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On the first page, the authors unloose a generalization of stupefying generality: "The United States has arrived at the point where poverty could be abolished easily and simply by a stroke of the pen.
Someday, perhaps, she will let that blister pop and unloose the rage and terror implicit in her stories.
" 'El Equipo' painted our police like a bunch of unprofessional people who don't even respect their own protocols, who make decisions impulsively and don't care if they unloose bloodshed so long as they get what they want," Álvaro Cueva, a television critic, wrote in the newspaper Milenio.
Of course, most of us humans are transplants, too, often moving between cities, and taking our familiar plants and animals with us — by accident or by design — without worrying much over the mischief we may unloose.
"Unloose your chivalry, Man of high command … pierce the vitals of Virginia, and scourge the serpent seed of her rebellion on the crowning heights of Richmond".
Insisting that he was unworthy to unloose the latch of Wordsworth's shoe, he quoted John the Baptist's evangelical welcome to Christ.
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After four years of bending the Constitution, the constitutional law professor now in the White House is trying to unloose the Gordian knot of W.'s martial and moral overreaches after 9/11.
The guns were eventually returned, but it is still unclear whether Mr Chalabi's group is to be allowed a monopoly, among Iraqi parties, on the right to bear arms.Across the country, release from the leaden grip of the Baath Party has unloosed a political free-for-all.
But it had a different meaning for him: the political opponent "disappearing" in a bricked-up cell, the newspaper ABC Color closed down for five years, or the "communist" agitator (he saw such phantoms everywhere, they unloosed American aid) silenced by near-drowning in a bath of dirty water.
After the election (1846) of the popular and democratic Pope Pius IX, whose reforms and policies unloosed liberal enthusiasm throughout Italy, Leopold became one of the first Italian rulers to grant a constitution for representative government (Feb. 17, 1848).
"What I was after is more like nuclear fission in which the explosion of something minuscule unlooses catastrophic, ungovernable devastation," he wrote in a 1992 afterword to some of his plays.
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