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Word: faulted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...even cartoons that are aimed at children require a little parental monitoring. Most popular cartoons aren't like the Smurfs. They are more violent and action packed. Incidences of violence that result from children mimicking cartoons, are not the fault of the television and the characters that appear on the screen, but rather of deeper moral and ethical issues involving family values and family education...

Author: By Raine N. Reyes, | Title: Television Only Shares the Blame | 12/6/1993 | See Source »

...forgetting is not the fault of the victims; it is the fault of the criminals. Certainly, due process must be adhered to. But if society and courts dismiss the accusations based on memory, then they are also dismissing the rights of all children, who are too often seen as helpless and therefore convenient victims; the testimony of psychiatrists and brain researchers, who say that memory can be buried; the possibility that the mind is fluid, better understood by its possessor than by lawyers. And they will be dismissing one of the lessons of Salem, too: that the power structure...

Author: By Jennifer L. Hanson, | Title: Memory, Testimony and Justice | 12/3/1993 | See Source »

...reclined. In his leather-upholstered office a few blocks away, Serge Leclaire, 69, an ex- president of the French Society for Psychoanalysis, notes all this cultural hubbub in France and contrasts it with the assaults on Freud in the U.S. "What happened to Freudian psychoanalysis in America is the fault of American psychoanalysts," he says. "They froze things into a doctrine, almost a religion, with its own dogma, instead of changing with the times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Assault on Freud | 11/29/1993 | See Source »

...trying to improve our communication on the court. The turnovers against Lee Strand (28 in all) were the whole team's fault, not just the guards," added Butler...

Author: By Mayer Bick, | Title: W. Cagers Prep for Season | 11/19/1993 | See Source »

...political deal may yet be cobbled together. Bosnia presented the strongest case for intervention, but it would have been a mistake as well, even if limited to air strikes, which could hardly have curbed the deep tribal hatreds at the dark heart of the struggle. The Clinton Administration's fault was promising action, then pulling back. Only when and if what is essentially a civil war were to become an international conflict would military intervention be justified. Compelling as the moral and humanitarian demands are, we must balance them against what we can realistically expect to achieve; hunger and bloodshed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letter to an Isolationist | 11/8/1993 | See Source »

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