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Word: distrust (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...know what is best for society but devote little thought to who will eventually pay the bills. I question the priorities of those liberals who lavish so much attention on individual license and entitlements that little concern is left for the good of the community at large. I distrust rigid ideology from any direction, and I am discovering that many Americans feel just as I do. The time may be at hand for a third major party to emerge to represent this sensible center of the American political spectrum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MY AMERICAN JOURNEY: Colin Powell | 9/18/1995 | See Source »

...Republicans cannot imagine anything better than Perot going away. Bill Clinton cannot imagine anything worse. Perot--and, more precisely, the millions of disaffected voters who support him and distrust the established parties--holds the key to the next election. Whichever way he--and they--goes will determine who wins the White House in 1996. The proof of this will come later this week when the entire G.O.P. presidential field (from Bob Dole to Illinois businessman Maurice Taylor), the Democratic leaders of the House and the Senate, a bipartisan mishmash of Washington politicians, even Jesse Jackson, converge in Dallas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ROSS PEROT: HE'S BACK (PART TWO) | 8/14/1995 | See Source »

...cable come into use, programming outlets will multiply. TCI's John Malone, who heads up what has long been the nation's largest cable company, is choosing to highlight the red-hot Internet, investing in his own Internet company as well as the Microsoft Network. "There is a growing distrust of one-way, packaged mass media," says Mark Stahlman of New Media Associates. This may mean that as people become more adept at navigating the World Wide Web, for instance, they will be less likely to depend on a single source of fun and news...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IT'S NETWORKING TIME | 8/14/1995 | See Source »

...shattered agency. An internal Treasury review, completed in October 1981 but little known outside the bureau, produced a portrait of an agency in agony, "grinding to a standstill." Unsure of its mission, it was readily buffeted by shifting political winds. Said the report: "There is widespread distrust of top management. There is little unity within the organization. Morale is very poor. This situation goes far beyond the normal criticisms and complaints which are leveled against management in any organization...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ATF UNDER SIEGE | 7/24/1995 | See Source »

...persistent barrage of outside attack also helped create a culture in which senior managers and agents face each other across a vast reservoir of distrust and hostility, according to hundreds of pages of internal reports and court documents reviewed by Time. Rank-and-file agents have long protested how managers use ATF's internal-affairs unit, which routinely conducts three to five times as many internal probes as the Secret Service's apparatus, even though each agency has roughly 4,000 employees. Magaw explains the differential as partly because of the fact that ATF agents conduct far more gritty street...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ATF UNDER SIEGE | 7/24/1995 | See Source »

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