Word: respecting
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Just like they’re wrong about not giving Harvard a top-five ranking and the respect that this undefeated team—the last remaining in I-AA for two weeks now—truly deserves. (In fact, I’ll be incredibly surprised if the voters give the Crimson a top-10 ranking in the polls that come out today, but I can take solace in the fact that almost all of the participants have never seen Harvard play...
...want to address the latter point here. Republicans simply take care of their base, respect them and value their contributions. Bush speaks proudly of being an evangelical Christian and appoints others to high office, like the recently-resigned John Ashcroft, who use their positions of authority to carry out an agenda that is highly favorable to the issues that evangelicals hold dear. Regardless of the logic or morality of this behavior, you cannot deny that this is a productive and visible way of reaching out to and securing a political base...
...empty promises and rhetoric that ages more like milk than wine, black voters turn out in droves. After 2000’s distressing election Democrats swore to us (again) that they would not let us be disenfranchised. Bush’s record is indeed abysmal, but the lack of respect that John Kerry and the Democratic establishment showed black voters is ridiculous. It is also, unfortunately, our fault...
...women who will be the future leaders in this nation, a nation that has developed more rapidly and with more social responsibility than perhaps any other in the world. It has also been a unique experience to live in a society led by someone who is sincerely and deeply respected. One of the reasons I left the U.S. and moved here was because of my growing apprehension about the direction in which George W. Bush and his advisors were taking the country. By contrast, the longer I live here and the more I learn about Sheikh Zayed?...
Although widely regarded as a friend to business, the President has struggled to find a Treasury boss who has won the respect of Wall Street and the Bush inner circle. JOHN SNOW is expected to remain in place, at least for a while, but it's almost certain that the search will go on. A possible replacement: WILLIAM DONALDSON, the former investment banker who, after a sluggish start as head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, is beginning to win praise for steering the agency into more aggressive scrutiny of slippery business practices. A Donaldson drawback: he has alienated some...