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Fu's choices reflect, in his view, a sincere desire to help build a better tomorrow.
WSJ: Chinese Art in an Age of Revolution: Fu Baoshi | A Message in the Landscapes | By Lee Lawrence
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Difficult conversations take skill, strategy and a sincere desire to do good.
FORBES: Is it past time you engaged in a "Courageous Conversation?"
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The people who know Sarah Palin best say that she joined the McCain campaign with a sincere desire to do what was best for America.
CNN: Commentary: What Alaska learned about Palin
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In essence, the implementation of such plans may be less a function of a sincere desire to achieve aspirational corporate governance standards and more a scramble to give the appearance of compliance perhaps, at worst, even to provide an inside trader with the appearance of sanctioned conduct.
FORBES: Is New Insider Trading Plan An Inroad Or Off-Ramp?
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The chancellor is patently sincere in his desire to encourage enterprise, and no doubt some of these measures are helpful although it is hard to keep track of them.
ECONOMIST: The British economy
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"I believed and still do that he was totally sincere in his desire for a more just society, even though most of our talk about revolution took place in high-priced restaurants, " one of his friends recalled.
WSJ: Sightings: The Ungenerous Brilliance of Kenneth Tynan
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Now you may not agree with the steps the Department and the Administration are taking to encourage innovation, but from my conversations with them, they are sincere in their desire to see this transformation occur.
FORBES: The Department of Education: Serious About Transformation
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In fact, some worry that Mr Bush is only too sincere in his desire to support hydrogen, and that many a pork-barrel project will ensue once energy companies wake up to the chance of government assistance.
ECONOMIST: Clean energy
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Performance targets may be better than no controls at all, and the desire of the Treasury to get value for money is sincere, but remember that if central planning and targets worked, the Soviet economy would by now have left the United States far behind.
ECONOMIST: Labour��s new prudence