It's not a panacea, a cure-all for farm financial ills, or a guarantee of profit. |
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Privatisation has become a social echinacea, a mysterious healing serum being touted as a cure-all for everything from Medicare to education. |
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In health care today, technology often has been labeled as a cure-all for what ails health care facilities. |
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In another age, he'd be selling his patent cure-all medicine from the back of a wagon. |
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His move from outside linebacker was supposed to be a cure-all, allowing him to line up in a three-point stance and rush quarterbacks. |
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Historically, whey was considered a cure-all used to heal ailments ranging from gastrointestinal complaints to joint and ligament problems. |
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Some marketers are promoting coral calcium as a cure-all for many chronic and serious conditions. |
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Of course they spoke of their brew as if it were a medicinal cure-all when in reality they produced highly refined and greatly prized moonshine. |
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It is supposed to be a cure-all herb that was created almost half a century ago. |
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It is legendary in its use as a magical cure-all and has been used as food or a remedy since time immemorial. |
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Of course, culture and intercultural dialogue are neither a cure-all nor a substitute for taking cooperation further in other fields. |
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However, this does not mean that antibiotics are a cure-all. |
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How did soy get its reputation as a cure-all for modern ailments? |
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He had quite a complex set of ideas on how it could be done, and he did dismiss the idea that a single medicine, a single elixir could be the cure-all that would achieve that. |
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Of course, technology is not a cure-all solution as innovations that create economic growth simultaneously destroy specific jobs as new technologies replace older ones. |
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Dried and sold as an aphrodisiac and cure-all in Asia, Russia, and North America, bear gall has long been treasure for poachers. |
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It's not a cure-all, it's not an end-all, it's not a magic potion, but it is a good dietary supplement. |
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Reinforced cooperation must not, therefore, become the universal cure-all in order to conceal our weaknesses. |
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It is not a cure-all for our economic woes, but it is a good support measure. |
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If so, staff should understand that COPE is not a cure-all to solve all problems. |
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The North Korean authorities recently banned a highly addictive narcotic painkiller than many North Koreans routinely used as a cure-all. |
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I do not expect federalism to be a cure-all for our complex problems of governance and economic development in the Philippines. |
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None of the measures recommended in this document is a cure-all or an end in itself. |
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Both groups toss aside any fact that gets in their way and trumpet any cockamamie cure-all that supports their goals. |
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In the rush to secure the nation, government officials have once again looked to restricting access to information as a cure-all. |
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We believe a sight or a fancy thingamabob added to the weapons systems will be a cure-all. |
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Nineteenth-century medicine vendors often peddled tonics as a cure-all for symptoms as varied as a mild cough or severe rash. |
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Wasn't private sector involvement the cure-all? |
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The plan is not exhaustive and should not be seen as a cure-all. |
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Actually, most calypsonians expressly avoid e-mail, thinking ownership of mobile phones a cure-all, even though their numbers are almost invariably unlisted. |
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Did the post-war family have some inherent virtue that, if lovingly restored, would be the cure-all for the ills of contemporary Canadian society? |
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But as popular and lucrative as cure-all patent medicines were in the 1890s, they failed to generate the kind of money to which Rosenblum's lifestyle aspired. |
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However, decriminalisation is not a cure-all. |
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They are tools that can do useful work, but they are not a cure-all. |
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Education has long seemed like the uncontroversial cure-all for these sorts of issues. |
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Medieval physicians created even more elaborate theriacs to dose a plague-dreading populace, for whom the possibility of a cure-all didn't seem too wild a notion at all. |
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But, seriously, it's good for you, but it's not the cure-all, end-all. |
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Whether Keynesian spending is the cure-all seems doubtful, however. |
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To find such a cure-all is no small thing: billions of dollars are lost each year due to stress and burnout. |
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Red alder is a medicinal plant that has been used almost as a cure-all by Native American tribes of the Pacific Coast. |
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The second, Madame Louise, is a haughty, witchlike peddler in a horse-drawn carriage, hawking an alcoholic cure-all. |
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But an audit in and of itself is not a cure-all, especially because audits done without integrity can be used to rationalize political decisions. |
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Sadly, some politicians, educational bureaucrats and others continue to raise phonics as the be-all and cure-all elixir for learning to read and write. |
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