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Most profoundly, we see the wages of war in those patriots who never came home.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama at the American Legion Conference
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The wages of war have been great for both our nations.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama and President Karzai Sign the Strategic Partnership Agreement | The White House
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This, a result of laws about wages in World-War-II-era America, is one of the original sins of the U.S. health care system.
FORBES: No, Romney's Plan Is Not Better For People With Pre-Existing Conditions
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Rather, more often than not, Armitage slings his gun - or, more accurately, wields his stiletto - in the other sense of a partisan: one who wages war from behind enemy lines.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The disloyalists
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Consider it a treatise on the cost of war, at least the way the Fed wages it.
FORBES: Bernanke and the Big Ease: We Happy Few
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It is an historical accident: employers began offering health insurance during the second world war as a way of attracting workers at a time when wages were fixed by the government.
ECONOMIST: Business is right to be scared by the costs of Obamacare
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Through Gawker, Denton wages war on self-regard or presumed self-regard, as his cast of mind is both abstract and deeply tribal, inclining him to sort nearly all people into one or another category that could be judged full of itself.
NEWYORKER: Search and Destroy
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The libretto, an 18th- century "education-of-a-tyrant" plot, features Tiridate, king of Thrace, who is obsessed with his sister-in-law, Zenobia, and wages indiscriminate war to get her.
WSJ: The Turn of the Screw: Those Lifeless Servants