeping change will wield disproportionate leverage in our politics, business communities and economy.
|
|
Incentives matter, but wield them with care The discipline of behavioral economics is fundamentally about the study of incentives.
|
|
Now that, relatively speaking, the security situation has improved Iraqis no longer have patience with those who wield power.
|
|
Learning how to wield a pencil isn't quite synonymous with forcing yourself to learn how to carry a tune.
|
|
You can knock the crap out the enemies, avoid flaming arrows, and wield excalibur — just like the real Arthur!
|
|
Jody Allen isn't someone most people have heard of, but she'll wield enormous power in the next few years.
|
|
Many asked about the benefits to Russia and Iran, who now stand to wield even greater influence in Syria.
|
|
DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who was supposed to wield the gavel at the convention, instead announced her resignation.
|
|
This is a power I was born with, and I wield it with the discipline of a Shaolin monk.
|
|
How that tool is used—for good or evil—depends on how accountable the people are who wield it.
|
|
As a result, these agencies wield extraordinary power — effectively deciding who works with whom, and which movies get made.
|
|
Their investment into the Time bid caused concerns that they would try to wield influence over Time's editorial agenda.
|
|
They are ways of helping a surgeon wield his instruments more precisely than if he were holding them directly.
|
|
But the establishment of a parallel party structure has given them a chance to wield power and peacock around.
|
|
Though confined to a few rooms inside the embassy, Assange was able to wield enormous authority over his situation.
|
|
And research is making it strikingly clear that these microbes wield a formidable level of control over our lives.
|
|
But the racist movement that grew from Spencer's and Regnery's efforts continues to wield considerable influence in American culture.
|
|
You wield a variety of weapons — alone or with a friend — in VR as zombie hordes march ever-forward.
|
|
But to many mothers, who wield family recipes like a sword, microwaving a turkey is an abomination to tradition.
|
|
Corporations could not wield influence by hiring ex-lawmakers and Cabinet members to lobby the government on their behalf.
|
|
They succeeded in retaking the House of Representatives, so now they actually have to wield the power they earned.
|
|
But new emerging players are threatening to topple whatever dominance Apple and Samsung currently wield in the smartphone market.
|
|
Ergo, it seems unlikely, post-brexit, the UK will be positioned to wield such EU-wide legislative influence again.
|
|
Once I felt like I could wield a cock and dominate someone in that way, things flipped for me.
|
|
Gone is the bashful ignorance of a person who doesn't know how to wield his body or his words.
|
|
In retrospect, that may have been because there was little power to wield between November 9 and January 20.
|
|
Some politicians have opposed a deal, citing concerns about the influence Murdoch would wield over the UK's news agenda.
|
|
Still, Amazon might find that some large investors with much more clout than we have, can wield their influence.
|
|
But even a first lady who minds her p's and q's can wield an awesome wand of soft power.
|
|
Hamilton believed that the federal government had to wield considerable power to steer a successful path for the country.
|
|
Far from empowering the Speaker to wield excessive power, the legislative process should promote the will of the majority.
|
|
Its workers, the special forces of mosquito control, wield sprayers loaded with pesticide, mostly on behalf of local governments.
|
|
In what Mukherjee calls the "post-genomic" world, we will wield a power as exhilarating as it is treacherous.
|
|
Players can wield the controllers like whips to drive the wagons and aim them to shoot animals for food.
|
|
It exists to give people control over those who wield power, and those who have power often want more.
|
|
Trump's supporters have countered that he was calling for gun owners to wield their political influence at the polls.
|
|
Instead, voters have moved behind outsiders or insurgents, leaving the governors to wield little influence over the 2016 race.
|
|
The health care industry is flush with cash, and insurers use campaign contributions to wield substantial influence in Congress.
|
|
Memory is another deceptive weapon that Camille is still learning to wield; without it, she can't control her narrative.
|
|
The biggest issue, though, is the totality of control the association allows coaches and schools to wield over athletes.
|
|
Now Trump is signaling that he won't wield the US's peerless influence to try to ward off said threats.
|
|
First, we must acknowledge the way we wield those words, how we treat the bodies we assign to them.
|
|
I am suggesting that artists take a page from the CIA playbook and wield the soft power of art.
|
|
Their very weight in the cluster and the tremendous influence they wield makes them ripe for corruption and malfeasance.
|
|
The ultimate goal is to assert one's influence through a widely disseminated image or story and wield that power.
|
|
He soon got a sour taste of the power a ruling party could wield when it drew political boundaries.
|
|
Or they wield them like implements — punt poles, divining rods, balancing poles, spears used as if to catch fish.
|
|
Good rejects the idea that killing zombies in make-believe makes people want to wield weapons in real life.
|
|
And he didn't call his opponent a faggot in London like that's an okay slur to wield in public.
|
|
The pair soon wield saws and other sharp objects in a series of manic attempts to off their offspring.
|
|
In that post she was said to wield more operational power than the mayor and the City Council combined.
|
|
Fermi wielded a six-inch slide rule as we today wield our iPhones, to plumb the essence of events.
|
|
Private equity has gravitated toward specialties like emergency medicine and anesthesia because a few companies wield enormous market power.
|
|
They'll also need to satisfy President Trump, who will wield a veto pen at the end of the day.
|
|
There is no way I'd want to see that boy given a lifelong appointment to wield power over others.
|
|
Both enjoy the great deal of power they each wield and relish the ability to use that power brutally.
|
|
Technology executives have been loath to accept much or any responsibility for the power they and their businesses wield.
|
|
Many of them spent 2019 detailing how they would wield government as a scalpel to surgically remove America's blemishes.
|
|
" Confederate statues, she added, wield a symbolic "tyranny" whose mere presence underscores "its power and importance, rather than virtue.
|
|
It's only in this week's episode that Fred's ability to deftly wield benevolent sexism to his advantage becomes undeniable.
|
|
Students will give speeches and wield handmade signs to make sure they're heard over the city's formidable din. Jan.
|
|
Of course, it is important to ensure that prosecutors who wield so much power are accountable to the public.
|
|
It is far from the first time Trump has vowed to wield presidential power to further his political goals.
|
|
Ownage just turns that self-confidence back outward: Now we wield our superior knowledge and skills over our rivals.
|
|
That's because big retail chains like Wal-Mart that wield considerable power over manufacturers insulate shoppers against rising prices.
|
|
In news reports, Ms. Park has also been accused of letting Ms. Choi wield undue influence in state affairs.
|
|
Ask yourself: can you say with confidence what the Democratic agenda is, and how they intend to wield power?
|
|
But it may be that the power women wield outside their own places of employment helps even the game.
|
|
"Mental health professionals wield a tremendous amount of influence over their patients," Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said.
|
|
Zuma and the wealthy Gupta family, which is alleged to wield undue influence over the president, have denied wrongdoing.
|
|
Yet, these tools can't compete with the power that Google, Amazon, and Facebook wield to fuel these bad deals.
|
|
Still, threatening to cut aid is a high-profile way for the United States to wield its global influence.
|
|
Could he wield threat of an expanded travel ban to ensure his hotels and condos get preferential treatment overseas?
|
|
The fact that a small number of conservative media outlets wield such disproportionate influence creates an opportunity for Germany.
|
|
But if congressional leaders refuse to wield their constitutional power of the purse, the results will be much worse.
|
|
I don't have that power or influence, but what I do wield is a different kind of bully pulpit.
|
|
That's because principals wield enormous power as a result of court decisions, school board policies and state education codes.
|
|
Another question hanging over the meeting is whether the hard-liners in the White House will wield their influence.
|
|
House Democrats will wield the speaker's gavel once again, and with it, the power to investigate the Trump administration.
|
|
Hackers can easily wield the device to collect sensitive personal information from unsuspecting users on public Wi-Fi networks.
|
|
It's a game where you can wield a motorcycle like a sword and juggle monsters using a pair of pistols.
|
|
But the omnipresent gun you wield also serves as a tool that does a lot more than shoot bad guys.
|
|
Maybe the Code once managed prison's savage elements, but some men weaponize it and wield it to maintain their influence.
|
|
It opens up ideas about who can access and wield power in ways that can be unsettling and provoke backlash.
|
|
Smugglers also wield enormous power, determining when and where migrants move and sleep, and if their debt has been repaid.
|
|
By analyzing the metadata of employee communications, one can uncover patterns that demonstrate which individuals wield greater influence and trust.
|
|
It's a great tool to wield, but shouldn't be too heavily relied upon for your core team of full timers.
|
|
As he pointed out over and over, prosecutors wield more discretionary power than anyone else in the criminal justice system.
|
|
How she will wield the power that comes with her unique place in the White House remains to be seen.
|
|
Gillum's emergence as the surprise Democratic nominee, however, didn't have anything to do with his ability to wield a knife.
|
|
Players can wield one in each hand, or combine them into a unique super-weapon by holding their hands together.
|
|
If Democrats pursue the fourth serious presidential impeachment effort in American history, Nadler would wield the gavel when it starts.
|
|
Naturally, this involves hordes of monsters ranging from giant bugs with explosive abdomens to floating masks that wield giant scissors.
|
|
In Original Sin, issue 7, Nick Fury whispers something to Thor which makes him Thor unworthy to wield his hammer.
|
|
But if Russia decides to wield its power more forcefully this will only add to the problems in the Arctic.
|
|
In his letter from prison, Mr Cakici boasted about the power his men wield within the police and the army.
|
|
Last year Russia, Turkey and Iran agreed "de-escalation" zones to ease hostilities in western Syria where they wield influence.
|
|
But it still sees itself as just a tool, with the direction of progress defined by those who wield it.
|
|
She dreams of escaping its traditions, and learns how to wield a mysterious power known as the Song of Usgar.
|
|
He's already the capable king of a thriving nation, so if anyone knows how to wield great power it's him.
|
|
It's the kind of place where you could wield bioengineered weapons while riding a dragon through a medieval-style village.
|
|
Almost all companies, including the privately owned tech stars, will continue to have party cells that wield back-room influence.
|
|
"The job of the Galactic President was not to wield power but to attract attention away from it," writes Adams.
|
|
Adversarial journalism is critical for making democracy healthier and checking people who wield great power in ways that are constructive.
|
|
There are also some useful new weapons, including my personal favorite, a pair of paint pistols you can dual-wield.
|
|
Communicating with recruiters is one way for tech workers to wield influence even if the companies aren't currently employing them.
|
|
The title describes people who can wield magic wands, but the hows and whys of that are never clearly explained.
|
|
It's incredibly satisfying, especially if you've spent a lifetime only imagining what it would be like to wield the Force.
|
|
If you want to make a statement among the crowd, then you can also wield her sword, the God Killer.
|
|
At the same time, television news is centered on celebrity anchors and hosts who wield a disproportionate amount of power.
|
|
The intervention is rare for a sitting Thai monarch, who are granted limited formal powers but wield significant political influence.
|
|
And while lobbyists may be reviled, they wield a huge amount of power behind the scenes in shaping American government.
|
|
Under a revised constitution, the presidency is now largely ceremonial and the prime minister and government wield most executive power.
|
|
There will be no secret and no pretense, as Ohtani's splitter is the perfect weapon to wield in this moment.
|
|
Fortunately, after a quick e-mail, the boss appeared and affably arranged for another secretary to wield the rubber stamp.
|
|
At the same time, there are a ton of pressure groups that focus entirely on trying to wield political power.
|
|
What makes Negan a fascinating character is how he picks and chooses the moments to wield violence and show force.
|
|
To wield the test for her own purposes, Ms Hicks arranged for participants to work through several sets of words.
|
|
Under the constitution, the prime minister and his cabinet colleagues wield executive power and the president remains above the fray.
|
|
Critics say the electoral contest will be set up to ensure the military continues to wield influence over Thailand's politics.
|
|
Israel described as "shameful" the decision by the United States to abstain in the vote rather than wield its veto.
|
|
What's often overlooked in this equation are ordinary American citizens and how they wield the state's power against each other.
|
|
Bill Cassidy (R-La.) is trying to assess how much clout he would wield through his access to the floor.
|
|
If women, for instance, wield power more humanely than men, will that difference remain when more women have more power?
|
|
Texas isn't commonly associated with corrupt union bargaining, but the state's biennial legislature shows how much power public unions wield.
|
|
Calls for a Democratic presidential candidate who can "bring this country together" wrongly assume a candidate can wield such power.
|
|
Erdogan and the AKP want the head of state, currently a largely ceremonial post, to wield much greater political powers.
|
|
Read more: 'Avengers: Endgame' directors give their take on why Captain America didn't wield Thor's hammer in 'Age of Ultron'
|
|
This idea became known as mutually assured destruction, in which countries wield nuclear weapons primarily to deter other nuclear powers.
|
|
They thought the military had been depoliticized, stripped of those who would undermine democracy to wield the power of force.
|
|
It's no slight against other states to note that James will wield slightly more power than the typical attorney general.
|
|
The justices ruled that Florida judges were given powers that juries should wield in deciding eligibility for the death penalty.
|
|
Mr. Kushner is likely to wield great influence over the new president regardless of whether he holds a formal title.
|
|
Since venture capitalists work heavily in this startup space, they wield power based on the companies in which they invest.
|
|
Books of The Times Some writers, like locksmiths, wield a master key with which they attempt to open life's mysteries.
|
|
Wielding power by giving it up Sometimes, the best way to wield power is, at first, to give it up.
|
|
By analysing the metadata of employee communications, one can uncover patterns that demonstrate which individuals wield greater influence and trust.
|
|
There are plenty of people in Washington who still wield influence and persuade officials without actually being registered as lobbyists.
|
|
But they disagree about how much they should wield it as a weapon in their battle to take back Congress.
|
|
And though the remix artists are experimentalists, they also unassailably wield a lot of clout in today's electronic music landscape.
|
|
Many have recognized the power they wield as employees of companies that depend on them for a healthy bottom line.
|
|
Economists are quietly asking whether an escalating trade war could tempt the country to wield its so-called nuclear option.
|
|
Noonan really was one of Albany's great shadowy eminences; 15 years after her death, she still seems to wield power.
|
|
It can't be a realistic portrait; Mr. Harrison could hardly wield those tools so expertly if his hands were shaking.
|
|
Back up dancers wield large flags as CL struts around the stage in a jumpsuit and thigh high cowboy boots.
|
|
Using that power to preemptively wield influence over a potential witness in a case, however, is a different matter altogether.
|
|
As the familiar refrain goes: The state is too old, too rural and far too white to wield such clout.
|
|
Ms. Pressley conceded that the left had work to do to figure out how to wield its power more effectively.
|
|
His vision of how to wield American power has a lot going for it in a crisis like this one.
|
|
In his previous novels Benedict Wells said that he had tended to wield "irony and sarcasm" to deal with loss.
|
|
Fans wield all manner of noise makers — clappers, pairs of plastic bats, small vuvuzelas — pretty much nonstop for nine innings.
|
|
Mr. Azar appears to be a joyful regulator, eager to wield his power to change the way medicine is practiced.
|
|
" In The Atlantic, Peter Beinart writes that "although conservatives dominate America's elected offices, liberals wield the greater power to stigmatize.
|
|
Presidents — who, as Madison noted, wield the power and wear the laurels of war — have an incentive to encourage this.
|
|
Recent weeks have witnessed a curious constitutional inversion: legislators eager to surrender power to a president reluctant to wield it.
|
|
Those can only destroy, and they destroy those who wield them as surely as those against whom they are employed.
|
|
In the absence of more conventional campaigning, these tech companies will wield more power over American politics than ever before.
|
|
It's also a debate over who gets to define millennial politics as that generation begins to wield its political might.
|
|
The remarks from the hosts also raise concern given how much influence figures like Hannity and Limbaugh wield over Trump.
|
|
Congress, not the White House, sets tariff levels, but some remain concerned about the way Trump might wield executive power.
|
|
Trump has come under scrutiny for his attempts to wield the power of the Justice Department against his perceived enemies.
|
|
Mao Zedong's theories inspired many groups fighting for decolonization and minorities' rights, giving Beijing an opportunity to wield international influence.
|
|
Tea Party leaders "understood how to wield political power and made two critical strategic decisions," Levin, Greenberg and Padilla write.
|
|
Hitmen wield Kalashnikovs made in China and the Czech Republic and sold in the United States to murder in Mexico.
|
|
In addition to her spending proposals, Warren also wants to wield the government's power to help consumers and smaller businesses.
|
|
But the ability to grab power does not grant the wisdom to wield it, and ungrounded grandiosity is just pretension.
|
|
Beyond the fate of the current wide-ranging investigations and pending prosecutions is a power that Trump alone does wield.
|
|
In an 8-1 decision on Tuesday, U.S. justices found that Florida unconstitutionally gives judges powers that juries should wield.
|
|
To boost growth, he intends to bring back tools employed by Ms Fernández's administration—but to wield them more deftly.
|
|
The more delegates Sanders wins, the more power he believes he'll wield at the convention and in talks with Clinton.
|
|
Donald Trump is the kind of leader who could wield outsized American influence to forever change the international world order.
|
|
McDormand was offering a fix: a contractual obligation that actors and filmmakers could potentially wield to increase diversity in productions.
|
|
What we can do, however, is attempt to determine how much power each of them wield in our cultural consciousness.
|
|
Hotel staff, for instance, might wield tight-lipped smiles and impeccable manners during exchanges with even the most disagreeable travelers.
|
|
Which suggests that neither he nor Trump has ever appreciated the breadth, and the nuances, of the power they collectively wield.
|
|
That, along with fight training to help him wield Aquaman's trident, prepared Momoa for the role and maintain his 230-lb.
|
|
This year, you're becoming the person who's big enough, brave enough, and loving enough to wield the power positive change requires.
|
|
Many Republicans deride that plan as amnesty for lawbreakers, a potential attack line their next primary challenger could wield against them.
|
|
Like most Democrats, Pelosi understands that someone has to stop President Donald Trump from continuing to wield his authority this way.
|
|
But Beijing doesn't wield as much influence over Kim Jong Un as it did over his father and grandfather, experts said.
|
|
By contrast, the teens in this recent spate of films embrace their outsider status and wield it as a defense mechanism.
|
|
In his telling, those who undermine Christianity's preeminent status in American society are the ones who wield and abuse their power.
|
|
Organized groups oppose many of those changes and, in our political system, organized interests generally wield more power than diffuse interests.
|
|
The white supremacist message is just an unashamed, vocal expression of something a lot of those who wield power feel subconsciously.
|
|
Iron Man, be strong enough to bicep curl a helicopter like Captain America, or wield tornadoes like the X-Men's Storm.
|
|
The president reminded us not to be afraid of change, but to wield it to improve the lives of all Americans.
|
|
Obama was not in charge of the Illinois state Senate and did not wield the kind of control that Rubio did.
|
|
Delve into the merger documents, though, and it doesn't look as if the main goal is to wield influence at Meredith.
|
|
With one phone call, they can wield the lethal weaponry of law enforcement like a cudgel in their personal, petty disputes.
|
|
Byzantine structures allow the sons and grandsons of company founders to wield great influence, whether or not they have controlling stakes.
|
|
Mr Gillum adamantly opposes school choice, presumably in deference to the teachers' unions who wield considerable power within the Democratic Party.
|
|
It's all too easy for these scammers to wield the power of the internet and fire off countless calls with ease.
|
|
But if you love books, and enjoy watching women wield whatever power is at their disposal, then I highly recommend it.
|
|
Spreading democratic ideals is not a consistent priority for the United States; it increasingly wants to wield power from a distance.
|
|
Right now Inkopolis has a darker vibe than usual, and teams order and chaos wield silver and gold ink in battle.
|
|
The nature of campaign financing has played a big role, but so has the declining power labor unions wield in America.
|
|
IN MEDIEVAL England, quarreling with the pope was a game with high stakes for anyone who wanted to wield earthly power.
|
|
Plus, she turned out to wield an eerily automatic understanding of a counter-intuitively tricky instrument if there ever was one.
|
|
Some U.S. Democrats remain concerned, however, that despite the various checks and balances, Deripaska may still be able to wield influence.
|
|
Li would become one of China's most powerful so-called princelings, or members of elite families that continue to wield influence.
|
|
Sanders has railed against "millionaires and billionaires" and the political power they wield throughout his insurgent campaign for the Democratic nomination.
|
|
Chao could wield a lot of power in the Trump administration, as the president-elect has made infrastructure a top priority.
|
|
But given the company's aggressive moves around real-time sharing, the survey suggests yet another way Facebook can wield its dominance.
|
|
YouTube and streaming services such as Spotify can often wield more influence than radio in shaping a musician's exposure to music.
|
|
Yet the prevalence of so many former fighting men in civilian office highlights the influence that armies still wield in politics.
|
|
But as he rages against Mississippi's woeful education system, he knows these blights demand bigger tools than a mayor can wield.
|
|
But because, like most women, I know firsthand that the power men wield in our society routinely emboldens and corrupts them.
|
|
However, when we discovered that we could wield it as well, our planet became a battleground for the next five centuries.
|
|
Hands tied In effect, the Trump administration can't wield a bigger stick in Pakistan because it knows its hands are tied.
|
|
He portrayed a U.S. in need of more economic and military might and himself as a leader eager to wield both.
|
|
Experts say sometimes bystanders see the victim as less important than the person committing the crime, who appears to wield power.
|
|
But district attorneys wield enormous power, too, and it is frequently overlooked or is cloaked in a kind of institutional invisibility.
|
|
While Democrats have long seen power as something to accrue and wield responsibly, they typically do little more than hoard it.
|
|
Elizabeth Warren, a presidential candidate who has said tech titans like Amazon wield too much power and should be broken up.
|
|
Today, it is possible for outside groups to wield more power and influence than the candidates themselves, and that is wrong.
|
|
Some of the firefighters wield eight-foot poles with mats attached to the end, and slap them down on the fires.
|
|
Ian will need to learn how to wield the magic powers Barley has obsessed over for years, but clearly doesn't posses.
|
|
A boost for American biofuels is a blow against forces that would wield oil as a weapon against our national interests.
|
|
Over the last four days, however, he has forsaken whatever moral or democratic authority he once had to wield those powers.
|
|
It's heavily hinted ahead of time twice that a regular human can't wield the stones and live to tell the tale.
|
|
Rather than fighting directly, they wield and in that way worsen the region's direst problems: dictatorship, militia violence and religious extremism.
|
|
The investigation will be the first Congress has ever conducted into how Silicon Valley's dominant platforms wield their vast market power.
|
|
Two sources familiar with his role say this is because he does not have the hiring power he expected to wield.
|
|
No other manager has been in his current job as long as Scioscia, and few, if any, wield as much power.
|
|
"Anyone who laughs at the ultimate assault on the dignity of women should not be allowed to wield power," Roxas said.
|
|
But if the Trump administration is in the process weakening US emissions goals, how much influence can they plausibly wield here?
|
|
The Dual Shock is represented in-game as a hovering ball, one you wield by lifting the controller and moving around.
|
|
Kanter can still picture the wood switch his first-grade teacher used to wield at students who fell out of line.
|
|
Worse still for the MSM, it's now arguably the case that the conservative media wield more political power than they do.
|
|
It was a quiet signal that she would wield significant power in his administration, and a hint of her political ambitions.
|
|
It's not that higher math is required to wield a hammer (that's what it's called, by the way, not a gavel).
|
|
His father, former President Asif Ali Zardari, is considered to wield the real power in the left-leaning Pakistan Peoples Party.
|
|
Many entrepreneurs worried that, without net neutrality provisions, internet providers would wield their increased power to control how businesses reach consumers.
|
|
Al Mutlaq says that even though the war is officially over, these militia continue to wield considerable power over government institutions.
|
|
Its roughly 210 stations, the most of any American broadcaster, still wield considerable hitmaking power, even in the age of streaming.
|
|
He had scant respect for any of those who got to wield power in Congo - from Mobutu and his cronies onwards.
|
|
There is another factor: Trump simply admires authoritarian leaders and seems dazzled by the power they wield in their own societies.
|
|
These so-called "deep state" agencies wield awesome powers of surveillance, secrecy, propaganda, and violence, which in turn, shape American politics.
|
|
Without positions on the Uber board, which currently has nine members, SoftBank has limited ability to wield its power and influence.
|
|
When humans bump up against beings who wield power beyond their comprehension, they respond with awe and even something like devotion.
|
|
This isn't a whodunit but rather an examination of power and the people who wield it, and it's fascinating and devastating.
|
|
Dr. Swint, the political scientist, noted that there were limits to the power that secretaries of state can wield in Georgia.
|
|
House members wield the power to inhibit policies they oppose and to leverage that authority to insist on those they favor.
|
|
And some observers have speculated that Trump is trying to wield his pardoning powers to boost his approval among African Americans.
|
|
They wield enormous power to ruin our lives — if not through a data breach, then through errors on our credit reports.
|
|
But somehow, folks kept paying for the right to wield the fourchette, like a culinary lottery one constantly hoped to win.
|
|
The bottom line is that our president may be uniquely and historically unfit to wield the awesome powers of his office.
|
|
I don't doubt their mother may wield guilt like a cudgel depending on the circumstances of her relationship with your partner.
|
|
This, she had seen, was how you wield power: You didn't just need to be heard, you needed to be feared.
|
|
You might not wield much power over the Thanksgiving dinner table, but underneath it you can rule with an iron fist.
|
|
He sees plenty of pitfalls ahead, both for the people attacked by auto-weapons and for the people who wield them.
|
|
Perhaps most important is their instinctive understanding of attention and how to wield it as both a weapon and a tool.
|
|
This makes it wrong to lament "presidential impeachment has become a weapon" parties wield against one another, as Starr did Monday.
|
|
The translators are keenly aware of the power they wield in conveying the message of BTS to an English-speaking audience.
|
|
The progressive caucus has touted itself as an organization that can wield power and leverage the votes of its 90 members.
|
|
At the same time, however, we should be asking ourselves how the people running our government came to wield such power.
|
|
Unlike Meadows' Freedom Caucus, Jayapal's group is too large and ideologically diverse to wield its votes in a fight against leadership.
|
|
Dashing the Reaganites' hopes, the court overwhelmingly upheld a law permitting independent counsels — prosecutors who wield executive power beyond presidential control.
|
|
And Republicans still have some powerful arguments to wield at the college-educated whites who have been drifting away from them.
|
|
As the gatekeepers to their institutions, medical school admissions committees wield a powerful influence over the health care of the nation.
|
|
Stars wield huge influence -- and sometimes earn lots of money for sponsored tweets -- thanks to the social media platforms they use.
|
|
Why it matters: Employers amassing data on their workers' movements, actions, habits and even emotions can wield sweeping power over them.
|
|
We won't back down to people who try to wield terror as a weapon against us being ourselves, and enjoying ourselves.
|
|
When push comes to shove, however, it is unclear whether Macron would wield a veto - especially if Germany is in support.
|
|
Still, she says the frustration lies mostly with the members of their own party who wield considerable power in the upper chamber.
|
|
Now he must wield power, risk making enemies, drive bargains and deploy the political muscle to get his troops behind a bill.
|
|
Filmmakers like del Toro and Peele are steeped in genre traditions and a reverence for the narrative power that genre can wield.
|
|
To solidify this idea even more, a relic pops up the game that only Byleth can wield: the Sword of the Creator.
|
|
And he cleverly leveraged Bernie Sanders's primary campaign accusations that Clinton was too close to banks into weapons he himself could wield.
|
|
What adds to the power these sites wield is a cultural conditioning that influences the way we've come to perceive the mugshot.
|
|
Prison gangs originally formed to protect inmates and advocate for better conditions, but now wield vast power that reaches beyond prison walls.
|
|
Czech presidents wield limited executive powers but from their office in Prague Castle they appoint prime ministers and represent the nation abroad.
|
|
This is a world divided between the human kingdoms and the magical realm of Xadia, where elves and dragons wield elemental magic.
|
|
It was revealed at Marvel's San Diego Comic-Con panel that Portman's Foster will be Lady Thor and wield the mythical hammer.
|
|
For example, doctors and lawyers draw lots of sensitive information from, and wield a lot of power over, their patients and clients.
|
|
An individual Infinity Stone on its own contains too much power for any mortal to even touch one, let alone wield it.
|
|
State governments still wield significant power over a wide range of policy areas, quite independent of Washington, particularly in social welfare provision.
|
|
According to Vanity Fair, Limbaugh's position with conservatives is comparable to Oprah's position with women — they both wield "concentrated and extraordinary power."
|
|
His campaign — even more so than Obama's — is based on a rejection of the power that wealthy interests wield over American politics.
|
|
Ms Banerjee's party may wield fearsome street muscle, for instance, yet as a regional rather than national party it lacks other cards.
|
|
Both Waller and Keating are morally compromised, tough, damaged women who wield a lot of power (an extreme amount in Waller's case).
|
|
Heinz-Christian Strache, who took over the FPÖ after it left government, is impatient to wield power and running out of time.
|
|
In Europe, where farmers wield outsize political clout, the spread of ASF is blamed on government bungling, bringing calls for ministerial resignations.
|
|
Pelosi and Schumer wield no national power at the polls and it's not clear what they stand for at any given time.
|
|
The comparison also has the effect of excusing those Americans — like certain presidential candidates in the 2016 race — who wield prejudices strategically.
|
|
They fight viciously, both trying to wield Negan's barbed-wire baseball bat against each other, but they both escape with minor injuries.
|
|
This, too, is a critique of the status quo, that those in power will not actively wield it against bodies of color.
|
|
The key difference here is the actors – the recognition that tech giants do not only wield power because they are ridiculously wealthy.
|
|
However, this is a blunt instrument that can be difficult to wield and may not have any effect on a defiant official.
|
|
From my position as a VC — and often a company's first VC board member — I only wield a certain amount of influence.
|
|
Trump has been slow to appoint financial regulators, including those that wield more power, like the Federal Reserve's vice chair of supervision.
|
|
Graduate students can be especially vulnerable to harassment by their advisers, who often wield enormous control over the direction of their careers.
|
|
"The establishment and their media neighbors wield control over this nation through means that are very well known," he told them Thursday.
|
|
For six seasons, we've watched the polarizing character wield her power quietly, projecting an IDGAF attitude while gathering anger and ambition within.
|
|
Rey doesn't wield Luke's lightsaber until well into the film's third act, and she's shown as more than capable during that time.
|
|
The primary weapon manufacturers wield to keep consumers running for the dumpster rather than the screwdriver is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
|
|
The Democrats took control of the House of Representatives in January and now wield subpoena power, with multiple committees investigating Trump's actions.
|
|
Sansa became an unequivocal tactical and leadership genius by learning how to wield power against enemies to scheme for an ultimate good.
|
|
Bran taking control of his body is the only way to wield his massive strength in defense of Bran and his friends.
|
|
Chen said Zhao could wield huge political power if he became the head of both the CCDI and the national supervisory commission.
|
|
Flake can not only slow nominations down on the floor but wield more influence as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
|
|
They think they deserve to wield that power over the rest of us deplorables, bitterly clinging to the wrong side of history.
|
|
FEC, overturned long-standing limits on the total amounts any one person can give, and therefore, how much influence they can wield.
|
|
Instead, Harley will wield a version of her iconic mallet, which was featured in "Batman the Animated Series" and in the comics.
|
|
Its longstanding but reportedly ailing director, Rustam Inoyatov, is expected to wield the greatest influence in the selection of the next president.
|
|
Who is willing to fight the entirety of the establishment and mercilessly wield the power of the presidency to get real change?
|
|
Since most convictions occur at the state level, some governors can wield even greater influence on criminal justice than the president can.
|
|
Critics say Syrian governments do not wield much political power in a system dominated by the president and the powerful security forces.
|
|
There are currently 25 states where Republicans wield absolute power—controlling the legislature and governor's mansion—compared with only eight for Democrats.
|
|
But Cuomo's campaign against the NRA suggests that he could wield power in a manner that's eerily similar to the current president.
|
|
Managers with a penchant for hoarding information do it to wield their power and control their environment and the people in it.
|
|
It is the media that can demand truth from power and hold those who wield that massive power accountable to the people.
|
|
Young people also seem to understand that they need to wield political power through the governing process, not just outside of it.
|
|
It creates a vacuum, and others who don't share our values but who wield big checkbooks are always happy to fill it.
|
|
As attorney general, Sessions will wield enormous power over a litany of civil rights issues that are important to communities of color.
|
|
The Originals: Season 5 23 Dangerous Animals: Asia (NETFLIX ORIGINAL): From fangs to claws to venomous stings, they all wield deadly weapons.
|
|
The field of human rights is not about pretty words; it involves the abuse of the vulnerable by those who wield power.
|
|
And these factions wield considerable social and economic power – enough to cause problems for SpaceX if they decide to mobilize over this.
|
|
But if Mr. Rajoy can survive the first six months, he can still wield "the threat of dissolving Parliament," Mr. Barroso added.
|
|
One officer suggested he declare himself king; or, if that term was distasteful, to choose a different word, but wield equivalent power.
|
|
They seem to wield a hushed influence over the academy's students, daring them to imagine one day being accepted to such universities.
|
|
She seems to assume that the white liberal elite is monolithic and thinks that working-class folks wield bats and belittle women.
|
|
At 22011, he continues to work to improve public health around the world — and to wield a hammer for Habitat for Humanity.
|
|
By virtue of providing increasingly critical services, tech giants wield immense leverage over the sellers and buyers that rely on their platforms.
|
|
Alabama police and prosecutors strategically wield power and influence with hospitals and medical clinicians to ferret out women who "endanger" their pregnancies.
|
|
Power, everybody knows, is intoxicating—even more so when that power is precarious and held over someone who would normally wield it.
|
|
Significant amounts of it come from public companies, which wield a mighty power to set the policy agenda in states and Washington.
|
|
The president needs to establish a system of social pressure for local governments to wield to enforce physical distancing strictly but compassionately.
|
|
In contrast, Claire (Rosario Dawson) and Karen, who don't wield as much power as the aforementioned women, live safer, more protected lives.
|
|
So I think we should recognize that we're all in this together, and we all wield the powerful resource of our sexuality.
|
|
The biggest companies wield considerable clout with local officials, allowing them to stay open even if they repeatedly violate standards, advocates say.
|
|
As our Republican Congress is unlikely to wield the hearings and subpeonas that brought down Gorsuch and Watt, others must step in.
|
|
Since Ida, always a reckless spender, continues to wield her credit cards promiscuously, it is a role that brings him little joy.
|
|
The video previews a possible attack that Democrats, and Biden, if he's the nominee, would wield against Trump during the general election.
|
|
However, it may be just as likely that the State Department doesn't have the intelligence it needs to wield its policy tools.
|
|
The Global Times, an outspoken state-run newspaper, described Ms. Hua's response as that of a sorceress able to wield godlike magic.
|
|
Of course, it's important to remember that a President Sanders could not wield a magic wand to enact his extreme policy proposals.
|
|
"The internet has been colonized by a handful of big tech companies that wield their monopoly powers without restraint," Mr. Hansson said.
|
|
So please, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar, stop whingeing about sexism and just show how you could wield power like a boss.
|
|
So please, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar, stop whingeing about sexism and just show how you could wield power like a boss.
|
|
Learning how to wield weapons and position yourself on the battlefield will be just as important as improving your character&aposs statistics.
|
|
You are entering a world that will make you smile, cry, hold your breath, scream, and pretend to wield a laser sword.
|
|
Judges in Argentina play a critical role in investigating accusations, giving them the sort of power prosecutors wield in the United States.
|
|
Smaller channels don't wield the same power, but we're starting off 2020 with a new type of conflict in the streaming wars.
|
|
But it still gives Samsung and Google an important piece of leverage to wield against the iPhone that they didn't have before.
|
|
It's a place where businessmen in custom suits wield knives and forks as they dig into pastries served on silver-plated stands.
|
|
This bundle covers all the powerful and essential features of the software, and how you can wield each one to your advantage.
|
|
A five-foot tusk is an unusual weapon to wield in central London, and its appearance was covered widely by the media.
|
|
Yet Mr. Clayton's nomination will be sure to fuel criticism that Goldman Sachs could wield too much influence in the Trump administration.
|
|
The more realistic objective — the goal of America's founders — is to prevent any single individual or small body to wield unchecked power.
|
|
It was unclear, though, how much influence the museum might wield in a project that is being led by the Emirates' government.
|
|
These 13 courts wield considerable power, usually providing the last word on rulings appealed from lower courts on disputes involving federal law.
|
|
Becky denies the charge that he made any overt threats, but he too is a man with plenty of power to wield.
|
|
She will wield far less power than the leaders of more important departments, such as the Treasury secretary or secretary of defense.
|
|
The government has a big enough stick with which to discipline offenders, he said, but the will to wield it is lacking.
|
|
The combative approach is partly an outgrowth of Democrats' strategy of maximizing their oversight authority in the House once they wield the gavel.
|
|
In addition to Washington, DC, states wield control over some aspects of the system, cities control other aspects, and counties oversee yet others.
|
|
As one of the more moderate Republicans in a closely divided senate, Graham could be positioned to wield significant influence in close votes.
|
|
While Trump seems eager to wield that approach against adversaries regardless of their gender, sharing the stage with Clinton highlighted his sexist tendencies.
|
|
But luckily, Jaime just happens to have Qyburn's dragon-killing contraption handy, and sends Bronn and his two able hands to wield it.
|
|
Several of these hosts wield significant clout with Wisconsin's conservatives, and their stature and platform provided the #NeverTrump movement with a powerful megaphone.
|
|
By scuttling the meeting, Saudi Arabia has asserted its supremacy and reminded the OPEC nations just how much power the Saudis still wield.
|
|
"You want to become an actor [so you] can wield a sword, ride horses, and play an English king," Chalamet told Vanity Fair.
|
|
Partisan clashes about climate change emerge from influential, well-funded sources that wield great influence on Congress, the media and ultimately the public.
|
|
On the comic book side of things, Jane Foster became Thor after the original Thor was deemed unworthy to wield his hammer, Mjolnir.
|
|
The euro area could wield its combined fiscal capacity to deal with the Italian threat while building a sense of shared fiscal responsibility.
|
|
The stones also influence the gameplay, giving a player's team a unique power-up based on what Infinity stone they choose to wield.
|
|
They often wield the threat of a blasphemy allegation in order to browbeat university departments into scrapping courses in music or comparative religion.
|
|
Fear of losing power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts those who are subject to it.
|
|
When citizens vote, they're exercising power over others, and if they wield that power arbitrarily or incompetently, they've negated their right to vote.
|
|
So have several of Hungary's richest men, including Lorinc Meszaros and Sandor Csanyi, who wield significant influence across broad sections of the economy.
|
|
NDiaye's heroine doesn't wield overt power over this class, but instead commits herself to delivering savory before sugar, invention and technique before pleasure.
|
|
As history shows, broad social transformation doesn't start with Congress but rather by a president willing to wield the power of the pen.
|
|
This was one of the later and most advanced games on the console; inhale your enemies and wield their own power against them.
|
|
It's warning me of an incoming wave of scorched, an advanced form of ghoul smart enough to wield weapons and duck behind cover.
|
|
At this point, the moon is done projecting its energy through one sign, but still preparing to wield its influence in the next.
|
|
But Qadri's execution on Monday showed the Pakistani government's willingness to risk the wrath of hard-line religious groups, who wield considerable power.
|
|
But he may struggle to close it: his presidency has been riven with infighting, and the hardliners who wield real power distrust him.
|
|
"We are the next billion users of the internet, so we're going to wield our power, and it really begins today," said Soundararajan.
|
|
And so much of the appeal of playing Kiryu for me comes down to seeing him wield a kind of emotional power instead.
|
|
Using a webcam controlling a servo-powered mechanism, the machine lets tiny fish wield a hefty carpentry hammer, smashing whatever they see fit.
|
|
In 2016 a report commissioned by Britain's Department for International Development (DFID) advocated studying the "merits" of jirgas, given the power they wield.
|
|
Whether playing as Qbby, the hero of past BOXBOY games, or the newly introduced BOXGIRL, Qucy, you wield the power to create boxes.
|
|
Why it matters: Mark Zuckerberg has total control of Facebook and its board, and he isn't afraid to wield that control at will.
|
|
The most obvious answer to who would wield absolute power best is Black Panther, even though it would inevitably corrupt even him too.
|
|
I merely wish they didn't wield such influence over impressionable young women; that they didn't command the attention and admiration of so many.
|
|
As governor, Mr Northam also will wield a veto that would be a powerful weapon against Republicans in the next redistricting in 2021.
|
|
Plants are low-maintenance, live-in companions that wield the power to easily elevate our spaces while thriving silently off water and sunshine.
|
|
Even if he never expects that nominee to actually be confirmed but rather to wield as an electoral cudgel, that is his right.
|
|
Britain has had a problem for some time with unelected aides who wield enormous power: think of Alastair Campbell's relationship with Tony Blair.
|
|
A brave knight seeks counsel from a wise sage about how to wield a mystical weapon to take down this evil kingdom's ruler.
|
|
Like other industries, finance is rigged from the inside by firms that invest in lobbyists and hire ex-politicians who still wield influence.
|
|
And considering the limited return on their investments in the last presidential election, exactly how much influence their dollars wield was in doubt.
|
|
The mantis shrimp is neither a mantis nor a shrimp, but it does wield perhaps the most stunning strike in the animal kingdom.
|
|
But more troubling, given the power Puzder will likely wield after his expected Senate confirmation, is his company's own record on labor issues.
|
|
If Thanos' gauntlet is busted and they need one to wield the power of the Infinity Stones, can't they just make another one?
|
|
The executive, David Chung, was the president of the Oceania Football Confederation, whose 14 members wield little power competitively or politically in FIFA.
|
|
The Prince That Was Promised, as legend dictates, will be "reborn amidst salt and smoke" and he will eventually wield a flaming sword.
|
|
If the United States turns inward under its new president, Beijing could wield more clout in everything from climate change to regional security.
|
|
Whereas, a No vote would reject the chance for Turkey to become a presidential republic and block Erdogan's attempt to wield greater powers.
|
|
But it's Tan and the software he's built that lets Initialized wield The Force when picking startups, and then rearing them into Jedi.
|
|
And as that smug conference photo from February suggested, Mark Zuckerberg will presumably wield full control over our most insignificant thoughts and feelings.
|
|
Sansa is a great choice, we just haven't even gotten to see her actually wield power in the books up to this point.
|
|
But, critically, the game doesn't make you weaker—you still are powerful, hitting hard, and able to wield incredible combos and weapon transformations.
|
|
Trump has been slow to appoint financial regulators, including those that wield more power, such as the Federal Reserve's vice chair of supervision.
|
|
Rosatom has signed billions of dollars worth of overseas contracts and is seen as a tool for Russia to wield political influence abroad.
|
|
From them, he learns to wield the Iron Fist, a technique that allows him to enhance his strength and speed to superhuman levels.
|
|
He plans to wield that power to ensure the financial future of New Yorkers, and to invest in a greener and sustainable future.
|
|