My reason for supporting network neutrality, in whatever form it can be accomplished, is simpler. |
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But the worst offense is a tone of cheerful, sanitized neutrality so overwhelming that it actually renders the prose ahistorical. |
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A policy of armed neutrality with an emphasis on quality kit, fit for purpose. |
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There can be no neutrality between justice and cruelty, between the innocent and the guilty. |
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The first thing that strikes anybody is the extraordinary courage and unswerving neutrality with which she handles such a delicate issue. |
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The logic of this argument is that the only policy compatible with neutrality is absolute pacifism. |
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The intensity changes generally reach their maximal values near charge neutrality. |
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The alderwoman maintained her neutrality at a subsequent meeting with the neighbors. |
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Her neutrality in the First World War left her out of the negotiations concerning the restructuring of Europe. |
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If the Religion Clauses demand neutrality, we must enforce them, in hard cases as well as easy ones. |
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In a belated move, the education authorities decided to crack down on teaching practices that are harming the neutrality of education. |
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Far more likely is that he will select a successor beyond criticism who will restore the position to uncontroversial neutrality. |
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Soldiers would be banned from engaging in any political activities both on and off duty to ensure their political neutrality. |
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Roosevelt had already pushed neutrality to the limit and had assigned warships to accompany convoys in the Atlantic. |
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The Chancellor also in effect asks us to bargain away whatever obligation or interest we have as regards the neutrality of Belgium. |
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Note that the observed distribution is quite uniform compared to the distribution expected under neutrality. |
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Forced to spare Albany to preserve Iroquois neutrality, Canadian and Native war parties spread terror in New England. |
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What he had done was to strip the false flag of neutrality from Big Media and expose it as a co-belligerent in the political wars. |
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Due to the redundant nature of codons, the genetic code shows a significant level of neutrality. |
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The overall coloristic neutrality of the painting is anchored by the red table where the sewing machine rests. |
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Instead, we argue for the neutrality of nature, which is significantly different. |
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The passive voice gives a sense of detached and objective authority that, in contrast to the imperative mode, is expressive of neutrality. |
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The supposed neutrality and incontrovertibility of scientific doctrine gave both regimes a good part of their intellectual legitimacy. |
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The network neutrality issue has become the most disputed aspect of an effort to overhaul the nation's telecommunications law. |
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This is the best explanation I have yet seen for why broadband ISPs hate the concept of network neutrality. |
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Complete impartiality and neutrality are the necessary conditions for winning the trust of the conflicting sides. |
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They also asked government workers to maintain political neutrality in the upcoming parliamentary votes. |
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For anyone who sees this fact clearly, neutrality, silence or private disapproval are not options. |
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Japan concluded the Anglo-Japanese Alliance to ensure that London maintained a benevolent neutrality. |
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The claim to moral neutrality, sometimes made by strategists, is another shortcoming identified by critics. |
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In every important strike the bourgeois press is forced to drop its spurious neutrality. |
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In reality, as the conflict in Bosnia cruelly showed, neutrality can become discreditable as well as counterproductive. |
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They are opposed on a lot of grounds, but mainly out of a sense of fear for Bulgarian safety and neutrality. |
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It also reconfirmed its anti-militarism manifest in its tiny regular army and long-standing neutrality. |
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His comments were the third time in recent days where a government minister has interpreted Ireland's neutrality. |
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A sodium ion was introduced into the system to reach overall electrical neutrality. |
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Non-intervention in the face of mass murder or ethnic cleansing is not the same as neutrality in time of war. |
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In fact, the role of the state, consistent with its position of neutrality, in these matters should be minimal and facilitative at the most. |
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Academic institutions and professional societies would maintain a posture of organizational neutrality. |
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The show was anchored, with the zeal of a crusader rather than dispassionate neutrality, by Ravi Shastri. |
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In the interest of maintaining the appearance of neutrality, there would be no speakers with any obvious political party affiliation. |
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And what is most objected to by the new generation of human rights activists has been precisely the demand for neutrality. |
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Mothers were instructed to use their own definitions of child positiveness, negativeness, and neutrality in rating child behavior. |
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One seductive resolution to this conundrum is to abandon all pretence to scientific neutrality. |
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The adversarial system, and the public and official neutrality of the decision makers, are closely related. |
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During a speech in Athens she said concerns over neutrality had been addressed at the recent EU summit in Seville. |
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Hitherto the question of neutrality or intervention had been largely theoretical. |
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For the museum, abandoning the neutrality of its public presentation may also mean a symbolic abandonment of objectivity. |
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For a moment, Mr. Steele's face held the expression of infuriation, but this was soon overtaken by a struggle towards neutrality. |
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Feeling threatened, the Internet community tried to push through net neutrality rules that said every packet should be treated equally. |
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Uncertainty over potential network neutrality requirements is one of the major factors delaying necessary network upgrades. |
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This week the U.S. Federal Communications Commission releases its proposed new rules for Internet Service Provider network neutrality. |
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Farber has urged Congress not to enact network neutrality mandates that would prevent significant improvements to the Internet. |
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Two congressmen have proposed laws which would enforce the principle of net neutrality. |
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If they can make net neutrality the law, the network providers won't be able to manage their network, traffic shape, provide QoS, etc. |
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I am certainly open to arguments on the merits on net neutrality, but I am much less open to achieving those ends via regulation. |
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By codifying the principle, the FCC is attempting to limit the erosion of network neutrality. |
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Taking a look 5-10 years into the future makes the existence of these new network neutrality issues even less problematic. |
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The proposed changes conflict with one of the fundamental concepts of the Internet, network neutrality. |
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On the information superhighway, net neutrality should be a basic rule of the road. |
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As the drums of war grow louder, so do the plaintive cries of the Irish neutrality lobby. |
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But at the Congress of VIENNA Swiss control was restored and the European powers guaranteed the confederation's neutrality. |
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The second deficiency is concerned with the overly strict definition of selective neutrality. |
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The German government was thus gambling on British neutrality, and in July 1914 this seemed a reasonable bet. |
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The net neutrality debate reached fever pitch in the summer. |
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If those in government allow themselves to be intimidated into neutrality because they harbour private peccadilloes, they will sell the pass to the prophets of moral nihilism. |
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The battle over network neutrality has transcended party lines. |
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In 1940, the two major colonial powers in South-East Asia, France and the UK, signed pacts of non-aggression with Thailand, which declared its neutrality. |
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In 840 a treaty between Charlemagne's grandson Lothair and the doge of Venice, protected Venice's neutrality and guaranteed its security from the mainland. |
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In contrast to the pattern observed in strong directional selective sweeps, the departure from neutrality in polygenic traits is usually not confined to a given locus. |
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We have a clear declaration from 15 member states stating categorically that our position on military neutrality is understood, accepted, and acknowledged. |
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With this new development, LEGO tacitly undermined its own claims to neutrality. |
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Tehran has been actively working against Israeli-Turkmen relations, but Turkmenistan has fiercely asserted its neutrality. |
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It is perhaps only by understanding the historical and cultural antecedents of Irish neutrality that we can begin to figure out a new way forward. |
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Moments of pleasantness elicit a desire for more, moments of unpleasantness give rise to aversion, and moments of neutrality are opportunities to fall asleep. |
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The Federal Communications Commission approved a set of net neutrality rules Tuesday, and nobody is happy. |
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Communities of impassioned religious believers may boast many virtues, but neutrality and detachment are not among them. |
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The argument that POTS telephony capacity scaling is a counter-example of network neutrality isn't going to convince anyone on either side of anything. |
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The premise behind this official posture of neutrality is false. |
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While you were a congressman, you voted against an amendment that would have solidified net neutrality into law. |
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In addition, we tested goodness of fit of the observed frequency spectrum to that expected under the neutrality and panmixis with constant population size. |
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Net neutrality has leveled the playing field, making it possible for mom-and-pop sites to compete with large corporations. |
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It is, say officials, so harshly critical, so voracious in its search for blunders or gaffes, that it has frightened politicians into a state of frozen neutrality. |
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Unlike so many internet freedom campaigns, though, the argument for net neutrality isn't just supported by a ragtag bunch of developers and techno-hippies. |
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Despite its neutrality, Belgium was attacked by the Germans in 1914 in order to circumvent the French fortifications along the Franco-German border. |
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Pamphlets were venues for advocacy and commentary on domestic affairs, but newspapers adopted a pose of just-the-facts neutrality. |
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By December 1941, when the United States entered the war, it was already convoying munitions to Britain, making most neutrality legislation a dead letter. |
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The first breach of neutrality did not express a change of policy. |
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Even services that claim neutrality can be swayed by the stockpile of personal data now available to them. |
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Even after October 1943, when allowing Allied air bases in the Azores made it a co-belligerent, Portugal maintained an outward veneer of neutrality. |
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Architectural projects of our day are often impudent and arrogant, and our age seems to have lost the virtue of architectural neutrality, restraint, and modesty. |
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Even the opinion polls published in the broadsheet papers showed very strong views on the Rapid Reaction Force and the need to preserve neutrality. |
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Obviously, the task of the government prosecutor is to present the case for the prosecution, and therefore by definition he can hardly incarnate neutrality. |
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German violation of the neutrality of Belgium, which since 1839 had been under the protection of the great powers, was for Britain the formal casus belli. |
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Aside from network neutrality, some senators are concerned that streamlined regulation of telecom video services might take too much power from local government. |
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The agency's inclusiveness, its solicitude toward the divergent perspectives of many different stakeholders, fit with its avowed mission of neutrality. |
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Even the high principles of liberal internationalism, with an emphasis on the League of Nations and collective security, made neutrality problematic. |
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Moreover, the positive side to Irish neutrality, our promotion of diplomatic settlements, our proud UN peacekeeping traditions, must be maintained. |
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Switzerland joined the League of Nations, whose headquarters were in Geneva, but regards membership in the UN as incompatible with its neutrality. |
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Our neutrality would have eliminated any need for the German submarine offensive in the Atlantic and so would have kept America out of the war too. |
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Liechtenstein follows a policy of neutrality and is one of the few countries in the world that maintain no military. |
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After the war the Netherlands left behind an era of neutrality and gained closer ties with neighboring states. |
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Its position on the Western Sahara conflict is, since the 1980s, one of strict neutrality. |
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The history of Dutch foreign policy has been characterised by its neutrality. |
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Finland joined the United Nations in 1955 and established an official policy of neutrality. |
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Transline Group is thought to be the only large provider agency in the UK to achieve carbon neutrality. |
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The fallacy is, of course, a classic case of false neutrality, tendentiousness posing as objectivity. |
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Are centrism and neutrality over in Lebanon, wondered Ali Hamadeh, a columnist in the Beirut daily AN NAHAR Thursday. |
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By 1941, the United States was taking an increasing part in the war, despite its nominal neutrality. |
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From the start of World War II in 1939, Norway maintained a strict neutrality. |
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Each of these rooms also has an ohmmeter visitors have to stand on, to verify their electrical neutrality prior to entrance. |
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Many commenters suggest a prophylactic justification for neutrality regulation by appealing to the possibility of harmful behavior. |
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Presumably, the mediator team was aware of the importance of mediator neutrality to their role and to the sustention of a legitimate process. |
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Panaou, a teacher himself, said he has prepared educational material on gender neutrality and aims to propose it to the education ministry. |
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Weber stressed the importance of gender neutrality towards ensuring impartiality, promotion of merit and efficiency in organizations. |
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Further, such use would be highly likely to result in a violation of the principle of neutrality. |
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Lewis maintained a strict neutrality in his writings through his column Cwrs y Byd in Y Faner. |
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Achieving gender neutrality might be one of the hardest advances that we have to make. |
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Since then, Austria has shaped its foreign policy on the basis of neutrality, but rather different from the neutrality of Switzerland. |
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They would like to impose upon us their concepts of political correctness, gender politics, and gender neutrality. |
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The Orange Order was split over the Union and adopted policy of neutrality to avoid a split. |
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Due to symmetry and charge neutrality, a polarizable particle in a uniform electric field will experience no net force. |
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As in the first world war, Sweden remained officially neutral during World War II, although its neutrality during World War II has been disputed. |
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On this account the Scepticks affected an equipondious neutrality as the only means to their ataraxia, and freedom from passionate disturbances. |
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The Navy contributed for the defense of the Portuguese neutrality at sea and air. |
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Sweden's government pursued an independent course of nonalignment in times of peace so that neutrality would be possible in the event of war. |
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In July he oversaw the occupation of Elba, but by September the Genoese had broken their neutrality to declare in favour of the French. |
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This had a major impact on Iran, which had declared neutrality in the conflicts. |
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Because of neutrality regulations no mines were laid within Norwegian territorial waters. |
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Germany disregarded Belgian neutrality and invaded the country to launch an offensive towards Paris. |
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However, the founding EEC members remained skeptical regarding Ireland's economic capacity, neutrality, and unattractive protectionist policy. |
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Twelve English transport ships also arrived, contracted to carry the Spanish army under the flag of English neutrality. |
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Thus the Germans were able to avoid a direct assault on the Maginot Line by violating the neutrality of Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. |
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Men who possess a state of neutrality in times of public danger, desert the interest of their fellow subjects. |
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In August 1914, Imperial Germany violated Luxembourg's neutrality in the war by invading it in the war against France. |
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Frustrated by this decision and by the Dutch Republic's insistence on neutrality, Britain soon turned to Russia. |
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The Battle of the Downs was a flagrant violation of English neutrality within sight of the English coast. |
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These decisions broadened the effects of partition but were in line with the evolving policy of Irish neutrality. |
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The plan required the violation of Belgium's and Luxembourg's official neutrality, which Britain had guaranteed by treaty. |
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During World War II, there was a significant drop of Gaelic speakers due to a prejudice caused by Ireland's neutrality during the war. |
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Similarly the British were wary of Denmark joining the war against them, but Copenhagen followed a policy of strict neutrality. |
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Sweden remained officially neutral during World War I and World War II, although its neutrality during World War II has been disputed. |
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The ICRC worked with the Russian Red Cross society and later the society of the Soviet Union, constantly emphasizing the ICRC's neutrality. |
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The independent position of Swiss Standard German has been strengthened by Swiss neutrality and the recent German past. |
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In 1551 the tsar sent his envoy to the Nogai Horde and they promised to maintain neutrality during the impending war. |
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His actions were condemned by the ICRC because they were deemed as acting unduly on his own authority and risking the ICRC's neutrality. |
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The ideal of journalistic neutrality also has pragmatic origins. |
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In 1939 on the brink of the Second World War, the League relocated its headquarters from Paris to Geneva to take advantage of Swiss neutrality. |
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Iceland turned down British offers of protection after the occupation of Denmark, because that would violate Iceland's neutrality. |
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The neutrality of such solutions reflects the fact that sulfate is derived, formally, from the strong acid sulfuric acid. |
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To date, the activities of the NSHR have been limited and doubts remain over its neutrality and independence. |
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Leonidas Polk's invasion of Columbus, Kentucky ended Kentucky's policy of neutrality and turned that state against the Confederacy. |
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In fact, net neutrality once drew significant backing from the right wing. |
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A large number of international institutions have their seats in Switzerland, in part because of its policy of neutrality. |
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On October 16, 1936, Belgium repudiated the 1921 alliance with France and declared its absolute neutrality. |
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Philip of Flanders declared his neutrality towards Henry, in return for which the King agreed to provide him with regular financial support. |
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Belgium tried to pursue a policy of unaligned neutrality before the war, but on May 10, 1940 the country was invaded by German forces. |
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It was the First World War, however, that was the catalyst that brought about the end of neutrality. |
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Most kept a low profile, but the Quakers, especially in Pennsylvania, were the most important group to speak out for neutrality. |
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Overall, three general mobilisations have been declared to ensure the integrity and neutrality of Switzerland. |
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Trade laid the foundations of prosperity, aided by neutrality between England and France. |
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A month later, British armed forces invaded and occupied the country, violating Icelandic neutrality. |
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Since then, Sweden has been at peace, maintaining an official policy of neutrality in foreign affairs. |
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After these events, Denmark pursued a policy of neutrality in Europe. |
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Ireland tends towards independence in foreign policy, thus the country is not a member of NATO and has a longstanding policy of military neutrality. |
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Despite Irish neutrality during World War II, Ireland had more than 50,000 participants in the war through enlistment in the British armed forces. |
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From the outset of his rise to power, Hitler expressed admiration for Britain, and throughout the Battle period he sought neutrality or a peace treaty with Britain. |
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Switzerland was enlarged, and Swiss neutrality was established. |
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Attitudes vary from approval through neutrality to outright hostility. |
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During World War II, Iceland joined Denmark in asserting neutrality. |
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Meanwhile, British officials in Quebec began lobbying Native American tribes to support them, while the Americans attempted to maintain their neutrality. |
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On the reverse side, those persons choosing to waltz in the alleyway of neutrality are often given the names of Uncle Tom, brown noser, Oreo, whigger, acquessor or wannabe. |
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There they could anchor under protection of English neutrality and ferry the army and supplies on smaller, fast boats across the English Channel to Dunkirk. |
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The League's neutrality tended to manifest itself as indecision. |
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Mindful of French neutrality, Kearsarge's new commanding officer, Capt. |
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Despite their country's neutrality, approximately 50,000 volunteers from independent Ireland joined the British forces during the war, four being awarded Victoria Crosses. |
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Pitt at one point even feared that the Dutch would enter the war against Britain, in response to repeated violations of Dutch neutrality by the Royal Navy. |
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When Confederate forces entered the state in September 1861, neutrality ended and the state reaffirmed its Union status, while trying to maintain slavery. |
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At that point, Lincoln had secured the support of the Republicans, War Democrats, the border states, emancipated slaves, and the neutrality of Britain and France. |
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The 1839 international guarantee of Belgian neutrality was not violated. |
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Net neutrality may not be a big issue in Australia at the moment, but under a monopolistic or duopolistic market structure, it could rear its ugly head. |
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Bratianu was a Realpolitiker was noticed by one of the most intelligent and astute diplomats accredited in Bucharest during the period of neutrality. |
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With the beginning of WWII that fall, Copenhagen declared its neutrality. |
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Finally, neutrality was exercised to address researcher bias during the interpretational analysis of the teen fathers' experiences and perceptions. |
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This paper uses the terms 'white' and 'whiteness' to highlight the racialising function of the supposed racial neutrality of Australian bureaucratic discourse. |
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First, May deconstructs the neutrality of civism and considers this as the first step toward a non-essentialist understanding of cultural difference. |
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Integrating awareness of stereotyping into initial teacher training will help feed a new and more positive culture of gender neutrality into school life. |
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The gender neutrality of microfinance discourses, we suggest, both reflects and contributes to the masking of the gendered dimensions of poverty in Australia. |
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Since both sexes are affected, albeit to different extents, the eventual Bill could break a 40-year tradition of strict gender neutrality in UK legislation. |
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He further examines the responsibility of the Conflict Tactics Scale in the perpetuation of myths surrounding gender neutrality in partner violence. |
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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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William feared that even English neutrality would not suffice and that control over the Royal Navy was a prerequisite for a successful naval campaign against France. |
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Sawatsky also believed in maintaining a militant neutrality in his approach, always keeping an open mind and allowing for disconfirmatory evidence to be heard. |
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The Dutch government endorsed the ambiguous declaration, thus relieving itself of an obligation to declare war on Germany for violating its neutrality. |
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