Yet a closer look at his record suggests that he is just a convenient scapegoat for a lot of people's stereotypes. |
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Could it be there's method in the apparent madness of allowing these two to scapegoat others for Government failures? |
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The obvious thing to do would be to find a scapegoat, so they blame it on the bugs. |
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As for Hodge, there is little doubt that he will relapse into his traditional scapegoat role today in the eyes of the Scottish rugby public. |
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The events taking place at that time will foreshadow the scapegoat ritual of the Day of Atonement in Israel's sanctuary service. |
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Labour's concession to those who try to scapegoat refugees and migrants is shameful. |
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It would only take one more attack on the US homeland for the President to become a scapegoat and his Office of Homeland Security a broken reed. |
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I would say that he is taking the rap for it anyway, short of being the scapegoat. |
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As government forces suffered defeat after defeat, the military junta needed a scapegoat. |
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In its incorporeity, it is a ready scapegoat word, like State, Establishment, the Right, the Left. |
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But the complex set of circumstances I discovered cannot be explained by finger-wagging demands for a scapegoat. |
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It's easy to see how that loss of Englishness could use a visible minority as a scapegoat. |
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And so, in a cynical political exercise smacking of opportunism if not racism, they scapegoat the unborn children of non-national parents. |
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He doesn't even have the good grace to scam us by finding a scapegoat to pin the blame on. |
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The crisis ends with the victimisation of the guilty scapegoat through collective violence. |
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A fourth was to attack the social problem not directly but indirectly, by blaming a particular scapegoat for its emergence. |
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Instead a public servant has been sent into the line of fire as a fall-guy, a scapegoat, to take the heat. |
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Eastwood plays ex-Lieutenant Kelly, who was busted down to private as a scapegoat for a failed mission. |
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He claimed he was being made a scapegoat by the inquiry and strenuously denied he was a standover man. |
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Othello's intense pain of learning of a humiliating loss of power instantaneously converts to physical violence against the scapegoat Desdemona. |
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The fallen leader's statues often go down with him, like the scapegoat cast out at the year's end, a focus for normally inexpressible feelings of violence. |
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It is not a moral value to scapegoat undocumented immigrants. |
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Burnside may have been made a scapegoat, but it sparked the start of his solo PR career. |
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When there is a problem, there always is a scapegoat to blame. |
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Despite this and similar findings by other researchers, the recording industry has continued to scapegoat file sharing, even as record sales have fallen over the past year. |
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Ronnie also noted that using the media as a scapegoat leads people to ignore problems that may exist in the homes and schools of those who commit so-called copycat crimes. |
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His government is using ASBOs to scapegoat and criminalise young people. |
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One of the binmen sacked after being reported for standing on the back of a dustcart, said he was made a scapegoat by the council and claims the practice is still going on. |
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When properly manipulated, bureaucrats can help dominators maintain their tight grip on markets while supplying a convenient scapegoat for unfair rules. |
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Lisa, the middle Bradford child, is typical of the scapegoat and clown roles, a personal life marked by violence, chemical abuse, and dark humor. |
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Those in charge are already defensive and the graduate can be the scapegoat. |
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He said she was convinced that he would be the scapegoat if anyone ever found out about the drug use. |
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It looks like McGuinty is setting up the federal government to be the scapegoat for reneging on this money too. |
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However, as a strategic objective, enlargement can be the scapegoat for collective European impasses and that, in my opinion, should be avoided. |
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The euro will just continue to be the scapegoat for Member States' own failures. |
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The Association of Poles has become a scapegoat, and Poland and Polish diplomats have become public enemy number one in the country. |
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The old god appeared to carry away with him various weaknesses and fulfilled the role of an expiatory victim and scapegoat. |
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Instead of admitting our own mistakes in not providing the taxes to maintain and improve health care, we want a scapegoat to take the blame away from ourselves. |
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But the animal is the convenient scapegoat, and easily blamed. |
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Teenagers have always been an easy scapegoat to blame for wider problems, but ultimately the majority of these young people grow up into well rounded adults. |
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The president is wrong to scapegoat the intelligence agency for failing to connect the dots on the Christmas bomber. |
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But the player's ostentatious manner off the pitch made him an easy scapegoat. |
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By the end of his time there, he had become the scapegoat for a team that was perceived as lazy and entitled. |
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In England, public opinion showed impatience and Loudoun became the scapegoat for everything that went wrong during the year. |
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Dica has been used as a scapegoat and it is affecting other people like me. |
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Second, during wartime, many people looked for a scapegoat to explain their own misfortunes. |
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It is as if society needs a scapegoat for its ills and chooses youth to take on that burden. |
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In other words, the government is using GSK as a scapegoat to shirk its own responsibilities. |
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Is this an irrefutable scientific fact or simply another example of the scapegoat syndrome? |
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Our goal is to change the structures that generate injustice and ressentiment, and not confine ourselves to looking for a scapegoat. |
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The teaching profession is too readily made the scapegoat for more deep-rooted problems and inadequacies. |
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However, the EIA procedure has also become a scapegoat for a number of inefficiencies in the project development process. |
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And, as in countless other countries, LGBT people are a convenient scapegoat. |
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What Tismaneau is clear on is how Bolshevism and Nazism both desired a scapegoat to achieve their end goals. |
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In the blink of an eye, the hipster has turned into a catch-all scapegoat, guilty for everything from expensive beer to bad music. |
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They are vouching for Shadman, saying he is a scapegoat of a shoddy investigation. |
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Contending that he was being used as a scapegoat, Palmer asked for a trade. |
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The scapegoat is invariably an outsider, existing at the margins of a community, and resisting its core values. |
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For 17 years, the media has made me the black knight, the scapegoat. |
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Disabled people are seen as a good scapegoat. |
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As a result of the Second Dutch War, Charles dismissed Lord Clarendon, whom he used as a scapegoat for the war. |
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The most effective means to thwart such a peril proves to be the scapegoat mechanism, which allows to purge society of its overwhelming violent tendencies by channeling them towards one or several sacrificial victims. |
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Fraser argues that the Queen was a scapegoat, accused of being, at once, a frivolous, featherbrained hedonist and a dangerous, Machiavellian plotter. |
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But he is most likely to be made the scapegoat for future economic failures, and without the power ministries' support, his options to manoeuvre are few. |
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In their desperation to silence the scandal, the unlamented Grant Shapps was made scapegoat. |
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The punchless, Peyton Manningless Colts made defensive coordinator Larry Coyer the scapegoat for their 0-11 season this week and fired him. |
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The play subtly demonstrates how Bill's deadness — his refusal to make sense of things or to properly fix anything — is an unconscious attack on the house, in which he is alternately scapegoat and hostage. |
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It is true that they found a golden opportunity in the unfortunate words of Bishop Williamson, which enabled them by an unjust amalgamation to ill-use our Society, considered as a scapegoat. |
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Following this, Maximiliano Korstanje explains that tourism serves as an scapegoat mechanism used in order for society does not collapse. |
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Fastolf escaped with a small band of soldiers and became the scapegoat for the humiliating English defeat. |
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Conversely, members of a society may also shun or scapegoat members of the society who violate its norms. |
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Rae's respect for the Inuit and his refusal to scapegoat them in the Franklin affair arguably harmed his career. |
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Historian James Lockhart suggests that the people needed to have a scapegoat for the Aztec defeat, and Moctezuma naturally fell into that role. |
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During the civil war, Guinevere is portrayed as a scapegoat for violence without developing her perspective or motivation. |
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Then either the world or others or the self becomes the target for the human tendency to scapegoat. |
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Key international cadre were won to the Left Opposition, including James P. Cannon, a central leader of the American CP, and Chen Duxiu, the founding leader of the CCP who had been made the scapegoat for Stalin's betrayals. |
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We all know how ministers use the EU as a scapegoat. |
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In a situation of widespread poverty such as in Guadeloupe, the state's xenophobic attempts to scapegoat Haitians can often fall on fertile ground. |
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People tend to fear and then to scapegoat... groups which seem to them to be fundamentally different from their own. |
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If you, as leader, do not react, this will be interpreted as callousness, and it can easily be interpreted that the company are inhuman and that they are the scapegoat and do not care about the employees. |
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The constant need to look for a scapegoat can only lead to faulty analyses and superficial solutions, and therefore to the perpetuation of the problems. |
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The raillery of the fool and his frequent ritual association with a mock king suggest that he may have originated as a sacrificial scapegoat substituted for a royal victim. |
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A non-existent scapegoat may be the best scapegoat of them all. |
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The tendency to seek such a scapegoat is exacerbated when the seeker is not merely discomforted at the way things are changing, but positively yearns for a past age of golden rusticity. |
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For Girard and Ciuba, Jesus is the demythologizer of violent culture and was the ultimate scapegoat. |
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Thirdly, Europe must become more effective and coherent, capable of vigorously rebutting the attacks launched by eurosceptic groupings which, in my country too, use Europe as a scapegoat for domestic failures. |
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Because he took biblical revelation seriously, including from a scientific standpoint, he was able to unearth the essential role of the scapegoat mechanism in human societies. |
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Blaming just the public sector and how it works for all the imbalances within Europe, as seems fashionable at present, is not sensible since, as is often the case, the scapegoat can mask the real causes of the malaise. |
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At this point the asylum-seeker, the black African drug dealer or the foreigner will generally become a scapegoat for those whose fears are not specifically defined and are therefore uncontrollable. |
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But the goat, on which the lot fell to be the scapegoat, shall be presented alive before the Lord, to make an atonement with him, and to let him go for a scapegoat into the wilderness. |
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It is convenient to audaciously scapegoat an entire religion or an entire race and make the enemy visible and attackable. |
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The dressing down he got from Leanne Wood for seeking to scapegoat immigrants suffering with HIV for soaking up the NHS budget generated one of the few spontaneous rounds of applause of the night. |
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I may be crossing the species barrier here, but we think that the seal is perhaps being used as a scapegoat for the complete decline of the cod stock. |
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The euro is often used as a scapegoat for poor economic performances that in reality result from inappropriate economic policies at the national level. |
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If we raise our eyes, the Treaty of Rome of October 2004 rather appears to be the scapegoat of widespread unrest that does not so much relate to institutional order as to the government policies of the Union. |
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Eritrea refuses to be used as a scapegoat and it cannot accept statements that fail to objectively and honestly assess incidents that occur outside of its jurisdiction. |
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They had been used for centuries to justify or rationalize the behavior of that status and conversely to scapegoat and blame some other category of people. |
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If you want a scapegoat for your cruddy life, pick on a posho. |
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There seemed to be a shared perception of Colonel North as a good and honorable serviceman who had been left to twist in the wind, the scapegoat of an operation gone awry. |
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