Word: judgmentalism
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...There is probably nobody in politics more flawed than Kennedy, and many of us lost all respect for the man long ago. Obama is making a mistake attaching himself to the Kennedy family. Sadly, Obama has poor judgment when it comes to his associates, as previously seen with his pastor and Antoin (Tony) Rezko. I hope Obama can accept the endorsement with no strings attached and win the nomination on his own merits. Susan Kachmar, Mondovi...
...year-old independent voter, and while my mind says Hillary Clinton, my heart says Barack Obama. I have had concerns about his experience, but as he bests Clinton in state after state, it is becoming clear to me that this man has the judgment to surround himself with people of experience who know how to face challenges creatively. I suspect that if Obama becomes President, he will have the political courage to call on seasoned, experienced advisers from both parties to tackle the horrific challenges America faces. Perhaps we voters need to show some courage ourselves. Maureen Aull, Fairbanks, Alaska...
...papers are not in order, so long as there is no evidence that it was dug up during the period covered by the source nation's cultural-property laws. "We can't just have a policy that prohibits those acquisitions," he says. "We've got to exercise informed reasonable judgment...
...year-old independent voter, and while my mind says Hillary Clinton, my heart says Barack Obama. I have had concerns about his experience, but as he bests Clinton in state after state, it is becoming clear to me that this man has the judgment to surround himself with people of experience who know how to face challenges creatively. I suspect that if Obama becomes President, he will have the political courage to call on seasoned, experienced advisers from both parties to tackle the horrific challenges America faces. Perhaps we voters need to show some courage ourselves...
...respective field. By the time an academic has ascended to such a height, he has presumably amassed an incredibly broad knowledge of his subject and, most likely, attained unrivaled expertise in his specialty—whether it be Machiavelli or early American midwifery.As such, professors, if we trust the judgment of Harvard, are credible authorities in their fields and are qualified to pass on their vast knowledge to students, in perspicacious lectures, well-structured seminars, and carefully-selected reading lists. Such lights of the Academy ought to be entrusted with deciding what students should read and what they should learn...