Word: evilã
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...supported you after 9/11, especially against the Taliban,” said Miller, speaking from the Iranian perspective. “We thought we had begun to make strides, but then we couldn’t have been more shocked by this ‘axis of evil?? speech.” “The majority [of Iranian diplomats] feel it is a fruitless pursuit,” he said. After the panel, one student said the discussion was thought-provoking. “Tonight it became very clear, in talking about the leverage other countries...
...little.” Parsani expressed concern that the fuel that will be given to North Korea as a result of the agreement could potentially be used for nuclear weapons. “We don’t think the ‘axis of evil?? should have weapons of mass destruction,” said Zaidel Bin Baharuddin of the Universiti Teknologi Malaysia. “But we don’t think the ‘axis of good’ should have them either.” While the delegates said they were pleased about...
...months ago. His visit generated controversy, but it also deepened the debate on Iran’s nuclear ambitions. A university, as a center of open discourse, is uniquely positioned to improve the quality of relevant debates. As one-third of the so-called “axis of evil?? and as the focus of an intense and divided nuclear debate, North Korea is at the forefront of global politics today. In late November, American diplomats traveled to China to meet with North Korean officials, and international talks about North Korea’s nuclear weapons program...
...United States politics course involved the interpretation of political cartoons. Our teacher, in an effort to diversify the usual assignment of essay questions assigned us the task of drawing our own cartoons. The assignment, due a week after President Bush’s infamous “axis of evil?? State of the Union address, resulted in almost the entire class drawing various depictions of a triangle surrounded by the leaders of Iran, North Korea, and Iraq, with hazardous waste symbols, and the words “axis of evil?? somewhere in the four-by-five...
...American discourse and thought as the president, and no one has had as much power to shape the words of President George W. Bush in the last five years as his speechwriter, Michael J. Gerson. When you hear the president use terms such as “axis of evil?? or “soft bigotry of low expectations,” you are hearing Gerson’s handiwork. Gerson—a former presidential speechwriter and top adviser who left the White House mid-June—is at Harvard this week as a Visiting Fellow...