If nothing else, as Goldwater said, voters will have a choice, not an echo.
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One could almost hear an echo of Martin Luther denouncing the sale of indulgences.
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"There is still an echo and a bruise, " Hastings told analyst during a Wednesday conference call.
But cynics also saw an echo of Mr Putin's first state-of-the-nation address as president in July 2000.
There is even an echo of the anti-elite message preached by the National Front's Jean-Marie Le Pen.
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There is an echo of Greek tragedy about the succession of blows striking a single American family.
If this high octane tax deduction sounds to you like an echo from the past, it is.
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The same complaint followed Giuliani into politics, where he sometimes seemed to be deliberating inside an echo chamber.
They are an echo of the early 20th century, when TB was widespread and sanitariums dotted the nation.
And so, you can actually, like, in an echo in sound, you can see the light moving outwards.
In an echo of derby's depression roots, the tough sport has enjoyed a resurgence during tough economic times.
His misgivings have an echo in the criticisms of genetically modified food today.
In an echo of Conservative policy nationally, she says "we have to be very, very clear about the public finances".
In choosing Johnson and Gray the LP nominated two serious candidates who truly offer a choice rather than an echo.
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In an echo of the Hayne-Webster debate, bills have been introduced in at least eleven states to nullify the federal law.
Thus an echo chamber in which no dissenting views ever get heard.
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He referred the woman for an echo cardiogram (an ultrasound video that enables a cardiologist to evaluate how well the heart is working).
Arguably, then, gold's rise to date is not as much a reflection on U.S. monetary management as it is an echo of the commodity boom.
The indigenous community has used the Internet to get its message out to the international community, Siren said, in an echo of protest movements elsewhere.
Bloggers linked to one another's sites and posted on Brill's blog and elsewhere, creating an echo chamber in which, through repetition, the scandal began to seem genuine.
Then, in an echo of her appearance at last year's Brits, her post-awards press conference performance was interrupted to welcome the sound editing winners to the stage.
The researchers found that there were a lot more positive than negative stories, an echo of the well-known tendency for stockbrokers to issue more buy than sell recommendations.
There may have been a heckler or two, but while they failed to find an echo, such displays of impoliteness are not the usual way at this gathering.
Dana Milbank chimed in to argue that the rise of Twitter had created an echo chamber effect among campaign journalists that shapes these shared narratives, literally moment-by-moment.
And since Washington is an echo chamber in which the terms of the debate are initiated by government and reflected back by media, you forgot that any other options even existed.
Science as we know it was consciously created in the 19th century, and in many ways the current wave of data techniques feels like an echo of that first flood of innovations.
They are looking for a rephrasing of the slogan uppermost in their minds: "a choice not an echo" -- the title of the best-selling manifesto that helped persuade Republicans to follow Barry Goldwater to disaster.
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