• The economy and stocks and fiscal policy and global trade are related, but not to be conflated.

    FORBES: Don't Get Stockblocked

  • This is an area where tax reformers face two separate questions that often get conflated in the political rhetoric.

    FORBES: Good and Bad International Corporate Taxation

  • Of course, for journalistic flourish she also deliberately conflated hospital reimbursement with physician pay (only for US doctors, interestingly).

    FORBES: It's Physician Pay, Stupid!

  • Moreover, the anti-sharia crowd has "conflated" (yes, another favorite word of progressive elites) a radical interpretation of sharia with the mainstream entirely innocuous interpretation.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: yerushalmi

  • In order to establish their credentials within the Hellenic world the Carthaginians conflated the Greek hero, Heracles (better known as Hercules), with Melqart, his Tyrian counterpart.

    ECONOMIST: Myth and the making of history

  • The answer is that the financial industry has conflated saving with investing, inventing products that supposedly do both, even though in this context the two are incompatible.

    FORBES: How Wall Street Unloads Its Risk On Unsuspecting Savers

  • Sometimes when IFRS is discussed, especially with regard to the roadmap for adoption in the United States, the accounting framework is conflated with the accounting standard or principle.

    FORBES: Crisis? What Crisis? Don't Blame The Accounting

  • Connie Rice, an African-American civil rights lawyer who helped broker reforms of the force after the 1992 riots, warns that Dorner's rants should not be conflated with the legitimate grievances of a bygone age.

    BBC: Christopher Dorner: What made a police officer kill?

  • Since the 1950s large-scale immigration to Britain has mainly been from Africa, the Caribbean and South Asia, meaning that arguments about immigration have been racially charged (indeed, plenty of politicians have deliberately conflated the issues).

    ECONOMIST: Immigration trends

  • Their argument, the court said, conflated two basic legal principles, first that the court must approve a settlement for fairness, and second that cy pres awards, must be given to groups that offer a reasonable substitute for the absent plaintiffs.

    FORBES: Court Rejects AOL Settlement Over Questionable Charity Awards

  • The euro zone's misfortune is that its political leaders have allowed the vital structural overhauls needed to restore growth to become conflated in the public debate with the necessary fiscal adjustments needed to curb borrowing under the toxic label of austerity.

    WSJ: In Place of Austerity: What Comes Next?

  • But, I mean, look, I think that people have conflated money lent to banks, much of it paid back with interest, to stabilize the financial system, or investments that had to be made in restructuring auto companies with the recovery plan.

    WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing

  • Meanwhile, he said, news and comment were being deliberately conflated, Watergate-style conspiracies dominate to the point that the media will not accept politicians make mistakes rather than act venally and, as a result of all this, there is no balance in reporting.

    BBC: Analysis

  • The composition is clearly divided into earthly and celestial domains and, as the art historian Sarah Schroth has described, two recognizable European types the "All-Saints Picture" of a sacred realm filled with divinities, angels and saints, and the motif of the "Last Judgment, " in which the dead are judged for eternity are beautifully conflated in the upper register.

    WSJ: El Greco's Masterpiece The Burial of the Count of Orgaz: A Vision of Faith | By Mary Tompkins Lewis

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