Word: judgment
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...which was originally founded by proponents of Plan E, also backed the commissioners seeking an outside legal perspective because they're concerned about situations where judgment may be tainted by personal considerations...
...disclose to Demjanjuk's attorneys certain details that at the time seemed neither relevant nor exculpatory became, in the court of appeals' view, "misconduct" sufficient to set aside the extradition. I believe that the investigating judge was correct when he characterized these instances as the product of honest judgment and not misbehavior...
These sentiments recall a judgment voiced in a New York Times editorial: "There is a limit to our powers of assimilation, and when it is exceeded the country suffers from something very like indigestion." That observation was not made recently, however, but in May 1880, when anti-immigrant sentiment was also on the rise. Then too there was no effective limit on the number of immigrants entering the U.S. The hard fact is that when times are good, few worry about how many newcomers arrive; when times are tough, as they are now, cries of opposition invariably rise...
...retreat leaves some disturbing question marks about Clinton's leadership. Perhaps the president has decided that his domestic program and popularity are more important than these groundbreaking missions. If so, he has made a serious error in judgment. Worse, Clinton could be unaware of the ramifications of his actions. Neither alternative bodes well for U.S. foreign policy or for the future...
...have overwhelmingly rejected charges of brainwashing as lacking merit. In a brief filed with the California Court of Appeals in 1987 (Molko v. HSA-UWC), both the American Psychological Association and the American Sociological Association characterized the allegation of brainwashing by the Unification Church as "simply a negative value judgment in scientific garb...