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noninterventionists

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of noninterventionist.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • How many of these "noninterventionists" would agree to eliminate Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. insurance or the deductibility of mortgage interest?

    marconews.com Stories 2010

  • How many of these "noninterventionists" would agree to eliminate Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. insurance or the deductibility of mortgage interest?

    naplesnews.com Stories 2010

  • How many of these "noninterventionists" would agree to eliminate Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. insurance or the deductibility of mortgage interest?

    naplesnews.com Stories 2010

  • How many of these "noninterventionists" would agree to eliminate Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. insurance or the deductibility of mortgage interest?

    marconews.com Stories 2010

  • Now Brooks, echoing Niebuhr, set realism against two extreme forms of idealism — “the idealism of noninterventionists, who are embarrassed by power, and the idealism of imperialists, who disguise power as virtue.”

    A Man for All Reasons 2007

  • Now Brooks, echoing Niebuhr, set realism against two extreme forms of idealism — “the idealism of noninterventionists, who are embarrassed by power, and the idealism of imperialists, who disguise power as virtue.”

    A Man for All Reasons 2007

  • American idealism, he believed, comes in two forms: the idealism of noninterventionists, who are embarrassed by power, and the idealism of imperialists, who disguise power as virtue.

    A Man On a Gray Horse 2002

  • Many libertarians are “noninterventionists” who seem to oppose almost any military invasion outside the territory of the US on the ground that the unintended consequences of such actions are likely to be terrible, as indeed they often are.

    The Volokh Conspiracy » Libertarianism and Foreign Policy (long): 2004

  • American idealism, he believed, comes in two forms: the idealism of noninterventionists, who are embarrassed by power, and the idealism of imperialists, who disguise power as virtue.

    A Man On a Gray Horse 2002

  • Antonio Salandra, the Italian prime minister, had envisaged Italian intervention on the Entente side almost since the beginning of war, but the noninterventionists, led by Giovanni Giolitti, were too strong to make that at first a practicable policy.

    5. The Intervention of Italy, 1915 2001

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