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It's a hard game to explain, and even harder when it's tangled up with politics.
NPR: The Volatile Mix of Politics and Golf
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Both fighters winged wild shots, and were often thrown off balance and tangled up with one another.
WSJ: Bradley Wins Controversial Decision Over Pacquiao
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Arguments about the architecture of the parliament's mosque have inevitably got tangled up with issues of secularism and Islam.
ECONOMIST: The architecture of mosques
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Dallas discovered its plans for enforcement were tangled up with state law collecting fines from the red-light speeders proved impossible.
FORBES: Rahm Puts On the Red Light
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In "Raylan, " out next week, the marshal gets tangled up with criminals who try to cut out his kidneys, a corrupt coal-company executive and a thuggish strip-club owner.
WSJ: Elmore Leonard on 'Justified' and His New Book, 'Raylan'
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"We're extremely hopeful that this bill will remain an immigration bill and not get tangled up with the issue of gay rights, " Richard Land, a leader of the Southern Baptist Convention, told reporters on a conference call.
NPR: Study: Immigration Bill Would Help Social Security
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It is tough to make judgements like this when your own life is so tangled up with the events of the world, but I think it is reasonable to say that the 1972 election was the end of an era.
FORBES: George McGovern Passes On - Where Were You In 1972 ?
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These loans are all tangled up inside of big pools with other mortgages, and the companies involved have all these perverse incentives.
NPR: Government Plan Would Guarantee Some Mortgages
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Are you one of those users always ending up with a case full of tangled cables?
ENGADGET: Fractal Design's Define Mini custom PC case ditches LEDs for style
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Coca-Cola is not trying to get involved in politics, says Webster, but as a huge brand so closely associated with the US, it sometimes finds itself tangled up in politics, or singled out for criticism.
BBC: Who, What, Why: In which countries is Coca-Cola not sold?
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In order to bolster the domestic economy, they also need to free up the services sector, which in many places remains hopelessly tangled with red tape.
ECONOMIST: East Asia's economies
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They also like Yulia Timoshenko, a former deputy prime minister who tangled with the tycoons over the country's murky energy business, ending up in jail.
ECONOMIST: Ukraine