Sentences with phrase «smart political people»

With so many Democrats ousted from office, Israel now has smart political people in almost every state in the country with their ear to the ground.

Not exact matches

Despite its overall air of smacking you in the face with the blatantly obvious, the article does have good quotes from actual smart people and a roundup of various political blog - related hijinks.
And we are confident we can, because we are a nation of smart, dedicated and hard - working people, blessed with abundant natural resources; and a nation that has maintained peace and political stability and earned international respect and goodwill.
Political campaigns often focus on wringing donations out of their online supporters (and we'll discuss online fundraising in depth in a later chapter), but real people are are worth more than just the contents of their bank accounts — smart campaigns will try to tap their brains and time as well (mmmm, brains....).
Political campaigns often focus on wringing donations out of their online supporters, but real people are are worth more than just the contents of their bank accounts — smart campaigns will try to tap their brains and time as well!
«It's obviously a stunt, a political stunt by Mr. Collins, and I'm sad that he's using this opportunity to create noise and division in our party but I think the people of Western New York are smart enough not to be fooled by this,» said Nate McMurray, the endorsed Democrat in the 27th.
If we want people involved in the political process, there are smarter ways to go about it, says Niall Firth
People often comment that Brexit and the US presidential election have proved so divisive that it feels as if smart and civil political debate has taken a hit.
The rest probably depended on the Mongols» brilliant cavalry skills, smart political maneuvering and savvy adaptions of urbanized peoples» technologies.)
The six - decade - long study on domesticating foxes in Siberia that we write about has everything from cutting - edge science to political intrigue to human / animal love stories, but perhaps more than anything else, it shows that when smart people with a passion for science pair that with almost superhuman perseverance, we can unwrap the mysteries of the world we live in.»
Many people are scared to participate in the political process or worried they aren't smart enough.
Third, most of our top rank experts and the people in many places, the ones who refer to each other as «the brightest and the best» -LCB- and point to each other as the «smartest guy in the room» -RCB-, appear not to rejected adequate ways of communicating to the family of humanity about what people somehow need to hear, see and understand: the rapacious dissipation of Earth's limited resources, the relentless degradation of the planet's environment, and the approaching destruction of the Earth as a fit place for human habitation by the human species, when taken together, appear to be proceeding at breakneck speed toward the precipitation of a catastrophic ecological wreckage of some sort unless, of course, the world's colossal, ever expanding, artificially designed, manmade global political economy continues to speed headlong toward the monolithic «wall» called «unsustainability» at which point the runaway economy crashes before Earth's ecology is collapsed.
Remapping the terrain — accomplished by talking to people on the ground — can sketch out where people move and why, as well as where resistance or other political dynamics lie, informing smarter policy.
Or to quote straight from the horses mouth (in this case Noahm Scumsky) «The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to STRICTLY limit the spectrum of accepptable opinion (= the purpose of political correctness) but allow very lively debate within this spectrum»
Van's a fan Progressive bloggers are buzzing about her nomination, with The American Prospect gushing that she would bring «passionate commitment to working people, a high level of political smarts, and some genuine displays of raw guts that could make her a star of American liberalism» and Jonathan Stein, writing for Mother Jones, calling her «a nominee to get excited about.»
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