Yet, even as the movement restated the evils of the Great War, some peace elements came to feel that they were irrelevant to the European situation of the late 1930s, while others found themselves uncomfortably allied with
isolationists at home.
Not exact matches
On stage, He couldn't help pointing out that the U.S. and Britain were struggling with
isolationist political movements
at home.
At first glance, the Bible might seem to offer support for bigots and
isolationists.
No Lutheran pastor in my childhood ever made — whether in or out of the pulpit — a public political comment (though it was generally assumed that most of them, if they voted
at all, voted Republican), and while we occasionally talked politics
at home (my father was a Robert Taft
isolationist Republican), the true family passion was religion.
His suspicion of systematic apologetics might
at first glance make Frei seem a kind of theological
isolationist, retreating from wider circles of intellectual discussion.
From what I understand, Trump is an
isolationist / non-interventionist,
at least more so than previous presidents.
But he can not last if his cabinet refuses to back him, faced with an inward - looking and
isolationist reshuffle that leaves the prime minister
at odds with the mood of his own parliamentary party.
Reviving tensions between the two coalition parties after Mr Cameron vetoed a treaty to help rescue the euro
at this month's Brussels summit, Mr Huhne warned the
isolationist approach favoured by Tory sceptics would be disastrous for British jobs and trade and foreign investment in this country.
The revolution in Japan
at the end of 19th century put an end to 300 years of
isolationist policy.
In an era when US - produced movies shied away from the wars in Europe — largely due to a strong American
isolationist movement
at the time — Chaplin took a stand and used popular entertainment to cast a light on the issues.
«We are a little
isolationist,» Ivars Ījabs says to fellow from the Baltics in a session of constructive candor on «the paradox of the open culture»
at London Book Fair.
Historical figures
at the heart of the story include Madame Rachilde, a proto - feminist novelist turned
isolationist; Michel Leiris, a Surrealist who ends up in the hospital
at the end of the evening; and the banquet's honoree, the Symbolist poet Saint - Pol - Roux.
At a time when global political agendas are becoming more aggressively
isolationist and violent, the need for an equally brutal artistic assessment of these situations seems all the more urgent.
«Nothing unusual - ists» always fail to look
at the whole planet, always selecting a region in favour of their premise, and then they pounce on that single area forcing the view that the rest of our planet is likewise the same, they should be regarded as climate
isolationists, basically thinking that one region has absolutely nothing to do with others.