By contrast, societies that trade liberty for security, as Ben Franklin noted, end often with neither. |
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He was devoutly committed to principles of secularism, pluralism, liberty and republicanism. |
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I'm gonna take a liberty and speak for Edward and Barry and say that we love what we're doing. |
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Band concerts, parades, ceremonies around liberty trees, patriotic plays, and slogans on official stationery proclaimed that concern. |
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But a responsible political leader is not at liberty to proceed in that manner. |
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The intimidation of political dissidents threatens the right of free speech for all and debases our traditions of civil liberty and tolerance. |
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One result of this shilly-shallying is that much of the talk about liberty becomes a self-serving charade. |
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No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with the procedure prescribed by law. |
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He doesn't present himself as a dictator who tramples on our liberty and demands blind obedience. |
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Dissecting Leftism says that a belief in individual liberty is more basic to conservatism than is traditionalism. |
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First, liberty is the prerogative of citizens, and a large majority of the population will not possess citizenship. |
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The U.S. Constitution puts a premium on individual liberty and freedom from governmental interference in the citizens' daily affairs. |
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The evil of entrusting our liberty to politicians is compounded by a lack of independent safeguards or transparency. |
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They have sold their golden birthright of American liberty for a mess of coward's pottage. |
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Conservative believers in individual liberty and personal autonomy should allow citizens to freely choose a life partner whether gay or straight. |
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So the claim that there are conservatives who believe in some sort of absolute liberty is a total straw man. |
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Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech. |
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He couldn't hear or see anyone, so he took the liberty of crossing a name off the paper. |
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Isn't depriving a person of their liberty the worst punishment under our criminal law? |
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Others view Poland as the suffering Christ among nations raising the torch of liberty and independence for themselves and others. |
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I could have told them that if liberty means anything at all, it is the right not to participate in imbecile Mexican waves. |
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But there are important ways in which liberty and equality are natural bedfellows. |
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To deprive someone of their liberty without telling them the charge or the evidence is completely foreign to our system of justice. |
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Murdoch is well aware of the massive global power he wields as a force for liberty and the empowerment of the individual. |
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More raucous merrymaking took place in public spaces as artisans and farmers raised liberty poles and enlisted men fired thirteen-gun salutes. |
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That liberty and freedom are something worth fighting for, worth bearing a burden for. |
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He lists the erosion of liberty with enough precision to make objections to his flippancy seem footling. |
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Those whose greatest interest is in liberty and self-reliance are lost in the shuffle. |
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We are talking here of a judge of a court of record and in a serious criminal trial where liberty is at stake. |
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In both cases, an intellectual commitment to liberty is coupled with quite extraordinary intolerance in practice. |
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The struggle between friends and foes of liberty has in many ways been going on for thousands of years. |
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Without a person developing the corresponding moral character necessary for self-restraint, his liberty is bound to result in the harm of others. |
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This liberty ranges from the inviolability of the person to the freedom of expression and association. |
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Can an author with reason complain that he is cramped and shackled if he is not at liberty to publish blasphemy, bawdry, or sedition? |
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Yale could not do better for its matriculants than inculcate the notion both of individual liberty and its inherent responsibilities. |
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In the long term, one of the greatest threats to human liberty is internationalism. |
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One way to trace liberty is to take note of occasions when people consented to those who governed them. |
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This insufferable self-serving sanctimony about freedom and liberty is more than just annoying, however. |
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The father's empire then ceases, and he can from thenceforward no more dispose of the liberty of his son than that of any other man. |
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The 1918 law, the Court held, violated the liberty of contract protected by the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. |
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Gender of itself has no bearing on a person's innermost desire for liberty and to reach their fullest potential possible. |
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We took the liberty of bringing medical supplies along with standard field kits for any operation. |
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It follows that religious liberty rights are not in question and that the Pledge policy fully comports with the Constitution. |
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It is a manifest encroachment upon the just liberty both of the workman and of those who might be disposed to employ him. |
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We have taken the liberty at booking you at Collelungo, an agriturismo near Castellina. |
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We should be wary of dangers to our liberty and privacy with the excuse of security. |
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Sadly this will set a very destructive precedent, which could place the future of our liberty in grave jeopardy. |
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If the Americans are serious about the spread of liberty they must commit themselves to it. |
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The sad fact is that many of these champions of liberty have never lifted a finger to defend said liberty with arms or real effort. |
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The husband dying soon after this connection, Stanley became more at liberty to pay his addresses to the widow. |
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The freedom of churches to administer the sacraments is as fundamental a religious liberty as there can be. |
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Too much liberty of this kind savours of a luxuriant ungovernable fancy and borders on enthusiasm. |
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On an absolutely literal reading, your Lordships' liberty to apply does not apply to past expenses if there are future expenses. |
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Once more, this country has recouped its liberty and we will all struggle to perfect and maintain it. |
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The internal combustion automobile is one of the biggest engines of personal liberty ever created, right up there with the firearm. |
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With authority gone, the result would be not liberty but increasing dependence on naked force to compel obedience and maintain order. |
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Every member of our society is at total liberty to allocate his or her resources wherever he or she wishes. |
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Depriving people of liberty yields safety only by rendering people incapable of doing harm. |
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Anatomy brought life and liberty to the art of healing, and for three centuries the great names in medicine were those of the great anatomists. |
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It's restricted information which I'm not at liberty to discuss with you till we actually get there, ok? |
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The Levellers developed from a demand for individual freedom of conscience, to demand a comparable political liberty for the individual. |
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There, the great rhapsodist of liberty certainly owned, and probably bought and sold, domestic slaves. |
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Even hardcore libertarians accept restrictions on liberty when the behavior harms others. |
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How far should a government go in restricting the personal liberty of its people in the hope of defeating terrorism? |
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Americans are now enjoying the fruits of two centuries of individual liberty and free markets. |
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Therefore the fundamental purpose of the state is to limit liberty in the name of security. |
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Tariff taxes precipitated both independence movements, and both were based on the view that liberty and free trade were of a piece. |
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Some British radicals argued, too, that overseas conquest bred autocratic habits, which then threatened liberty at home. |
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Still, Rand was the most successful and widely read popularizer of the ideas of individual liberty and the free market of her day. |
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In addition to providing society with political liberty and justice, a single tax on land promotes economic efficiency. |
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Individual liberty exists within the context of the rule of law and limits on government power, i.e., constitutional liberalism. |
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We have adopted the value of individual liberty from the Western societies, without learning their manners. |
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In Condorcet's view modern society and individual liberty could be served only by public instruction understood in this sense. |
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Finally, there is no compensation for the five men who lost 20 months of liberty as punishment for a crime they did not commit. |
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The crimes that the men committed are contemptible and grave, and the men deserve to lose their liberty for them. |
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The convicted thief will lose his right to liberty by being placed in prison. |
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People lose their lives and liberty in the struggle for democracy, which tells me that elections must be a good thing. |
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There may be a crime against humanity where there is a serious deprivation of physical liberty short of imprisonment. |
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No libertarian could possibly construct a justification for violating the liberty of another person. |
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She knows from bitter experience what it means to lose that basic liberty we all take for granted. |
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There would also be a loss of liberty or freedom for the morally wicked, since they would be punished or otherwise made to suffer. |
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Hobbes couched the argument in terms of liberty vs. necessity, rather than free vs. externally determined will. |
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Sailors on the ship, ashore on liberty or in the local community would raise their level of awareness and be on the lookout for anything unusual. |
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A Sailor, on liberty in a foreign port, was returning to his ship when a knife-wielding assassin attacked him. |
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It seems to me either he is at liberty or he is not, and the imposition of conditions assumes the residue of power is still being exercised. |
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We are being put at risk, because patients are free to roam and at liberty to abscond. |
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Desdemona said a friend was storing valuables there, and she wasn't at liberty to allow them in. |
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The mountains are still free, and we're all at liberty to climb them largely as we desire. |
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In fact, a principal authority is at liberty to withdraw the functions assigned to an agent. |
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Up to then it had been wholly outside my experience that police officers were seemingly at liberty to heartily abuse members of the citizenry. |
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Although I've taken a little liberty with it, it was told to me as a supposed true story. |
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While the establishment seemed to spoil the rich, she took the liberty to pamper the poor. |
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Since she owned the paper, she took the liberty of searching out and reporting her own stories. |
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Yesterday, Apple took the liberty of launching their newest iPod, called the iPod Nano. |
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Mark, while you were away from your desk I took the liberty of sorting the unopened incoming mail for you. |
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The Americans can say they're doing things in the name of freedom, liberty and apple pie. |
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But the language of liberty and freedom is apt to be confusing in these areas. |
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A better policy is to promote liberty in the religious sphere as well as in the economic and political arenas. |
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To be born an aristocrat does not in itself prevent me from taking on the project of liberty for the commoner or the day laborer. |
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The king then sought to organize a new royalist coalition around a programme of religious liberty for all. |
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We can never sacrifice democracy and the values of liberty in favour of social change. |
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After experiencing two days of liberty and being reunited with her family, she was rousted from her sleep taken back to prison. |
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The rowdies were given a free hand to subvert justice, equality, liberty and fraternity. |
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This half-way status of the liberty is perhaps best illustrated by its relations with the Lords Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire. |
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If tribunals were to be at liberty to exceed their jurisdiction without any check by the courts, the rule of law would be at an end. |
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For this to be realised, they must be assured of full religious liberty to pursue their mission. |
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Bush's second inaugural address was devoted to the power of liberty and democracy. |
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America is based upon each citizen's equal and inalienable right to life, liberty and property. |
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This note was a promise that all men would be guaranteed the inalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. |
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They rigged up a rope ladder and hung it from the fantail and the liberty boat ran in under it. |
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These constitute not a coherent theory of history or of liberty but a series of insights that continue to enlighten and inspire. |
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I mean, there is, I think a sense in the country that promoting liberty is the right place for America to be both idealistically and practically. |
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They are the ones who speak out, resist, and pay with their liberty or their lives. |
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All these moralistic pathologies are likely to impinge on individual liberty and economic efficiency. |
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Therefore, congregations have had the liberty to choose their own liturgy, including their hymns and hymnals. |
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There is a thoroughly conservative article here that takes up the burden of finding a balance between liberty and paternalism. |
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Walls, low partitions, and planes are articulated throughout the space with liberty and intention, losing their simple character. |
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The four of us who will be voting against this legislation have some very serious civil liberty concerns about it. |
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If the decision is made after hostilities have ceased, it is more likely to favor civil liberty than if made while hostilities continue. |
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This is excellent news and a triumph for civil liberty and freedom of choice. |
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This is the common-sense notion that civil liberty must always be balanced against other societal interests, such as a nation's security. |
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This new natural-rights view of civil liberty later inspired both the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. |
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We need to develop substantive policies that consider both civil liberty and public health protection as equally valued national priorities. |
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But Native leaders, human rights advocates and civil liberty experts say the changes didn't go nearly far enough. |
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In both the cityscapes and the flower paintings, an almost shocking liberty with facts is apparent. |
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Obviously, there is a bit of liberty between the subtitles and the dialogue in the dubbed track, but the dub is quite good. |
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His aim, ostensibly, was to bring liberty and equality to the oppressed peoples of that continent. |
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As a way of striking the difficult balance between liberty and security, sacrificing foreign citizens' liberties is undoubtedly tempting. |
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It was in the cause of liberty that writers such as Cowper and T. Day defended the Noble Savage and attacked the slave trade. |
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He has been lauded as a solitary champion of liberty and censured as the absurd opponent of progress. |
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War gives them their liberty and sends them, like boys bounding out of school, to obtain their heart's desire or perish in the attempt. |
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Cultural and civil liberty activists ought to unite and fight to resist these onslaughts on basic fundamental freedom, he said. |
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Is liberty a price worth paying, for a security that will only fuel our feelings of insecurity? |
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That made him careless about liberty and willing to use the authority of the state to create the sort of society he wanted to see. |
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What an opportunity to proclaim real liberty to those in physical captivity and spiritual bondage! |
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Anyway, I just couldn't leave you all dirty like that so I took the liberty of giving you a sponge bath. |
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He was among many Soviet dissidents who fought not just for political liberty but for national rights. |
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Now I ask you in all soberness, if all these things do not tend to rub out the sentiment of liberty in the country. |
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The Coalition pushes the liberty value untiringly, but only the economic kind not the civil liberties kind. |
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The unsuppressed liberty of spirit evident throughout the poems is a tonic and a consolation no matter what tyrannies life imposes. |
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It remained up to the naval commander, whether or not to give half the crew liberty during a port call. |
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Moreover all are at liberty to navigate that vast ocean, since the use of the sea and the air are common to all. |
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Civil liberty means the liberty of a citizen, not the abstract liberty of an individual in a state of nature. |
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There are 12 main varieties of magic mushroom growing naturally in the UK, with the main type called liberty cap. |
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Those who were pleased with the collapse were not people who thought much about political liberty but people whose major concern was nationalism. |
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Genuine democracy, i.e., liberty and equality, is unrealisable unless this aim is achieved. |
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In both cases, liberty refers to the freedom of person within comparatively narrow confines. |
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When I finished my stint with pursuing life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, I returned to these shores determined to become a born-again. |
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Some freedom-minded people pin their hope for liberty on withdrawing from an unfree world. |
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Do we pour all of our resources in trying to fix an unfixable solution, or do we go away and pursue our own life, liberty and happiness. |
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He boldly broke all fetters that hindered his liberty in preaching and in teaching. |
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Hasan's servant having on one occasion thrown a boiling hot dish on his master obtained his liberty with monetary help by reciting this verse. |
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We shall oppose for re-election all who in the white house or in congress betray American liberty in pursuit of un-American ends. |
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Other democratic states, faced with terrorism, have sacrificed liberty for the sake of order and come to regret it. |
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And it has just struck a blow for liberty by refusing to pass Government plans to curb trial by jury. |
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Only their lack of a tradition of liberty has held them back by keeping them under the control of tyrannical governments. |
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Attention will then turn to the application of the general rights of liberty and security of person. |
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He declined to elaborate on the details of the discussion and said he is not at liberty to discuss Cabinet meetings. |
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They also suggested that perhaps her liberty could be purchased with 20-30,000 ecus. |
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Criminals are being warned that they could lose their liberty and their lavish lifestyle thanks to the dedicated efforts of a North Yorkshire Police team. |
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One of those living conduits of female liberty who is eternally reconquering a new generation. |
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Civil society, human rights, civil liberty organisations, minority groups and opposition parties were not consulted before promulgation of the ordinance. |
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If you're ever faced with taking an inkblot test, your best bet is to decline it, especially if your life or liberty are on the line in a court of law or shrink's office. |
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While there is nothing significant about the circumstances in which the appellant lost his liberty in that case, the facts are very different from here. |
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It began, for them all, with the urge to seek some form of liberty and escape the stultifying conventions of Regency England. |
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Some fascinating comparisons are achieved by juxtaposing the liberty and exclusivity of the traditions of the synagogue with those of the illegal trade of the mafia. |
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The answer was to ensure that individual liberty was not trumped by religion or government or corporations. |
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Its residents long for the freedoms they relinquished so many decades ago, and to join in the liberty and freedom of spirit represented by bikinis and Speedo swim-suits. |
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A lot has been said about the 'onerous' infringement of liberty that takes place when people are forced to purchase insurance. |
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Throw in an X-Man whose special power is preserving religious liberty and you have the makings of a movie franchise. |
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During the INR, Sailors were given liberty to go explore the Big Apple. |
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To be at hack is to be in the state of partial liberty in which eyas hawks are kept before being trained, not being allowed to prey for themselves. |
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And liberty or freedom would have had not a thing to do with it. |
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Second, when their workload permits, Sailors get special liberty the day before their final exams to study, similar to what many commands do for advancement exams. |
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Or, this year, the ways in which religious liberty is balanced against civil rights. |
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At present there are a number of persons accused of murder at liberty on bail and in some cases it is many months after the alleged murder that the case comes to trial. |
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After they were set at liberty they did not lose sight of them. |
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Now they went into the house, and they basically violated liberty rights. |
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I always believe in the necessity, if not the virtue, of intervention when human rights are violated, when human life is at stake and when liberty is being curtailed. |
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I could explain, but for the first time in two months, I am at liberty to do absolutely nothing at all and as you might guess, I'm really quite eager to get going on that. |
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A libertarian society bases itself on the rule of law and more fundamental to that on the principle of an individual's liberty limited to the non-coercion of the other! |
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The parties shall be at liberty in the interim, through counsel, to propose a candidate or candidates for the position of guardian of the person and guardian of the property. |
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Would you be ready to shed your blood in the name of liberty without knowing whether you are making history or just adding to the list of nameless victims of the tyranny? |
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Tonight we solemnly decree the sublimest sacrifice ever made by a nation for the salvation of humanity, the institution of worldwide liberty and freedom. |
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It's a liberty I choose to take with my chosen brand of fiction. |
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But there was also the liberty to consider of those people who wanted to use the bridge to get home. |
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We took the liberty of marking up the photo to illustrate your points. |
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I took the liberty of participating in the coed and competitive basketball leagues and found, to my surprise, that there are a lot of good players. |
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No friend of liberty can avoid the tumble back and forth between burke and Paine. |
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The correlativity of this jural relationship shows that the person against whom the liberty is held has a no-right concerning the activity to which the liberty relates. |
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As the council's report points out, scientists are at liberty to explore, experiment, and innovate largely unburdened by the dead hand of government. |
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He seems to have just discovered that, although economic liberty is needed for economic development, you can have economic liberty without much political liberty. |
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Confirm thy soul in self-control, thy liberty in law Not to be confused with self-deport! |
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The liberty of the subject is not safe when they can imprison at their pleasure, and keep men in jail till their health is impaired, without even the form of a trial. |
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Back then, property was understood by universal consensus as a foundational cornerstone of human liberty and a life worth living. |
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The ground of liberty is to be gained by inches, and we must be contented to secure what we can get from time to time and eternally press forward for what is yet to get. |
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It is always difficult to explain to students of politics how the core concepts of liberty and equality are contradictory yet mutually constitutive. |
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The freedom from coercion to have or to adopt a religion or belief and the liberty of parents and guardians to ensure religious and moral education cannot be restricted. |
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Even Liberty, the civil liberty pressure group, accepts a shoot-to-kill policy to protect the public is needed when a suicide bomber looks set to detonate a bomb. |
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Baez complemented Morricone's main theme in such a way that it has transcended the borders of film music and has become an immortal ballad for freedom and liberty for all. |
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In it, he raged against the loss of liberty that the industrial revolution and interfering government had imposed on the freeborn citizens of Albion. |
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The defence of liberty was a potent rallying call against foreign enemies, but it also made freeborn Britons sensitive to the actions of their own government. |
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Graham is happily pottering about the house and gardens, doing the light jobs, and a deal of his time is freeing up, leaving him at liberty to pursue other interests. |
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Occasionally, we may have to lend practical support for keeping the peace and protecting life and liberty in the face of internal and external aggression. |
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It is clear that liberty is a communicable power because it does not entail such incommunicable qualities as total causal independence and self-existence. |
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The argument for petitioners is that the tax moneys are not earmarked, and that Congress is at liberty to spend them as it will. |
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It's the founding conviction of our country, that we're endowed by our creator with certain unalienable rights, the right to life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness. |
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I hope we remain a nation that believes that all people are endowed by their Creator with the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. |
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This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. |
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The prisoner's continued liberty or, as the case may be, immediate release, would present an unacceptable risk to the public of further offences being committed. |
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Doing our darndest to protect religious liberty in a very broad sense is a start, and a most important one at that. |
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The ideals of liberty and self-determination, equality and the rule of law have haltingly advanced. |
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Nicolas Rodriguez took the liberty of disannulling the newly elected alcalde and aldermen, and invited the San Patricians to join their ranks or punishment would follow. |
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International trade agreements lowering tariffs, however, do not need these high hurdles because they promote liberty and strike a blow against special interests. |
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This policy allows the US to guard the liberty of its citizens, to protect and insulate them against malevolent forms of interference in their lives. |
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I am not at liberty to say what the plans are, and in any case they have to go through umpteen stages yet, but I was quite delighted by the vision being presented. |
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The qualification was based on the idea that a person can forfeit his natural rights to life and liberty by a suitably serious violation of natural law. |
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It seems incongruous that such a self-styled truth teller should wager his liberty on a godfather like Correa. |
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While society turns a deaf ear to such helpless women, it gives full credence to unmarried females who are at liberty to decide the fates of innocent males. |
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One form of liberty is to rule and be ruled turn and turn about. |
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Lawyers and civil liberty groups say sunlight is the best disinfectant. |
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Individual liberty and free enterprise are feminism's best friends. |
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The enactment of these proposals would strike a much better balance between the interests of liberty and security. |
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Corporate corruption and civil liberty attacks can't do that. |
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Before imposing democratic regimes, therefore, we should ensure that civil liberty is properly entrenched in a rule of law, a rotation of offices, and the freedom to dissent. |
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A new liberty will arise, so the monitory promise goes, not in any freedom from constraints too subtle for the hungry to perceive, but in class consciousness. |
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The necessity for, and the pervasiveness of, these technostructures immediately raises issues of personal liberty and civic engagement in their securitization. |
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But the six-page summary report does not address the frustration that has been expressed by civil liberty advocates, defense lawyers and the families of prisoners. |
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Now, we are talking about the liberty of the citizen, are we not? |
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Michael begins to discover that liberty and the pursuit of happiness may carry a price tag of rejection, setbacks and stinging home truths but these are a price worth paying. |
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The very English and very puritanical Founding Fathers proposed the principles of religious liberty as a mechanism to protect religion from the pollution of the state. |
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The arguments appear to have prevailed, as by the fourteenth century Durham was accepted as a liberty which received royal mandates direct. |
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He aimed to restore liberty of conscience and promote both outward and inward godliness throughout England. |
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In fact we find this attempt disrespectful and I personally find it incredible that anyone takes the liberty to talk on Seve's behalf. |
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Article 5 provides that everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. |
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In order to protect individual liberty there must be an arbiter between the governing powers and the governed. |
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Verily the violence of a griefe, being extreme, must needs astonie the mind, and hinder the liberty of her actions. |
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An atheocracy of the Marxian type is as intolerant of liberty of thought as any Holy Roman Empire or Bible-ridden company of Puritans. |
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It behooves every man who values liberty of conscience for himself, to resist invasions of it in the case of others. |
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Look here, my body-snatchers, you have unlawfully abridged the liberty of one of the sons of the sovereign State of New York! |
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The Colt Evil chiefly affects young stoned colts, which have full liberty with mares before they are able to cover them. |
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I have no other notion of economy than that it is the parent to liberty and ease. |
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If you endanger other people's life and liberty in your pursuit of happiness, I shall have to confiscate your arms, boys. |
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Thirty thousand Frenchmen were vomited on to our shores, drowning the throne of liberty in waves of blood. |
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The 1620 ship brought a small company of brave men and women to plant here liberty of conscience denied them in their homeland. |
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This was around the time when the universal values of freedom and liberty were incarnated by the French Revolution. |
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More broadly, any person who advocated religious liberty was typically called out as Nonconformist. |
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They are therefore not only devoted to liberty, but to liberty according to English ideas and on English principles. |
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In politics, liberty consists of the social and political freedoms to which all community members are entitled. |
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As such, the exercise of liberty is subject to capability and limited by the rights of others. |
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The modern concept of political liberty has its origins in the Greek concepts of freedom and slavery. |
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In 1215 the Magna Carta was drawn up, it became the cornerstone of liberty in first England, Great Britain and later, the world. |
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By the later half of the 20th century, liberty was expanded further to prohibit government interference with personal choices. |
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However Mill is clear that his concern for liberty does not extend to all individuals and all societies. |
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Because he personally funded his films, Chaplin was at liberty to strive for this goal and shoot as many takes as he wished. |
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They saw individual liberty as something achievable only under favourable social and economic circumstances. |
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He then argues that, according to these definitions, not only are the two compatible, but liberty requires necessity. |
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Berlin points out that these two different conceptions of liberty can clash with each other. |
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First, the nature of the offence is an attack on, and infringement of, the personal liberty of an individual. |
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It considers both liberty and equality to be compatible and mutually dependent on each other. |
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Spain provides one of the highest degrees of liberty in the world for its LGBT community. |
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Living outside the society that oppressed them, presented an ability to attain liberty at sea. |
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According to Paul Gilje, impressment was used by England as a way to deny liberty to those who called the colonies home. |
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In the years after the Haitian Revolution, ideals of liberty and freedom had spread to even Brazil. |
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Thus Aurobindo Ghose stated that the puritanical, pharisaical British conquered in the name of liberty and usurped under the cloak of altruism. |
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It resulted in Sutcliffe being at liberty for more than a month when he might conceivably have been in custody. |
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And it is that liberty alone, which gives the true relish and delight to their ordinary playgames. |
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He arrived in Santiago, Cuba on 4 November 1549 and immediately declared the liberty of all natives. |
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Their scions studied in the best universities of Europe where they learned the ideals of liberty from the French and American Revolutions. |
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The republic abolished the slave trade early in the 15th century and valued liberty highly. |
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He stated that the reason for his opposition to the 1964 bill was Title II, which in his opinion violated individual liberty and states' rights. |
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Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties. |
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It is considered by some that the sole purpose of government is the protection of life, liberty and property. |
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Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty and in the final analysis, its only keepers are the people. |
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If men are to wait for liberty until they become wise and good in slavery, they may indeed wait for ever. |
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Jo carried her love of liberty and hate of conventionalities to such an unlimited extent that she naturally found herself worsted in an argument. |
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And Aristotle turns Plato's overt revolt against liberty into a larvate rebellion against reason. |
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I'm taking the liberty to writing a response only because I live around these relations and can understand most of them. |
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What must liberty mean for the traditionalist, and what is libertarian virtue? |
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Supreme Court's focus on the deprival of liberty and the notion that imprisonment is an extremely severe type of punishment. |
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What makes the liberty elm special is that it is a strain of elm that is resistant to Dutch elm disease. |
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The word desk is highly imageable, but the word liberty does not refer to an object and may not bring about a mental image as easily. |
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I felt it was becoming a liberty beating those old punchbags, defenceless as they are. |
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Tangier acquired the reputation of a spying and smuggling centre and attracted foreign capital due to political neutrality and commercial liberty at that time. |
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Montesquieu devotes four chapters of The Spirit of the Laws to a discussion of England, a contemporary free government, where liberty was sustained by a balance of powers. |
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Antiquarians Robert Beale, James Morice, and Richard Cosin argued that Magna Carta was a statement of liberty and a fundamental, supreme law empowering English government. |
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The wretch had the pernicious habit of writing in Milanese dialect. He was doubly wretchful when he took the liberty of giving birth to parodies of the Divine Comedy. |
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The third magistrate is not listed locally as a freemason, but I am at liberty to assume that he is a freemasonic member because he does not deny any association. |
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In the accounts of his Roman enemies, Arminius is highly regarded for his military leadership skills and as a defender of the liberty of his people. |
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Considering that the penalty imposable for the crime is life imprisonment, no bail is recommended for the temporary liberty of the accused,'' Mupas said in his order. |
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We have given the schools the liberty of employing their Lollipop Man. |
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In the 1860s and 1870s, Gladstonian Liberalism was characterised by a number of policies intended to improve individual liberty and loosen political and economic restraints. |
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William Penn founded the colony of Pennsylvania in 1682, and attracted an influx of British Quakers with his policies of religious liberty and freehold ownership. |
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The Protector offered Lilburne his liberty if he declined to act against the government, but he answered that he would own no way for his liberty but the way of the law. |
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Hume calls this form of decision making the liberty of spontaneity. |
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I stand with Charlie Hebdo, as we all must, to defend the art of satire, which has always been a force for liberty and against tyranny, dishonesty and stupidity. |
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Their approach to implementing liberty involves opposing any governmental coercion, aside from that which is necessary to prevent individuals from coercing each other. |
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Customers can choose from more than 100 fabric options including non-iron materials, luxury Egyptian cotton, exclusive linens, liberty flowers and many more. |
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Because of his opposition to aristocracy and slavery in his major writings, he is accused of hypocrisy and racism, or of caring only for the liberty of English capitalists. |
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Rousseau believed that liberty was possible only where there was direct rule by the people as a whole in lawmaking, where popular sovereignty was indivisible and inalienable. |
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