The average citizen fails to appreciate civil liberties precisely because in this country they can be taken for granted. |
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And don't talk to me about the series, we both know that I took major liberties with the last incident, but it's still better than the series. |
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If civil liberties are left to popular votes, they can similarly founder on the rocks of majoritarian advantage. |
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This sovereign power is attributed to hate speech when it is said to deprive us of rights and liberties. |
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Why don't you and your poodle of a Foreign Minister try setting up a democracy with individual liberties in, say, France first. |
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He used liberal vibrato and took many liberties in phrasing using ritards, accelerandos and tenutos over important structural notes. |
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The monarch has suspended civil liberties, supposedly to enable the government to defeat the Maoists. |
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Do you know the difference between real bad guys and the bogies leaders use to try and hoax your liberties away? |
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Everything I tell you really did happen, give or take a few liberties of poetic licence. |
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The Western ideal for representative democracy involves free, multiparty elections and maintenance of civil liberties. |
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Here may be a key to understanding the liberties he takes with the painters whose lives he poetically reinvents. |
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All these technologies raise serious questions about invasions of privacy and violations of civil liberties. |
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With friends like these, what person who values civil liberties and human rights needs enemies? |
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An armed people could protect themselves and their neighbors against crime and their liberties against tyranny. |
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Online, the thinness of the connection permits us to take social liberties that in a real-world, embodied meeting we would not. |
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But civil liberties campaigners are now worried that the Catcher may be sold to other governments or secret services. |
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The administration insists that we give it a blank check for waging war and trampling on civil liberties. |
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Civil liberties groups, however, have raised concerns that the long lens of the law invades the privacy of innocent residents. |
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I personally think that the whole argument about civil liberties comes into play again. |
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Democracy, political rights, and civil liberties are politically modifiable variables that seem to be associated with health status. |
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Fortunately progressive and civil liberties groups exist to defend our rights to cut and be cut from these bigoted Bible-bashers. |
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It seems that sheeple have a suicidal tendency to roll over at the least sign of danger and surrender their liberties willingly. |
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In the meantime, the Feds have again shown a determination to trample on civil liberties to harass nonviolent protestors. |
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It has militarized our economy, undermined our own liberties and eroded our democratic rights. |
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If the right to hunt foxes is a question of civil liberties, so is the right to organise bear-baiting and cockfights. |
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And with Americans so touchy about their civil liberties, the Feds have to be legally covered to the hilt before they go snooping. |
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Yet much of the debate over civil liberties in wartime has, to this point, been framed in all-or-nothing terms. |
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He has done wrong and will have to take the consequences, but it has gone beyond hunting now, it's about civil liberties. |
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Today, perhaps more than ever before, religionists feel the tension between institutional faith and civil liberties. |
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The big problem is that the broader public does not see the RIP Act as an infringement of their personal liberties or rights. |
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I keep to speed limits because I do not see them as an infringement of my civil liberties but as a protection for vulnerable road users. |
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The author argues that the new Act is extremely punitive and constitutes a gross infringement of civil liberties. |
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I'm against it, as an unnecessary and expensive excuse to infringe my civil liberties, but there are those for them and against. |
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The slipperiness of the term tends to make for bad laws, legislated in haste, that infringe civil liberties. |
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The Bill of Rights spells out citizens' inherent liberties and limits the government's power to infringe those rights. |
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While that is bad, is that number high enough to infringe on the liberties of every single driver in the state? |
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Such formal liberties were intended to jolt the viewer out of complacency into a fresh social outlook. |
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My own conclusion after a bit of homework is that the threat to the civil liberties of most Americans is still mainly a matter of incipience. |
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Unfairly and inaccurately called a traitor and a Bolshevik, she never reneged on her commitments to civil liberties or to pacifism. |
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Liberal Democrats have rejected illiberal measures to tackle crime as ineffective and a threat to civil liberties. |
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As it has done on four prior occasions, the Senate should shelve this most dangerous and idolatrous assault on our civil and religious liberties. |
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Although these civil liberties directives appear to favor freedom of speech, it is a freedom that is ideologically determined. |
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They are shared by the otherwise opposed law-and-order and civil liberties lobbies. |
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As a result, both socioeconomic rights and civil liberties are being destroyed. |
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I am still naive enough that I'd like our country run on a basis of free speech and civil liberties. |
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It ended Gandhi's emergency legislation, and restored civil liberties and free speech. |
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There's no need for extra measures that bypass basic human rights and attack civil liberties. |
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It marks a major escalation in the assault on civil liberties and democratic rights. |
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This show trial is a serious threat to basic civil liberties and democratic rights. |
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Traditionally, the common law has provided some protection for civil liberties. |
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The assault on civil liberties and human rights did not end with the end of the Emergency. |
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Most of our contemporary ideas about freedom of speech and civil liberties come from the Enlightenment. |
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Let alone that he'd already demonstrated his commitment to civil liberties and freedom as a Governor. |
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By then his passionate concern for civil liberties and justice before the law was entrenched. |
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It has forced compromises on freedoms and eroded civil liberties in many ways. |
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Instead of protecting us with technology, they use the information superhighway to remove our liberties. |
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The Home Secretary seems to have genuinely missed the point of civil liberties. |
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That way, interesting cinematic liberties may be taken without fear of high-toned academic outrage or comparison to the text's richness. |
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Purists may cavil at the liberties taken with scientific objectivity, but as a memoirist, he is a mensch, a prince among primates. |
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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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This is because we must accept a compromise of some of our fundamental human rights and liberties in the cause of effectively fighting the enemy. |
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First, drawing on longstanding European prejudices, they depicted blacks as heathens and savages unworthy of English liberties. |
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They've been taking similar liberties recently in their entertainment sections, captioning photographs of celebrities with made-up quotes. |
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Now, the attack on executives is at the forefront of the state's intrusion on civil liberties. |
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A tough stance on crime should not be at the expense of innocent people losing their long-treasured liberties. |
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That is why Jim Wallace is trying to find a new voice on civil liberties, with freedom of information legislation and penal reform. |
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The chips transmit signals and civil liberties groups fear the technology could eventually be used to spy on consumers. |
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Which road to industrialisation has been victimless, and undertaken under a benign system of civil liberties and human rights? |
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But minor vexations are not the same as an assault on fundamental liberties. |
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From him young voters at least hope for an economic upswing and the retention of their modest liberties. |
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Imposing draconian laws that restrict civil liberties will not prevent terrorist attacks. |
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But it is these days difficult to avoid the tangled mess of geopolitical analysis, so please excuse my taking liberties this week. |
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Having said that, it would be an unwise team that chose to take liberties with this feisty Currie team. |
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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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Possible suspensions of civil liberties are something we should all be keeping an eye on now, watchdogs among the dogs of war. |
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The idea of the state snooping into the affairs of private citizens is anathema in a country which takes individual liberties seriously. |
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And Americans are divested of yet another of their hard-won personal liberties. |
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When we say we're afraid to exercise those liberties, we dishonor their sacrifice and we disgrace ourselves. |
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Right or wrong, I think the public perception is that these measures collectively encroach on American civil liberties. |
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Some of these rights and liberties are the results of custom and convention, whereas others are contained in the written Acts of Parliament. |
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The power of judicial review has allowed the Supreme Court to protect civil liberties within America. |
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Louis was required to renounce all claim to the English throne and to restore the charters of liberties granted by King John. |
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Culturally and juridically, cities were always associated with special rights and liberties. |
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Trial by jury is the most fundamental of our civil liberties and eroding it is wholly unjustified. |
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The civil liberties case against ID cards is a feeble one that belongs to a more innocent age. |
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Under your watch, laws eradicating civil liberties have been enacted which put into question the rights of citizens. |
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I'm not clear on why simply reclassifying the former as issues of civil liberties rather than economic policy answers the broader question. |
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National-security types often assure us that wartime diminutions of civil liberties are only temporary. |
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And the civil liberties issues highlighted by the information commissioner this week remain unsolved. |
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As the US and western powers tool up to tackle this new threat, civil liberties will receive very short shrift. |
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More worrisome is the notion that our civil liberties are subject to cancellation in times of crisis. |
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The reign of Alexander III did a great deal to extend the power of the tsar at the expense of liberties taken for granted in Western Europe. |
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Throughout the Middle Ages, Suffolk was dominated by the two liberties and the many other religious houses. |
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The station has also involved itself in civil rights and civil liberties issues. |
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Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people? |
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Basically the Feds get to write their own report card every month and they're not exactly loathe to take some liberties in compiling the numbers. |
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A reputation for tolerance and civil liberties had been replaced by violence and repression. |
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Hot in pursuit of their goals, democracy can be forgotten and principles of civil liberties and human rights take a back seat. |
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Disorder provides an excuse to rescind liberties in the name of restoring calm. |
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The same day, a message was dispatched to William of Orange, begging him to rescue the liberties of the subject. |
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What are we going to do to defend ourselves from illegal civil liberties depredations? |
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A Bill of Rights was soon added to the constitution specifically to protect the individual liberties of citizens. |
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Conversely, countries currently enjoying religious liberties are expected to show increases in religiosity with time. |
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It is presumptuous and oppressive to suggest that other cultures want the liberties we take for granted, their argument runs. |
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We believed that our rights, privileges and liberties did not derive from the king or government, but rather were a gift from god. |
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There will always be those who abuse certain privileges or liberties, but those few cannot ruin an entitlement for the rest. |
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In this sense, the king may repeal parliament, common law, and liberties at will. |
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The Ausgleich was a complicated balance of royal prerogatives and national liberties. |
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It is accordingly not a right to exercise liberties within a prison's walls. |
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The political liberties have a central importance in making well-being human. |
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Essential civil and political liberties have been denied so systematically that they may as well be luxuries. |
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The film will be a tribute dedicated to all American soldiers who have fought to preserve our freedoms and liberties here in America. |
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By aggressively expanding the scope of free institutions worldwide, we ultimately guarantee our own liberties at home. |
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Individuals will respond by sacrificing personal liberties for increased security, and by resolving that normal life must go on. |
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Political rights and liberties are permissive advantages, and their effectiveness depends on how they are exercised. |
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He says currently human rights and fundamental liberties are not enshrined clearly and completely anywhere in Australian legislation. |
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Libertarianism puts a premium on individual liberties, and with liberties comes responsibility. |
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Over time, the children of family members may take liberties that when left unchecked, become real problems. |
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I got on well with my teammates, but I think that would have been taking liberties towards the club. |
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Although he followed the form of the drawing the inker took liberties with the face and the musculature. |
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Doing so is disingenuous, and takes liberties with the facts and the policy of this matter. |
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In the commentary, Wright remarks on several other liberties he and the other filmmakers took. |
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For Parker, the traditionalists who accuse him of taking liberties are one of the targets. |
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I'll take liberties creating new melodies while still preserving the integrity of the tune. |
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It not only stifled dissent, it bred a whole new rhetoric antipathetic to civil liberties and due process of law. |
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Confined within proper bounds, such measures need not pose a threat to civil liberties in general or to academic freedom in particular. |
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I am sick of hearing the ridiculous arguments about civil liberties and tradition. |
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The antiterrorism bill he is proposing represents a sweeping and unprecedented assault on civil liberties and constitutionally guaranteed rights. |
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Strong antiterrorism measures can actually support, and not conflict with, civil liberties, Collier said. |
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This poses an important test for those of us who want to make a consistent stand in defence of liberties during the second term. |
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There has been a predictable response from some quarters that the plan would be a violation of civil liberties. |
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And there would be serious civil liberties concerns if there was general application of those kind of powers. |
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Meantime an attempt was made by the Assembly to formulate definitely the Gallican liberties. |
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The coalition urged demonstrators to lobby their senators and representatives to stop the war and the attack on civil liberties. |
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September 11 th has brought mostly unpleasant changes, including curtailment of civil liberties and threatened perpetual war. |
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His dissent gives clear insight into his limited, narrow view of individual liberties. |
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When philosophers take liberties with language to make their distinctive points they are not frivolous. |
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Guns, however, remain unfettered, which suggests that they benefit from, rather than protect against, the destruction of other liberties. |
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As the attorney general, you have to be involved in the civil liberties of all Americans. |
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That is simply part and parcel of the liberal right of free association, one of our most basic civil liberties. |
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The sheer audacity and disdain for privacy and civil liberties was amazing. |
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If a student took similar liberties with print quotations in a term paper, he would given a serious lecture on the responsibilities of scholarship. |
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The scheme has been condemned by civil liberties groups and queried by the National Association of Head Teachers. |
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Some on the far right may sincerely believe their liberties are being threatened, but they believed that about desegregation too. |
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It's the continuation of big government and the attacks on our personal liberties. |
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The administration's arguments justifying the wholesale abrogation of civil liberties are by no means limited to an emergency response to an immediate threat. |
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Today a Times editorial came down squarely on the side of civil liberties. |
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You normally strike a genuine balance on matters of civil liberties. |
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Should everyone respect our age-old civil liberties and the rule of law? |
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Until the proposals to change wiretapping and surveillance laws are made more specific, it is difficult to assess how damaging to civil liberties they will be. |
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He has been a noted champion of republicanism, a political ethos that privileges the well-being of the nation over individual rights and liberties. |
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There is, after all, something hopeful about a future that was smart about encoding our civil liberties. |
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When the framers of the constitution were first debating it, few people imagined that Congress would prove to be the basic guarantor of American liberties. |
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It is the means by which a court, exercising its power to determine guilt, guards rights and liberties of those accused by requiring proof up to a certain standard. |
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The Great Charter confirmed previous royal charters and incorporates previous liberties, privileges and exemptions, which the city had formerly enjoyed. |
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Before adopting the world's norms, we should ask whether those norms protect these rights and liberties, and live up to the principles that have served us so well for so long. |
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Any unease expressed by the parents or the other students is clearly secondary next to the transgendered student's basic human rights and liberties. |
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He not only insisted poems appear in all lowercase but took other liberties with line breaks, punctuation, parentheses, which often amounted to a tricky cleverness. |
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For 20 years, she has eloquently and ardently defended civil liberties. |
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Neither in World War II nor in the Cold War did US administrations go so far in restricting civil liberties or arrogating unlimited power to the executive branch. |
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They treat them as unequal under the law, as lacking full civil capacity, as not having the property rights, associative liberties, and employment rights of males. |
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Designing security into systems from the beginning, instead of tacking it on at the end, would give us the security we need, while preserving the civil liberties we hold dear. |
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Does this backdown demonstrate a newfound respect for our liberties? |
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Every now and then, he writes these hysterical, factually insupportable, logically inconsistent screeds against some looming threat to civil liberties in the United States. |
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Is it ethical to step outside the law for the greater good, or to infringe civil liberties as a means to an end? |
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Or have we made it easier for governments to infringe on civil liberties, as the left argues? |
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I had always known them to be a very, very consistent advocate for civil liberties, but we disagreed on so many issues that I never really sought them out in terms of an ally. |
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By their selectivity of causes and their self-serving approach they have discredited themselves as genuine defenders of human rights and liberties. |
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Did you two ever disagree when you wanted to take liberties and he wanted to stick to the facts? |
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Opponents claim such a move would be a gross violation of civil liberties which is likely in Scotland to fall foul of European human rights legislation. |
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He is not, then, someone who treats civil liberties lightly. |
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Laws that trench upon established rights and liberties and do very little in preventing extreme acts of political violence will be on the statute books. |
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I changed melodies and took liberties with the melodies to make it a little more singable. |
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The main media outlets have imposed their own, more far-reaching blackout on the case, despite its implications for civil liberties and free speech. |
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In a free society law also underpins the freedoms of citizens by guaranteeing certain civil liberties and imposing legal checks on the authorities. |
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Well, apart from the torture victims, the murdered and other unfortunates who have had their civil liberties eroded, human rights curtailed and so on. |
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What is so alarming about the commissioner's report is the revelation that so many relatively minor inroads on civil liberties have gone unremarked and unnoticed. |
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In other words, he took substantial liberties with the facts to improve the yarn. |
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Treating this as something much more than it is strikes me as unsound, and likely to undermine the attention given to serious civil liberties complaints in other cases. |
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He has become a jaded cynic who unwraps large packages of cash from defending drug dealers while deluding himself he is working to protect civil liberties. |
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We, who are as good as you, swear to you, who are no better than us, to accept you as our king and sovereign lord, provided you observe all our liberties and laws. |
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No ye that we have granted to all who have taken burgages at Liverpul that they shall have all liberties and free customs which any free borough on the sea has in our land. |
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There's a perverse obliviousness to the fact that we equate our national security and welfare with foreign policy that deprives others of the liberties we supposedly cherish. |
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But Mr Blair said he was confident the Government could get the ID cards legislation on the statute book and that it had public support despite concerns about civil liberties. |
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Civil liberties groups and music fans say the bill unfairly targets electronic music and might bring about unforeseen consequences for both promoters and participators. |
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The title of this book refers to both civil liberties and human rights. |
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This bill is an infringement of our civil liberties, our rights of trade. |
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Both are concerned about restrictions and clampdowns on civil liberties. |
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What have you done besides taking our liberties, stealing our money under colour of law and protecting and supporting the agenda of the internationalists? |
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Undermining fundamental liberties, such as indefinite detention without due process, however, is another matter altogether, one as likely to fuel problems as quell them. |
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He insists doctors do not ask for patients to be tested before they are treated and would consider new rules an infringement of doctors' civil liberties. |
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These critics imply that he harbored excessive and even irrational fears about government infringement on American civil liberties and about encroachments on personal privacy. |
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On the other hand, we are less touchy about individual liberties and more prepared to believe that the government knows better as far as the public interest is concerned. |
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In contrast to the old-style fire and brimstone, today's efforts to curb personal freedoms and erode civil liberties are justified in the terms of health and safety. |
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Yet inevitably some will remain suspicious that the present crisis will be used as a pretext for introducing legislation which will erode our civil liberties. |
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In a column written for the Daily Nebraskan in September, Derek attacked seat belt laws as intrusions on individual liberties and expensive to enforce. |
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Richman's call for coordination between national and local governments and his insistence that civil liberties must be protected in this process are both persuasive. |
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CreamWare took some liberties and improved on the original by allowing the synth to be played polyphonically and integrating a multi-effects section. |
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It was true for the abolition movement, the efforts to put women on an equal legal footing with men, guaranteeing religious liberties, and so many more. |
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After art school, he set up the Suburban Press, a free sheet dedicated to promoting civil liberties and exposing local government corruption in the Croydon area. |
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As one who draws great pleasure from an occasional gasper, especially when enjoyed in convivial surroundings, I am appalled at this assault upon the liberties of smokers. |
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These believers express a desire for political authority, but only of the type supportive of pro-family social nucleus and traditionally-bound, regulated liberties. |
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Enumerating the right of freedom of speech neither enhanced its previous protection nor derogated the protection afforded other liberties not enumerated. |
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But it was also thought of as a guarantor of common liberties. |
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Douglas argued that liberties relating to personal relationships, such as marriage, have a unique primacy of place in the hierarchy of freedoms. |
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Kuwait is among the Middle East's freest countries in civil liberties and political rights. |
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Britannia became a very potent and more common figure in times of war, and represented British liberties and democracy. |
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Artwork which takes liberties, altering for instance color and form in ways that are conspicuous, can be said to be partially abstract. |
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The keyword of Western social development after millennium was the spread of liberties and autonomies in Western Europe. |
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Edward had nevertheless won a significant victory, in clearly establishing the principle that all liberties essentially emanated from the crown. |
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It has remained a democracy with civil liberties, an active Supreme Court, and a largely independent press. |
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He protected the constitution and liberties of Norway and Sweden during the age of Metternich. |
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It is also argued to be integral to the way in which England's approach to rights and liberties evolved. |
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Failure to take the oath meant possible imprisonment, denial of civil liberties, banishment and in some instances, death. |
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The interference with localism and traditional liberties was deeply resented, although some modernising reforms took place. |
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It also performs well in several national performance metrics, including freedom of the press, economic freedom and civil liberties. |
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They wink at Fitzgerald worshipers primed to hate any textual liberties. |
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Passage of the Petition of Right in 1628 and Habeas Corpus Act in 1679 established certain liberties for subjects. |
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For the record, I too support the First and Fourth Amendments, as well as civil liberties, but we'll have no civil liberties if we're dead. |
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In order to have any chance of saving the Constitution and our civil liberties, we need a party dedicated to that cause. |
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He said civil liberties of people were in danger and there was need to act. |
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In 2013, he protested against what he perceived were civil liberties violations by the UK Government. |
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On Monday evening, the civil liberties committee voted to strengthen EU data protection rules and to demand heavier fines for non-compliance. |
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It favors civil liberties, AIDS research, curbing dogs in Georgetown, and similar toughies. |
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Some players took liberties today and played for themselves and not for the team. |
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Many of the liberties enjoyed under Roman law endured through the Middle Ages, but were enjoyed solely by the nobility, rarely by the common man. |
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Meanwhile, people and animals have taken liberties with the car, with shoeprints and paw prints visible on the vehicle body. |
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According to the Whig interpretation of history, the Glorious Revolution was an example of the reclaiming of ancient liberties. |
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Brady realised that the liberties of the Charter were limited and argued that the liberties were the grant of the King. |
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Just because it is a biopic, sometimes people take liberties. |
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Readers who deem the book's liberties too free can stick to the tonnage of Watergate memoirs, transcripts, investigative reports and marginalia. |
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Many unkindnesses as well as many liberties and general vexings, were required to move her to this. |
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Maryland law protects individual civil liberties by forbidding wiretapping without the consent of the tappee. |
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Civil liberties groups have claimed the draconian rules will make Bangor like the communist dictatorship. |
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Both saw Magna Carta as a useful declaration of liberties that could be used against governments they disagreed with. |
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I see this as an abuse of police power and an infringement of civil liberties. |
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Writing a work of fiction, however, Shakespeare took many liberties and made great omissions. |
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His rule restored many of the liberties once assumed by Domitian and started the last golden era of Rome. |
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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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I see you've finally found a lightskirt to allow you the liberties you've craved. |
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Each Martial Law was marked by the quell of civil liberties or human rights. |
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Without such liberties, no civilization is free of its inquisitional tendencies. |
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Many liberties protected by state constitutions and the Virginia Declaration of Rights were incorporated into the Bill of Rights. |
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Human rights or civil liberties form a crucial part of a country's constitution and uphold the rights of the individual against the state. |
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The ongoing struggles over martial law and civil liberties, along with the rejection of the Resolutions seriously concerned the Commons. |
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Men had a civic duty to be prepared and willing to fight for the rights and liberties of their countrymen. |
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Britain seemed to threaten the established liberties that Americans enjoyed. |
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The ordinary Cossacks had to follow and give up their traditions and liberties. |
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They are within the boundaries and liberties of the City, but can be thought of as independent enclaves. |
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For the Cossack elite, a noble status within the empire came at the price of their old liberties in the 18th century. |
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The old Cossacks started giving up their traditions and liberties that had been worth dying for to obtain the pleasures of an elite life. |
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Some smaller settlements also enjoyed some degree of autonomy from regular administration as boroughs or liberties. |
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A new state constitutional convention could not limit individual liberties, according to the proconvention group Con Con for Court Reform. |
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Ronnie Kray was a Category A prisoner, denied almost all liberties and not allowed to mix with other prisoners. |
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However, Eliot judged Swinburne did not master it to the extent of being able to take liberties with it, which is everything. |
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These liberties, especially the liberum veto, led to anarchy and the eventual dissolution of the state. |
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Since then, membership of the Dutch Republic was perceived as a guarantee for the preservation of civil liberties. |
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Over the next few years, Mussolini banned all political parties and curtailed personal liberties, thus forming a dictatorship. |
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Voltaire came to embody the Enlightenment with his defence of civil liberties, such as the right to a free trial and freedom of religion. |
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In terms of civil liberties, the code made provincial 14th century Sardinia one of the most developed societies in all of Europe. |
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Within the City of London are the liberties of Middle Temple and Inner Temple. |
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Around this time, the county of the City of Dublin was established along with certain liberties adjacent to the city proper. |
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He considers that everyone has the right to use any means necessary to prevent deprivation of their civil liberties and force could be necessary. |
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To him, the people of Britain and of the Free World owe largely the way of life and the liberties they enjoy today. |
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It also takes a progressive approach to social policies such as civil liberties, animal rights, LGBT rights and drug policy reform. |
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He was an outspoken advocate of civil liberties, despite the risk this placed him in under the strict censorship laws of the time. |
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In May 1985, he appeared on BBC's Question Time, arguing that the Conservative Government's Public Order White Paper was a threat to civil liberties. |
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Rawls argues from this 'original position' that we would choose exactly the same political liberties for everyone, like freedom of speech, the right to vote and so on. |
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There were quite some liberties taken with the continuity of Hogwarts. |
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Besides promoting an individual's liberties, the right to a fair hearing has also been used by courts as a base on which to build up fair administrative procedures. |
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Constitution, but many English common law traditions such as habeas corpus, jury trials, and various other civil liberties were adopted in the United States. |
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Either Bsod nams dpal bzang po or, perhaps less likely, his subsequent editor has taken two interesting liberties with Khro phu Lo tsa bas eulogy. |
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No man has power over my rights and liberties, and I over no man. |
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The Revolution was made to preserve our antient indisputable laws and liberties, and that antient constitution of government which is our only security for law and liberty. |
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Being a councillor isn't a blank cheque for taking liberties. |
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The story line using the animated people follows closely that of the scripture whereas more liberties are taken with the characters in Buggelsville. |
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At the Liberty Stadium, the afrohaired Belgian took liberties with reality by saying he had nodded a pass to Victor Anichebe for the first of Everton's three goals. |
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Aside from the hit Canadian civil liberties will take with its passing, from green lighting charier violations, extending incarceration without charge. |
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Accordingly, Coke convinced the Lords to meet with the Commons in April 1628 in order to discuss a petition to the King confirming the rights and liberties of royal subjects. |
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Basic civil liberties undergird our system of representative democracy and many of the key provisions of the USA Patriot Act of 2001 undermine them. |
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Unlike the UK's Conservatives, Turkey's AKP has become an Islamofascist party over the last five years, narrowing rights and liberties, and intervening in private life. |
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Finland is a top performer in numerous metrics of national performance, including education, economic competitiveness, civil liberties, quality of life, and human development. |
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The party supports constitutional and electoral reform, progressive taxation, environmentalism, human rights laws, banking reform and civil liberties. |
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There is debate in these countries about whether such cards and their centralised database would constitute an infringement of privacy and civil liberties. |
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However, these liberties were accorded only to Roman citizens. |
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I never demagogued on our serious questions and stood for civil liberties. |
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Please remember, victims of crime also have civil liberties. |
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You've written that we're willing to trade with them but we don't draw a line when they obviate civil liberties, when they continue to act repressively. |
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The fact that Cromwell lacked military credentials grated with men who had fought on the battlefields of the English Civil War to secure their nation's liberties. |
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In 1628, alarmed by the arbitrary exercise of royal power, the House of Commons submitted to Charles I the Petition of Right, demanding the restoration of their liberties. |
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To any man whom we have deprived or dispossessed of lands, castles, liberties, or rights, without the lawful judgement of his equals, we will at once restore these. |
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It ranks among the highest in international measurements of government transparency, civil liberties, quality of life, economic freedom, and education. |
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The Reichstag Fire Decree, imposed on 28 February 1933, rescinded most German civil liberties, including rights of assembly and freedom of the press. |
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The political myth of Magna Carta and its protection of ancient personal liberties persisted after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 until well into the 19th century. |
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He checked the power of the nobles and helped the towns to free themselves from seigniorial authority, granting privileges and liberties to the emergent bourgeoisie. |
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In 1315, faced with the constant encroachments of royal power on the liberties of Normandy, the barons and towns pressed the Norman Charter on the king. |
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The first ten amendments, collectively named the Bill of Rights, were ratified in 1791 and designed to guarantee many fundamental civil liberties. |
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