Man feels the same impulsion, but he knows that he is free to acquiesce or to resist. |
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To argue otherwise now is to acquiesce in a rhetoric which those of us who accept universal human rights have no choice but to reject as racist. |
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If we do not make a stand, we will acquiesce to our positioning as mere spectators in the construction of our society. |
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However, to understand is not to acquiesce in or accept these developments. |
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No matter what side you're on, there are enough voters who either agree with you or acquiesce to you to win the election. |
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Third, have an alternative strategy to wrest the initiative from them and force them to acquiesce. |
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In many cases it is being done by co-opting both the clergy and the laity, giving them no alternative except to acquiesce. |
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The best strategy for the author is to refuse to acquiesce and wait for the threatener to give up. |
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If he was not prepared to bend to his wife's wishes on this, will he acquiesce to any pleas for extra cash in the future? |
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Rather than acquiesce, many women won a voice in the public sphere by forming societies and clubs for self-improvement and community reform. |
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Hence, they are resolute in not placing themselves in a position of having to acquiesce to another agreement hammered out by the rich countries. |
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He ought to acquiesce, using at the same time the utmost powers of his reason to promote its repeal. |
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Now that these men demand their pound of flesh in increasingly raucous voices, the government at the Centre has no resort left but to acquiesce. |
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Her request was granted, although the hospital doesn't usually acquiesce to such appeals. |
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It took about two centuries to pacify the province, and indeed not until after 1854 did the Miao fully acquiesce in their fate. |
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So, it turned out that White had to acquiesce to the exchange of Bishop for Knight after all! |
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To counter this threat, futilitarians are moving on two fronts to all but guarantee that courts will ultimately acquiesce to futile care theory. |
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If on the other hand, these were imposed on them by a more powerful superstratum, they had to acquiesce. |
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But lately the catcalls and hisses are dying down as audiences acquiesce to the reality of in-theater advertising. |
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War is necessary, as a last resort, for resolving disputes between states that cannot agree and will not acquiesce. |
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But for the moment, there is no sign that Mr Wahid is ready to go quietly and acquiesce in a smooth transition. |
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Some informants wondered whether the college would acquiesce to this request. |
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This is the way things would go if Parliament were to acquiesce in the agreement between the Commission and the United States. |
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There will be temptations to bicker, there will be inducements from the north to sidle off and acquiesce in more compromise. |
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He was force of nature and a force for good that eventually, they had to acquiesce. |
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Are five crotchety conservative men likely to decide to acquiesce to this change, or fight it? |
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If you let by without dispute a failure of language you acquiesce in an affront against literary integrity. |
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People perpetrate it of their own free will, and other people acquiesce in it of their free will by allowing it to go on. |
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It was sad for epistemologists, Hume and others, to have to acquiesce in the impossibility of strictly deriving the science of the external world from sensory evidence. |
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It noted that he had sent a succession of emails to the mother clearly indicating that he did not acquiesce in the retention. |
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That temptation must be resisted. To give up hope is to acquiesce to the gravest of threats to international peace and security. |
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We acquiesce in the loss of freedom whenever we are silent in the face of injustice to anyone. |
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However, he did acquiesce to their request for a hearing to decide whether or not to ban research on the system. |
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So many wish to suppress this history, and it's good to see Coulter refusing to acquiesce. |
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Balcombe L. J. argued that to acquiesce there should be an informed acceptance of the infringement of rights. |
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Why do citizens acquiesce in regimes of which they obviously disapprove? |
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With the King now present, Cromwell was eager to find out what conditions the King would acquiesce to if his authority was restored. |
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It is clear that a group of people have hijacked the European project, and I am, regrettably, convinced that those who acquiesce once again will go down in history as benighted squanderers. |
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Sir Stelios hinted that if the chairman, Sir Colin Chandler, refused to acquiesce, he would reassume the chairmanship himself, as he is entitled to do. In this section A gathering storm? |
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Never again will we acquiesce in the killing fields, not on our watch. |
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If the government thought millions of cast-aside workers would quietly acquiesce to their fate and let bygones be bygones, it was sorely mistaken. |
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Judges should be slow to infer an intention to acquiesce from attempts by the wronged parent to effect a reconciliation or to reach an agreed voluntary return of the abducted child. |
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It's marketed as a treat, the cherry on top once you finally acquiesce to the will of our corporate overlords and cough up for permanent next-day delivery. |
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He claims they pathologised his erudition and his refusal to acquiesce. |
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These two factors combined constitute a powerful temptation to acquiesce to the continuation of the impasse, at least for another number of years. |
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Canada should not acquiesce in this hijacking of the anti-terrorist program, but it neither can nor should pull out of collective security arrangements. |
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In Chapter IV of this report, I conclude that Canadian officials did not participate or acquiesce in the American decision to remove Mr. Arar to Syria. |
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The Chair may not necessarily acquiesce to such a request. |
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I have an even harder time explaining why it is that many delegations here seem to assign the principal blame for inaction at the CD to those of us who refuse to acquiesce in hostage-taking by others. |
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We agree and acquiesce to this recommendation. |
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He encouraged the judiciary to participate at the ground level in the design of an information technology system, rather than acquiesce in the design by others. |
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They were compelled to acquiesce in a government which they did not regard as just. |
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I may be forced to acquiesce in these recent developments, but I can hardly be expected to make merry over them. |
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Although respectful toward the King, he made it clear that his constitutional duty was to acquiesce to the will of the people and Parliament. |
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Adolf Hitler had hoped that France and Britain would acquiesce in the conquest of Poland and quickly make peace. |
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In return, the politicians acquiesce to union demands for a union shop and the dues checkoff. |
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In Egypt, Sultan Saleeh decided to acquiesce to the results and made no attempt to raise an army to encounter the Mongols who had invaded his dominions in Syria. |
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By 1209 the situation showed no signs of resolution, and Innocent threatened to excommunicate John if he did not acquiesce to Langton's appointment. |
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Throughout May, the House of Commons passed several bills attacking bishops and episcopalianism in general, but each time the Lords refused to acquiesce. |
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