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Word: blusterous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Limbaugh are that everything he says could be filed under Political-Science Fiction. That's because he wants it both ways. * He wants to be taken seriously as a pundit by those he convinces and indulged as a comedian by those he might outrage. He considers himself, with typical bluster, "the epitome of morality and virtue" and "the most dangerous man in America." Are most of his facts factual? Yes. Does he overuse the debater's tactic of tarring whole movements with extreme examples? Yes. Does the distinction between fairness and exaggeration matter? Yes -- every bit as much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Conservative Provocateur Or BIG BLOWHARD? | 10/26/1992 | See Source »

...forcing it to write off $350 million -- including the allegedly stolen funds and $340 million in overstated profits. The privately held concern has dismissed auditor Coopers & Lybrand, which it blamed for failing to spot the fraud. The accounting firm says Phar-Mor's move was "apparently designed to posture, bluster and transfer blame...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hard Pills to Swallow | 8/17/1992 | See Source »

...blurbs on the back cover of The End of Equality ttry to paint Kaus' message as a radical departure from American political practice. Author Lawrence Mead goes so far as to name Kaus "the inventor of Civic Liberalism. "But despite the book-jacket bluster, Kaus' solution is as old as America itself. Alexis de Tocqueville considered strong civic ties to be the cornerstone of democracy, and the activists of the French Revolution even reorganized the calendar in order to squeeze class rivalry out of late-eighteenth-century society. Kaus' philosophy is nothing...

Author: By Dante E.A. Ramos, | Title: Money means Nothing in Kaus' Post-Liberal America | 8/14/1992 | See Source »

Hanks plays an alcoholic former major leaguer who is given a last chance for redemption as the Peaches skipper. As a traditional male placed in a distinctly untraditional role, he is given a lot of bluster and vulgarity to play. Too much of it. It forces him away from the reality he's also trying gamely to find. The same could be said of the whole picture. Energetic, full of goodwill and good feelings, it never quite attains the graceful nonchalance and self-confidence with which finely tuned athletes -- and comedies -- move and enchant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Girls Of Summer | 7/6/1992 | See Source »

...wingtips with a military shine. He has backslapped and arm-twisted with the best of them, winning lucrative non-bid government contracts and appealing decisions he didn't like to higher, more malleable authorities, having loosened them up with huge gifts. Beneath Perot's white shirts and CEO bluster beats the heart of an insider who has been playing the game for 25 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Perot and His Presidents | 5/25/1992 | See Source »

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