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If sharing music was a deliberate act back then, today it is becoming an impulsive one.
FORBES: Will Music On Facebook Make Us Flightier Listeners?
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"I was hopeful it was an accident and not a deliberate act, " Mrs Heaton added.
BBC: Manchester
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The Fed let them, again not out of neglect but as a deliberate act.
ECONOMIST: A refresher on the 1930s
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But most Palestinians never viewed the uprising as a deliberate act of revolt.
ECONOMIST: Israel and the Palestinians
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Sir William's point is that the unfairness can often be the result of ignorance or thoughtlessness, not necessarily of a deliberate act.
ECONOMIST: Debating Lawrence | The
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As individuals, communities, and nations of the world, we must make a conscious declaration to rise above this deliberate act to hijack our way of life and our mindset.
FORBES: After the Boston Marathon Bombing: Trust? Are You Kidding?
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Currently, almost any accounting system you can think of records mistakes of commission, when a deliberate act goes wrong, but keeps no record of mistakes of omission: things not done that should have been.
ECONOMIST: In praise of the ideas of Russ Ackoff
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According to an opinion poll last year, 33% of evangelicals think hurricanes are a deliberate act of God which presumably means that man should not mess with them. (Some 13% of non-evangelical Protestants, 15% of Catholics and, bizarrely, 17% of non-religious people agree.) Twenty-two leading evangelicals wrote to the National Association of Evangelicals asking it not to endorse the climate initiative.
ECONOMIST: Doing it their way
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Playing point forward is less than ideal for Anthony, a six-time All-Star, because it makes him more deliberate and leaves him less opportunity to act as a deadly spot-up shooter.
WSJ: Spotting Carmelo Anthony's Shooting Problem
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Not only must there usually be an agreement between two or more parties, but there is also an additional requirement that a sufficiency of evidence exists to establish, on balance, that the act or omission complained of was deliberate and not merely negligent or inadvertent.
BBC: How has collusion been defined?
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Mr Blair's political opponents, especially those in the Conservative Party, cannot decide whether to portray these and other constitutional changes as an act of careless vandalism or as a deliberate plot to destroy a political union that has worked well for almost 300 years.
ECONOMIST: Undoing Britain?