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The laws may be muddled, but people are betting anyway, even where it is illegal to do so.
ECONOMIST: Log on, ante up
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Should vocation, destiny, and self-reflection really be muddled together?
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So meaning can be drained or muddled.
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On taxation, for instance, they demand that the muddled system be drastically pruned, leaving just three main rates and no exceptions.
ECONOMIST: Lumbering to the finishing-post | The
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The author is indignant not just over her sister's ultra-traditionalism, but over the fact that British society in what appears to be a spirit of muddled multiculturalism seems to tolerate or even encourage such backward-looking ways of living and dressing.
ECONOMIST: No time for tradition
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Separation-of-powers advocates can, admittedly, produce an argument for why muddled messages to China can sometimes be helpful.
ECONOMIST: Christopher Cox and the Chinese dance
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In reality, a drawer full of costume jewelry, broken chains, errant earring backs and muddled memories may turn out to be next month's heating bill.
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If, however, you successfully predict the questions you will be asked, but your answers are reactive, defensive, overly complex or muddled, you will not get any credit from the reporter, readers, viewers or listeners.
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Mr Williamson's middle way can be seen, if nothing else, as an attempt to replace this ad hoc non-system with something less muddled.
ECONOMIST: Off target
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If he is to be the strong, even radical leader that he claims to want to be, the most immediate use of that power should lie in the appointment of a resolute cabinet rather than the muddled cabinet-in-waiting that was elected last year by the party and is stipulated by Labour tradition.
ECONOMIST: Now reveal yourself