Word: reinterpreting
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...senior scholar at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, states flatly that "the process of economic reforms will naturally bring about a process of democratization, the setting up of checks and balances in political life and the rule of law." If so, and if the Chinese are willing to reinterpret Lenin as well as Marx, the potential consequences for both the Communist and non-Communist worlds would be truly staggering...
...peace. Now it's about jobs and growth, for most people. What we have to do is reinvent the idea of Europe. We have to show how our combined economic strength equips us to come to terms with globalization and benefit from it. We've got to reinterpret Europe in terms of the shifts that are taking place in the global economy. We've got to demonstrate why European unity and integration, our vast single market, our single currency, equip us with the strength to embrace globalization. Why are we seeing protectionist tendencies emerging in Europe...
Congress is expected this week to reinterpret the driver's license yet again. The license will never, of course, be called a national ID card, which evokes jackboots and imperial forces in the minds of many Americans. But the new law would make it function a lot like a national ID that comes in 50 varieties. To begin with, states would have to ensure that everyone who gets an official license is in the U.S. legally. Nine states do not have that requirement, and not all the others verify the authenticity of the immigration documents that they demand...
...first dead-on choice was hiring executive producer Greg Daniels, whose animated King of the Hill is TV's most acute satire of suburban mores. The second was casting Steve Carell to reinterpret the nightmare boss originated by Ricky Gervais. Carell's Michael Scott, like Gervais' David Brent, is a paper-company middle manager who believes he's a sage, a comedian and his employees' best friend...
Unfortunately, however, my argument reaches a lukewarm crescendo: I don’t know how we solve this ‘problem.’ Surely the answer is not to become technophobes and retreat into caves. It seems unlikely (though not unimaginable) that the courts would reinterpret the guidelines for some kinds of subpoenas and make them more challenging to acquire, given how much functional precedent lies behind the current procedures. For now, then, the best policy might well be one of prudence. It pays to be aware of just how vulnerable the details of our private lives could...