Sentence examples for its alienation from from inspiring English sources

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Advocates of a leaner -- or at least more decentralized -- bureaucracy say that the biggest problem with the central office is its alienation from the communities it serves.

New Labour was regressive and technocratic; in its heart of hearts it dreaded the messiness of democracy; the poor and the put-upon were not to its taste; its alienation from ideology - another word for thinking - left it doomed to be tossed about by the great issues of our time.

In spite of its alienation from the Nusrah Front, ISIL retained considerable strength in eastern Syria, establishing a zone of exclusive control in the Euphrates valley centred on the city of Al-Raqqah.

The Social Democratic and Labour party has been rechristened by republicans the South Down and Londonderry party in view of its dwindling electoral base and, by implication (the use of Londonderry), its alienation from nationalist public opinion.

Searching for ways to improve the economy and conscious of its alienation from the industrial working class, the regime turned toward market reforms with an increasingly significant elite-oriented liberal (from the mid-1980s) component.

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The generation was "lost" in the sense that its inherited values were no longer relevant in the postwar world and because of its spiritual alienation from a United States that, basking under Pres.

It's a tighter setup, in fact, because the same writer praised as "a top-notch journalist and fiction writer [who] braids keen and provocative observations about the American frontier, the myth of the mountain man, and the peculiar state of contemporary America with its 'profound alienation' from nature into her spirited and canny portrait" was subsequently lampooned for writing "chick lit".

Mike Marqusee has written at length on the conflicts in Dylan's life during this time, with its deepening alienation from his old folk-revival audience and clear-cut leftist causes.

The experience intensified his alienation from the city's Democratic machine and his anger at its leaders, especially Mr. Rangel.

"From his Puritan vantage point," Eugene Rostow once wrote, "Kennan has excoriated what he regards as the vulgarity, materialism and bad taste of the American culture; its deplorably simplistic and irrational politics... and its increasing alienations from the true sources of moral purity -- the life of small agricultural communities".

Partly in response to this development but also prompted by long-simmering tensions, a series of disturbances broke out in British cities in 1981, particularly in Liverpool and London, when an endemically unprivileged young black urban population turned its sense of alienation from much of British society against the police.

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