"The choice we were faced with was no choice at all: it was independence with detachment (of the Chagos archipelago) or no independence with detachment anyway," Jugnauth told the 14-judge panel.
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Brandt's distinctiveness comes from his intimate detachment, or impassioned disinterest.
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The feeling of detachment from my roots was very alienating.
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I developed this intense detachment that later turned into PTSD.
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Their detachment protects them and lets them serve as guides.
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The detachment from today's culture is something that interests me.
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They both have a bit of emotional detachment, though. Robotic.
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But is he too quick to choose access over detachment?
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Detachment, meanwhile, upheld ideas of propriety, elegance, dignity, and discipline.
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Putin was told by the military that it had begun withdrawing 25 aircraft, a detachment of Russian military police, a detachment of Russian special forces, a military field hospital and a de-mining center.
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The UN detachment was attempting to fetch water for a village.
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It was a voluntary detachment from the rest of the world.
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Themes of glamour, danger, and playful detachment run through their work.
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Romel Pajimula, DPAA detachment commander, prior to commencing a repatriation ceremony.
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Practicing detachment from the addictive quality of our devices is important.
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One of Sutton's favorite mental strategies is to practice emotional detachment.
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All my aesthetic and intellectual enthusiasms were versions of aesthetic detachment.
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There is also a coldness in her, a sense of detachment.
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" On the other hand: "Detachment is a great way to relax.
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"Not a lot, but just enough," Dodson says with remarkable detachment.
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He'd had the same detachment I remembered from our band days.
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Its removable doors gain a handhold for easier one-person detachment.
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For example, there is freedom as capacity and freedom as detachment.
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"Counteracting the resultant detachment takes a ton of work," she wrote.
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And Republicans offer nothing but negativity, detachment, absence and an ax.
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Each one brought something different to the role — steeliness, bewilderment, detachment.
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Militants attacked a military detachment in Soum province on Tuesday morning.
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JM: You can talk about it as a suburbanized experience of detachment.
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American Artist examines blackness and detachment with broken shards of digital culture.
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"One year we had a break in at our detachment," recalled Michalchuk.
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In describing the documentary to Neistat, Paul explained his story with detachment.
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"It creates a retinal detachment that looks like a blister," Neitz says.
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Such was their inhuman detachment from the reality of its likely consequences.
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As fluid accumulates, pressure builds, with one possible outcome being retinal detachment.
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You'll quickly understand the three-part method of acceptance, accountability and detachment.
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Another symptom can be depersonalization, or a sense of detachment from reality.
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That it is beautiful amazes, with aesthetic detachment tensed against naked emotion.
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The multiple readings his detachment offers are what disturb and touch us.
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Compassionate detachment and sincere curiosity are excellent ways to encourage self-exploration.
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The designator "a thing" is thus almost always tinged with ironic detachment.
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The rigorous scholar must strive for the strict detachment of scientific objectivity.
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Freedom as detachment is giving people space to do their own thing.
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Less and less do we expect Olympian detachment on the Supreme Court.
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"That detachment is something exemplified by the process of notification," said Ghosemajumder.
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The brain drain also encourages a uniquely modern form of cultural detachment.
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It took Pearl Harbor to jar the United States from its detachment.
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This generation takes in the current buzz with a level of detachment.
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And it was the humanitarian detachment from our local and federal government.
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An atmosphere of detachment reigns over most of the exhibition's imagined places.
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Artist's digitally-rendered Dr. Manhattan/Dorner character voices their disillusionment with chilling detachment.
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"I am used to acting with a certain detachment or coldness," he said.
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Members of Operational Detachment Alpha 0224 aboard a helicopter in Afghanistan in 2016.
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Those who rarely or never used these words showed significant detachment from reality.
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|
He had the strongest sense of ironic detachment of anyone I'd ever known.
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|
But I can't use the same detachment that protected me in the past.
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According to our findings, the American populace senses growing detachment from the Holocaust.
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|
Hear a hollow sound and you'll be able to tell there's some detachment.
|
|
Maybe it's harder to convey ironic detachment when you feel more at home.
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"It seems I will die here," he said, with an almost clinical detachment.
|
|
The mayor's detachment is a bit unusual, especially given the subway's dismal state.
|
|
Another theme in the documentary is Mr. Alvarez's detachment from his Iranian heritage.
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|
He sticks to platitudes and smiley detachment in public meetings with the president.
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"I continually experiment with methods of bodily detachment," Leah explains of her work.
|
|
I wondered if she treats those who she loves with the same detachment.
|
|
It may sound as if I approached this slice with cool, analytical detachment.
|
|
But because of the coronavirus crisis, the nature of that detachment has changed.
|
|
But intensifying conflict could make it difficult for Russia to retain that detachment.
|
|
Of course, my wife didn't have the luxury of that kind of detachment.
|
|
Ms. Coppola approaches these matters with her signature mix of intensity and detachment.
|
|
Tyler had a retinal detachment and lost the sight in her left eye.
|
|
Second, Republican voters may respond to the freedom-as-detachment rhetoric during campaigns.
|
|
But a signature tone of quizzical detachment marks even his most violent imaginings.
|
|
In September 1942, according to the file, Reimer was assigned to Detachment Czestochowa.
|
|
A basic sniper, a sniper detachment commander, and then there's the advanced sniper.
|
|
It would take a certain amount of Buddhist detachment to avoid that, I guess.
|
|
Romel Pajimula, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) detachment commander, right, greets Senior Col.
|
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Our screens can act as a protective boundary and foster a feeling of detachment.
|
|
Here is a three-step method for following the law of detachment at work.
|
|
The following month, in April 6900 a small Russian military detachment commanded by Col.
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And also to a kind of detachment from the collateral damage from his decisions.
|
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Aggression and violence towards fellow soldiers can be justified because of a soldier's detachment.
|
|
The Special Forces detachment is optimizing the joint training opportunities present on Okinawa, Japan.
|
|
Urban isolation, loneliness, professionalism, detachment — these are the signature themes of Michael Mann's films.
|
|
Who would have thought that aesthetic detachment could be a prescription for social equality?
|
|
They have two hotels, grocery stores and department stores, and the RCMP detachment there.
|
|
There's always an oscillation between intimacy and detachment, pain and analysis, speech and silence.
|
|
But now we have an ethos of detachment and competition all the way down.
|
|
Potential complications, albeit rare, include infection, inflammation, retinal detachment and double or shadow vision.
|
|
But there remains a sense of control and detachment when I think about them.
|
|
You acclimate to incomprehensibility, to a detachment that causes past and present to blur.
|
|
Freedom as detachment is marked by absence — the absence of coercion, interference and obstacles.
|
|
"I performed, and experienced, detachment," she says, of her first attempt at orgasmic meditation.
|
|
I was supposed to be there for a year as part of a detachment.
|
|
The deliberate distance between the subject and the object creates a sense of detachment.
|
|
And there is a sadness, an unflagging detachment that comes from forgetting your own existence.
|
|
Detachment nurse in Beech House, betray none of the traumas of war—the blown up
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|
Still, he admits, taking on a role like Scorpius requires a certain amount of detachment.
|
|
The human figure's absence from these fire scenes likewise encourages contemplative detachment over urgent empathy.
|
|
There's a certain lack of intimacy and detachment that exists in the process of airbrushing.
|
|
Donald J. Cline on Marine Corps League Detachment 1419, Mandan, North Dakota, Nov 1, 2017.
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|
When I asked him about Tezos, he assumed the frowning detachment of an elder statesman.
|
|
However, what may keep chokers alive and well is actually their detachment from the 90s.
|
|
Living in a country that is not your own gives you a sense of detachment.
|
|
On the other side of the street is a detachment of troops and a tank.
|
|
"A detachment of Islamic State fighters carried out the London attacks yesterday," the message said.
|
|
La David Johnson, who were all assigned to Army Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha 3212.
|
|
Joko said his counter-terrorism forces -- known as Detachment 88 -- have a two-pronged approach.
|
|
A few years ago I suffered a retinal detachment that required fairly urgent surgical treatment.
|
|
Image courtesy Petty Officer 3rd Class Jessica Blackwell / Navy Public Affairs Support Element Detachment Hawaii.
|
|
Shortly after, locals chased away the village's detachment of National Guards for drunkenness and extortion.
|
|
That level of detachment ran through the leadership, all the way to the president himself.
|
|
That level of detachment ran through the leadership, all the way to the president himself.
|
|
But regardless of his personal feelings, the Republican governor indicated some detachment from the issue.
|
|
These criminal cases suggest long-running fraud within the Special Forces' service detachment on KAF .
|
|
All are mired in ironic detachment from their misery and attracted to Hark's simple message.
|
|
Meyerbeer was the master of a kind of detachment that paradoxically heightened his theatrical power.
|
|
But judging from the running flow of witty, flabbergasted tweets, even some detractors tune in for the televised hours of the Rose of Tralee, a largely unscripted spectacle that is odd and compelling enough to watch with ironic detachment or with no detachment at all.
|
|
"With a lot of men, when it comes to gender equity, there's a detachment," Proudman said.
|
|
The tweets made news (most people agreed), but should be viewed with a sense of detachment.
|
|
Across all their work, Artist connects their stance of silent detachment to their African-American identity.
|
|
If you go this route, the secret to maintaining your sanity is to practice emotional detachment.
|
|
There's no equivalent endearing ingredient in most of their music, and so their detachment remains total.
|
|
Sweet, romantic Venus squaring off with cold, serious Saturn results in sensitive feelings—or aloof detachment.
|
|
Both in music and in video is translated the idea of duration, detachment and full confidence.
|
|
At most presentations at SXSW, there's an air of skepticism, or at least, reasonable human detachment.
|
|
That distance and smallness is ironic detachment, sure, but there are still actual displays of vulnerability.
|
|
It's only when surrounded by light surrealism that the characteristic Murakami detachment can achieve its ambition.
|
|
In the end, Mr. Gonzalez's kind of dreaminess wasn't blurry detachment: It was detail-oriented professionalism.
|
|
Fosse needed to be sure that Verdon could really sell Lola's ironic detachment to the audience.
|
|
In 2006, a Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA) from my company was deployed to Afghanistan.
|
|
In at least one case, his detachment may have cost him tens of millions of dollars.
|
|
The trauma also shifts the victims toward a preference toward detachment from and avoidance of relationships.
|
|
What was detachment in earlier Spiotta characters has hardened here into something chillier — and more chilling.
|
|
Perhaps it was the convergence of powerful symbols that momentarily made me lose my professional detachment.
|
|
My practitioner had moved on to the next client with the smooth detachment of a gynecologist.
|
|
Those feelings of detachment, worthlessness, insecurity that I described earlier are shining examples of just that.
|
|
It also can give users a sense of detachment from reality and delusional symptoms, he said.
|
|
But Mr. Trump is not one for cautious detachment, and he has disregarded such advice before.
|
|
Not without personal vanity, Debs nevertheless viewed his considerable charismatic gifts with a measure of detachment.
|
|
Their detachment is astonishing, because to be at Roland Garros is to become attached to it.
|
|
Far from exhibiting a sense of carefree detachment, three-fourths reported feeling grief, remorse and sadness.
|
|
Women using intellectual detachment to dull pain or avoid emotion isn't at all a new phenomenon.
|
|
The volume, particularity and inanity of the phenomena effectively force us to take up this detachment.
|
|
He treats them with a mixture of solicitude and detachment that reveals its cruelty by degrees.
|
|
Expect Philadelphia's famously frenzied fans to react to their team's first-round pick with sensible detachment.
|
|
Indeed, Robinson's exploitations of pop imagery succeed by failing the Pictures Generation shibboleth of ironic detachment.
|
|
You might experience blocked memories or detachment from certain feelings as stunted but effective coping mechanisms.
|
|
Where Hugo treated Ester with detachment or contempt, Olof can sometimes be tender, admiring, even amorous.
|
|
That sense of detachment also allows them to accept feedback from others without taking it personally.
|
|
Detachment from mainstream life and culture prompted generations to adopt new attitudes in the late 1970s.
|
|
The Illuminatus Trilogy, by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, depicted the Illuminati with ironic detachment.
|
|
But the heart of any Slow TV event is the aching, lovely detachment of it all.
|
|
"I also felt a real detachment between what I was doing and the end result," she continues.
|
|
A military detachment called the White House Communications Agency, regularly issues coins when the president travels abroad.
|
|
But he considers himself only a "stepchild" of the West, and that offers him a useful detachment.
|
|
One of them, a fair- haired youth, inspected his weapon with the calm detachment of a marksman.
|
|
Their detachment from reality is so sharp that no real world evidence could ever inform their beliefs.
|
|
I have a healthy detachment to objects and situations because I realize the transient nature of things.
|
|
"The issue with the detachment of the upper two decks, we're looking at that carefully," he said.
|
|
The moon enters Aquarius, inspiring some detachment—however, Mars opposes Pluto, and your temper will need tending.
|
|
As birthworkers, we see this (trauma) in the form of emotional detachment from mothers with their children.
|
|
But, where Flaubert adopted an air of superhuman detachment, Conrad insures that Marlow's position is itself relativized.
|
|
Refreshingly free of jingoism, that detachment unfortunately winds up working against the movie, which doesn't engage emotionally.
|
|
When she checked her reflection in the limo's smart glass window, it was with a cool detachment.
|
|
Already aching from the wound of Ross's natural adolescent detachment, Johnson takes the news as a crisis.
|
|
Will my daughter reflect back on her all but implanted American memories with the same cool detachment?
|
|
But what makes the video not merely effective but strangely moving is its air of scientific detachment.
|
|
In order to do this, he must, paradoxically, remain aloof, and approach everything with a clinical detachment.
|
|
In 1941, he boarded the U.S.S. Wasp and took command of the Marine detachment on the ship.
|
|
I'm not sure how long my routine will last, but I'm soothed by this detachment from adulthood.
|
|
Ultimately, however, the show's playfulness, intelligence, and breadth of work save it from straying into ironic detachment.
|
|
He is an elegant, contemplative filmmaker, observing strong emotions with a careful balance of sympathy and detachment.
|
|
St. Michael's head, for example, was completely unharmed after its violent detachment the night of the fall.
|
|
Of course it is — and it takes a higher level of detachment just to ask the question.
|
|
High on speed, I was arrogant and callous, watching the effects on P. with cold-blooded detachment.
|
|
He seems distanced from the past not only by the years but also by a flippant detachment.
|
|
While bin Laden was in Tora Bora, a detachment of US Special Forces was deployed near Kandahar.
|
|
They felt like there's this despair and detachment in voters and that they had not seen before.
|
|
On Friday, the European Space Agency reported there were just 3 miles left to go before detachment.
|
|
I found this: a remarkable piece of research, reflection, and polemic all at once — no detachment here.
|
|
And the flutter of fluorescent lights gives scenes set at school just the right level of clinical detachment.
|
|
As a result, almost everyone from the 5th assault detachment died — they were burnt together with their hardware.
|
|
Bianco creates distance and detachment by presenting it mostly through grainy cell phone videos or dimly lit scenes.
|
|
Cersei's mask of cold detachment threatens to drop as she asks Ellaria exactly why she took her daughter.
|
|
Often such ideas will be all the more original for being dreamed up in a moment of detachment.
|
|
"I had a feeling of detachment," Dickinson, 61, tells PEOPLE of being diagnosed with the disease in May.
|
|
There is at least a little truth to the accusation: the chancellor's essential political weapon is her detachment.
|
|
It's not escapism and it's sure as hell not wilful detachment, but it might be all we've got.
|
|
However, I had very real and terrifying feelings of detachment, the aforementioned shortness of breath, and chest pains.
|
|
"A detachment of Islamic State fighters executed yesterday's London attack," a statement posted on Amaq's media page said.
|
|
Like the canonical figures upheld at the time, Gustave Flaubert perhaps supreme, Roth wrote with detachment and deliberation.
|
|
Abandoning the refinement of "The Age of Bronze," it shrugs off beauty, which requires a degree of detachment.
|
|
The government of Turkey, which had a military base in the capital, sent a new detachment of soldiers.
|
|
Now they return with a new single "Santa Fe" that's off of their upcoming album The Great Detachment.
|
|
Detachment 88 - known locally as 'Densus 88' - has managed to stamp out or weaken many radical Islamist networks.
|
|
I wondered, then, what the usefulness of the dream frame was, except to add a note of detachment.
|
|
Islamic State said it killed 1,700 prisoners from the Iraqi army detachment at Camp Speicher in June 2014.
|
|
Writing, like yoga, I explained to the group, can promote flexibility, balance, detachment and a sense of achievement.
|
|
Operational Detachment Alpha members using high-powered telescopes to search for Islamic State fighters hidden in the mountains.
|
|
I was granted two embeds with the Operational Detachment Alpha, first in April and then again in July.
|
|
As Beatrice mimics the cold detachment she knew as a child, she begins a cycle of dysfunction anew.
|
|
Petty's detachment is notable in such company, as is his distaste for grandeur, and I'd suggest another term.
|
|
It would be easy to compartmentalize these ecological shifts as local tragedies, but that detachment is an illusion.
|
|
Because I got the feeling that you drew on the fact that it's the city of ironic detachment.
|
|
The group reported on Twitter that a "security detachment" killed the "preacher" to be a "lesson to others".
|
|
Lippmann thereafter retreated into a career of Olympian detachment and superiority as America's most respected and respectable pundit.
|
|
On the other hand, he has maintained, like I said, a level of detachment from the White House.
|
|
A detachment of US Marines will also participate in the border security operation, according to two defense officials.
|
|
Hsiung prefers to emphasize a different tenet known as anatta, translated as detachment, or the denial of self.
|
|
Some call it coldness — a Brechtian detachment, as Mr. Verhoeven remarked — or a chilly reflection of self-regard.
|
|
Two days later, the Pentagon confirmed the death of a fourth member of the 12-man Special Forces detachment.
|
|
Practice emotional detachment as best you can, and advocate for yourself by seeking clarity on her expectations and priorities.
|
|
That made it even harder to break out of the cycle of detachment and isolation I was caught in.
|
|
Over time, that can lead to retinal detachment and blindness, similar to the neovascular glaucoma commonly associated with diabetes.
|
|
Britax denied in a statement to BuzzFeed News that the sudden front wheel detachment is a product design flaw.
|
|
Similarly, short-sightedness may lead to cataracts, macular degeneration, retinal detachment and other vision difficulties as a person ages.
|
|
As she contradicts herself again and again, Dr Jordan becomes increasingly enthralled by her, ultimately losing his professional detachment.
|
|
Sam Gee, 20, student I didn't really know why I had a detachment from my name until last year.
|
|
Some commentators later said the moment was remarkable because Obama is known for his apparent Spock-like emotional detachment.
|
|
It was a concept that filled her with horror and a kind of psychological detachment from her own body.
|
|
And fourth, destabilising interventions by America have been followed, under President Barack Obama, by destabilising detachment from the region.
|
|
Hoping for neat catharsis after a significant detachment from one's identity—either by illness, migration, or both—is unrealistic.
|
|
John Wilkes Booth would be captured (and shot) in a Virginia tobacco barn by a New York cavalry detachment.
|
|
You're finally achieving some detachment, which helps you get a better view of what's taking place in your life.
|
|
Unlike several other recent TV musicals, this glossy revival is not live, which adds another layer of prim detachment.
|
|
"They are what&aposs causing this detachment, and not an unseen ninth planet," Fleisig said during the news conference.
|
|
You could chalk these new feelings of detachment from the Israeli state up to a shift in government policy.
|
|
That is why living in the present is not an abdication of ethical responsibility or a recipe for detachment.
|
|
" This involves, he writes, "a deliberate choosing of closeness over distance, of companionship over detachment, of relationship over isolation.
|
|
Looking apathetic is rarely a quality onstage, but Alix Riemer, as Mélisande, manages to project detachment without being bland.
|
|
My attraction to my cousin and my detachment as a husband both reside in the pantheon of male tropes.
|
|
It's a detached representation, that's all, and in its detachment Scott's hedonism admits the limits of its own escape.
|
|
The Islamic State militant group said after the attack that a "detachment" of its fighters had been behind it.
|
|
This time her subject was not a figure she could follow around to regard and depict with clinical detachment.
|
|
Across all three, Jamison's journalistic battle between sentiment and detachment rages on, sometimes resulting in texture, sometimes in tedium.
|
|
Indonesia's counterterrorism police force, known as Detachment 88, has been fully deployed in the wake of the recent attacks.
|
|
A woman is thirsty when she fails to cloak her emotional needs or insecurities behind a posture of detachment.
|
|
Douglass said that Amazon does not receive data from the unnamed surveillance technology used by the Prince George detachment.
|
|
Ms. Sevigny exudes an air of defensive detachment, which seems to tally with what other people say about Mary.
|
|
It sits on a dead-end street, providing a sense of detachment and privacy, while allowing nearby freeway access.
|
|
There is certainly antagonistic intellectual wit in his brand of romantic spirituality, but I see more tenderness than detachment.
|
|
In one way or another, each of these episodes mourns our detachment from our food and how to prepare it.
|
|
When Johns made "Flag" (1954-55), he wasn't rejecting subjectivity so much as merging a visceral experience with objective detachment.
|
|
I'm as aware of the pleasure people might find in them as I am of my own detachment from it.
|
|
It's not just not caring about the situation, but telling Alexa to play Despacito conveys absolute detachment from feeling anything.
|
|
"Security source to Amaq Agency: A detachment of Islamic State fighters carried out the London attacks yesterday," the statement reads.
|
|
And when it comes to the actual designs, Abloh's "everything in quotes" tagline is a rallying cry for ironic detachment.
|
|
Into the opening made by this paradox, Solstad inserts his playful irony, which often announces itself as an unexpected detachment.
|
|
"Every country we operate in, we enhance our partnerships and alliances with our foreign counterparts," said the SF detachment commander.
|
|
The characters' detachment and apathy is exaggerated to comic effect, their disinterested exchanges reading more like Youtube comments than conversations.
|
|
With the Belgian troops marched a detachment of French troops which had fought during long months on the Belgian front.
|
|
You had this suburban avenger-in-waiting dude David Dunn (Bruce Willis), who was developing a detachment from his wife.
|
|
Technically, we were the "detachment" of a regular fighter squadron, our identity cloaked because of the secrecy of the work.
|
|
A small detachment of international peacekeeping troops, mostly Egyptian and American, is stationed on Tiran (the islands are otherwise uninhabited).
|
|
Perhaps those first two qualities, with their suggestion of emotional detachment, are what helped the playwright cope with the third.
|
|
And when a beaming psychopath invades her family's lonely farmhouse, Francisca observes his bloody purpose with the same clinical detachment.
|
|
Savannah Guthrie's eye is slowly but steadily improving from a form of retinal detachment thanks to near-daily laser surgeries.
|
|
Boundaries and limits are explored, and big emotions rise to the surface—today you're tasked with balancing detachment and immersion.
|
|
For a viewer, that characteristic—clawing at present-day sensitivities—may well interfere with aesthetic detachment, as the show unfolds.
|
|
Finn and Jannah—the ex-stormtrooper in charge of the mounted detachment—use explosives to destroy the Final Order signal.
|
|
Because Eklof's approach is formally very clean, showing some genuine, intriguing detachment, I'm apt to prefer it to Seidl's work.
|
|
Detachment, though a useful quality for a reporter, is an affliction for a person in search of a sex life.
|
|
Because I wasn't directly acquainted with his celebrity, I watched with detachment, surprised at how subdued and self-aware he was.
|
|
Visiting Manila on Friday, Australian Defence Minister Marise Payne offered a small detachment of soldiers to provide training to Philippine forces.
|
|
On one level, it seems to parody endless consensus-building exercises that ultimately only ever yield moral relativity and cynical detachment.
|
|
Both artists at once treat objects with care and detachment; over time, through the cataloguing process, the objects become deeply lonely.
|
|
But their detachment from earthly powers, and especially from the use of force by earthly powers, can make them progressive heroes.
|
|
The ISIS-linked media wing, Amaq Agency, claimed on Sunday that a "detachment of Islamic State fighters" carried out the attack.
|
|
When stuck in depression, one tends to withdraw further and further from life, perpetuating a downward spiral of detachment and despair.
|
|
"A detachment of Islamic State fighters executed yesterday's London attack," a statement posted on Amaq's media page, monitored in Cairo, said.
|
|
As the battle unfolded, analysts on social media discussed events in real time with a zeal that comes only with detachment.
|
|
In the podcast, Keener played Heidi with a note of sardonic detachment in her voice, a quality that Roberts doesn't emulate.
|
|
" Infertile from an adolescent bout of mumps, he was often impotent except with prostitutes, whom, for their detachment, he termed "goddesses.
|
|
It included video from an on-board camera which it said showed the detachment of the cone that carries multiple warheads.
|
|
The vegetable invasion that threatens them seems so alien, in part, because it denies the detachment that modernity has made possible.
|
|
I think a lot of them have to do with detachment and trying to figure out what's worth the trouble [Laughs].
|
|
I often teeter between a sense of guilt for emotionally distancing myself from him and a feeling of downright warranted detachment.
|
|
The character-hopping, anthology-based single player campaign has its own issues with detachment from the dread context of this war.
|
|
On the fourth page, the man methodically stabs Sabrina to death, with a detachment consistent with the rest of the book.
|
|
Will's dad Lonnie is the intimate antagonism of divorce: tense one-sided telephone conversations, a life somehow sinister in its detachment.
|
|
Nothing illustrates the big-tent parties' detachment from reality more than their performance in the run-up to the European elections.
|
|
Rothman explained in an email that it was meant to echo their own feelings of detachment growing up in the suburbs.
|
|
Spotswood had sent the naval sailors — including a detachment traveling overland — into what amounted to an unsanctioned invasion of North Carolina.
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The performer here is Elaine Davis, a middle-aged woman of clean-scrubbed eloquence and an almost accusatory air of detachment.
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Captain Perozeni is one of five soldiers from Operational Detachment-Alpha Team 3212 who are being considered for a Silver Star.
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There's something surreal about the staging's aridity, a context of detachment that makes the work's mounting emotional temperature feel extra unnerving.
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It included video from an onboard camera, which the broadcaster said showed the detachment of the cone that carries multiple warheads.
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At first we imagined this practiced detachment was a legacy of Franco, and of socialism — a reluctance to participate in capitalism?
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But Klee's final drawings exhibit instead a bewildered detachment, each asserting the need for irony in a world governed by madmen.
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They have a detachment and unsentimentality that recalls the fiction of Imre Kertesz, the Nobel-winning novelist and fellow Auschwitz survivor.
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The indifference around the royal couple's plans reflects how Canadians see the monarchy, with a mix of detachment, reserve and insouciance.
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Wood's description of Nirvana as "a detachment from everything that is finite" is not the best way to define the term.
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Before the driver was shot, Ahmed, Ali and their detachment had descended into the same side of the city on foot.
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I may lack the refined Brooksian detachment, but I hope I can make up for it with "Calvin and Hobbes" references.
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How about the shift, over four sinuous sentences, from detachment to intimacy, as the narrator reveals his relationship to the Smiths?
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Lakmaier's own experience with disability inspired the work, which plays with ideas of detachment on a rather colossal, jaw-dropping scale.
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So achieving the kind of detachment we need for productive rest can't really be done without detaching physically from our devices.
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Even if I know that person, there is a distinct emotional detachment when a screen is between me and that friend.
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Little is to be found of ironic detachment here, but rather a continuous force of play in the face of dreadfulness.
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A newly formed Special Operations Detachment - Africa, of the Texas Army National Guard, is training for future operations in the country.
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Victory in two world wars and a long history without invasion has given Britain a sense of detachment from its European neighbours.
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A teasing tone undercuts moments that might otherwise have been serious, and this tone can at times seem godlike in its detachment.
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Revolution had broken out in Paris after a group of parading workers had refused to disperse before a small detachment of soldiers.
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People with these traits can be good at hiding their emotional detachment and may even come across as particularly charming and personable.
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Across his entire body of work, Beckmann matches perversity with tenderness, detachment with intimacy, angst and darkness with celebration and rich color.
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Instead, he depicts some of the less savory aspects of American culture with an eerie detachment that defies any form of argument.
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He had no higher aspirations for the present, but he thought detachment was the best antidote for cynicism in the long run.
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The detachment goes both ways, with Canada 19th on the table of export destinations for the UK and Australia a rung behind.
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After reaching maturity, the biofilm will spread, whether by detachment of slime clumps or by dispersal, as seen in the chart below.
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In addition to being a pageant queen, Barber is a Logistics Commander for the 988th Quartermaster Detachment Unit at Fort Meade, Maryland.
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Canavero claimed Ren's work was "to re-prove that a brain could really survive detachment and re-attachment" in the monkey model.
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When Michalchuk first started with the force in 2003, his Wunnumin Lake First Nation detachment burned down in the first few months.
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Reflecting on Billy's health condition, the late-night host recently told Oprah Winfrey that he and McNearney had brief feelings of detachment.
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When you follow the 'law of detachment' and learn to let go, you'll notice that even more success can come your way.
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First responders from the Air Guard's 125th Fighter Wing Medical Detachment-1, along with others from various agencies, became instantaneous wedding guests.
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Six days later, a detachment of marines swept in to capture Mr. Guzmán on his ranch, acting with information from American authorities.
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Area 2375 is a 20103,22010-square-mile detachment of Edwards Air Force base, officially part of the Nevada Test and Training Range.
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Area 51 is a 513,000-square-mile detachment of Edwards Air Force base, officially part of the Nevada Test and Training Range.
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After the Bali bombing the Indonesian police created Detachment 88, an elite counter-terror squad financed and trained by America and Australia.
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"What's so remarkable to me is the detachment of this White House from anything to do with the legislative process," he said.
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I have always been concerned that this detachment could affect future behavior but now I have an additional concern as a parent.
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And in both cases, the National Transportation Safety Board says, there appear to be signs of metal fatigue at the detachment point.
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Operational Detachment-Alpha Team 3212 was originally to go on a routine patrol lasting just a day to meet with tribal elders.
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Although it is believed that people return to their sexual baseline, enduring sexual detachment is a recurring theme in online withdrawal forums.
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A military grade laser sight with a serial number matching the Operational Detachment-A team that Johnson belonged to was also found.
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I need cataract surgery, since the cataract in my right eye is worsening after my retina detachment surgery a few months ago.
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His detachment from the proceedings suggests that however heated the story becomes, it will be shaped by a certain coldness of vision.
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Buddhism teaches detachment from desire as a means to end suffering, yet there are limits to how much one transcends these distractions.
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In a few months, the Special Forces team here will return to the United States only to be replaced by another detachment.
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A detachment of People's Liberation Army (PLA) soldiers have been stationed in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover which ended British rule.
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Capote found it in pills and liquor; Warhol, in a willed detachment that transformed emotional peaks and valleys into glazed, flatline curiosity.
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I'll randomly burst into tears, and there's a strange feeling of detachment that lingers, like my body isn't really where I am.
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The opening scene of "Elle" is a shocker: a brutal sexual assault witnessed by a house cat and filmed with pitiless detachment.
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We are expected, in short, to avoid the "appearance of bias" and maintain a sense of healthy detachment from what we cover.
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She'll be the first woman in history to finish the yearlong qualification course and be assigned to a Special Forces operational detachment.
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Actually, engaging directly with leaders and their officials is far more important so long as you maintain the necessary detachment and perspective.
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It's a day that brings a sense of detachment along with it, so make time to work through your emotions in private.
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Douglass said that an officer from the detachment contacted the tech giant after discovering it was working with police in New York.
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He connected with a part of the electorate that felt forgotten by the political establishment and viewed his detachment from it favorably.
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The local police predict a store will help curb bootlegging, but could lead to an initial spike of calls to their detachment.
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This palpable detachment is born out of his practice of viewing the world from a distance — framed and separate from the self.
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In the event of detachment, parachutes would deploy to deliver the cabin to a safe landing on the ground or in the water.
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He sat with an air of detachment mixed with anticipation, like a passenger on public transit not sure where the bus will stop.
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And the largest of the Paracels, Woody Island, sports an airstrip, hangars and a [detachment] of HQ-9 surface-to-air missile batteries.
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A detachment of the unit has carried out duties at Buckingham Palace since Elizabeth's great-great-grandmother Queen Victoria moved there in 1837.
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For one thing, the new take on the world that results from a consistent mindfulness practice can easily be confused with emotional detachment.
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" In place of a former immediacy is a distance or detachment: "I am so far away when I consider all that I love.
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Gone was the tongue-in-cheek irony and blasé detachment bestowed on the world by the likes of Kurt Cobain and Sonic Youth.
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Then, in April 2018, Kimmel opened up to Oprah Winfrey about the feelings of detachment he and his wife felt, out of fear.
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And in April 2018, Kimmel opened up to Oprah Winfrey about the feelings of detachment he and his wife felt, out of fear.
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He has not quit NATO; indeed, some of America's eastern European allies prefer his tough-talk to the cool detachment of Barack Obama.
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"A detachment of Islamic State fighters executed yesterday's London attack," read a message on the ISIS-run Amaq news site late Sunday night.
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The Killers' transhistorical camp combines the glamour, detachment, and kitsch of English synthpop with the grandiosity, sincerity, and kitsch of American classic rock.
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Excessive vibration from high-speed cycles have reportedly been resulting in the detachment of the top unit from the rest of the washer.
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That incident led to the North Koreans replacing the entire detachment of soldiers assigned to the JSA, increasing security measures in the area.
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"We built this ridiculously big rocket out of Legos," says Catie, who commands an ROTC detachment at the University of Houston in Texas.
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But if his long history of detachment from the lived reality of America is an indication, none of this is obvious to him.
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But this detachment distorts the reality of political change and propagates an overly neat narrative that has little to do with the truth.
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Davis said a joint U.S. Marine Corps and UK detachment would use the flights to validate overseas deployment activities and prove program interoperability.
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Lyonne's strongest muscles as an actress are sardonic detachment and antsy discomfort, and she flexes both in full force in these early scenes.
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"Each airman is trained in a different specialty providing various perspectives to achieve the tactical objectives presented by the detachment in the jungle."
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Past a detachment of bodyguards, in the open kitchen of an adjacent farmhouse, guerrilla cooks stoked a fire to prepare the evening meal.
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But for the first time, that other aspect of trauma that I'd sometimes experienced—the feeling of dreamlike detachment—began to take over.
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It's in every "ruin porn" photo montage that seductively lingers on the desolation of crumbling downtown districts and finds "beauty" in privileged detachment.
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Naturally, this order proceeds from a chronic sense of meaninglessness, detachment, and distress, which always, with Didion, swallows up any longing for respite.
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You can wonder about the sorrow in Alek's eyes, about the hint of a temper underneath Spencer's jovial energy, about Anthony's skeptical detachment.
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Several people who know him say he is intensely focused on his mission while maintaining a wry sense of humor and ironic detachment.
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When Jackson addresses the anger of masculine conflict, he does so, tellingly, with the detachment of years and a dry scrim of regret.
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Another detachment trained sea lions to help recover expensive items like inert torpedoes off the seafloor so that the Navy could reuse them.
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"Human beings are all so naturally at odds with the chilly detachment and objectivity of the information that flows towards us," said Soren.
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In those moments when you do manage to notice these thoughts with some detachment, their dogged concern with past and future becomes clear.
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The Wet'suwet'en are unhappy a detachment of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is on their territory to keep protesters away from the pipeline.
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The dreamy detachment that's a hallmark of the cinematic style of the French director Bertrand Bonello sometimes invites accusations of glibness, and worse.
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If you're shooting portraits at Sears, sure, cozy up to your subjects, but if you fancy yourself a photojournalist, more detachment seems prudent.
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Pre-Macy Conference, the prevailing view of systems positioned the engineer/scientist/observer outside, monitoring its processes with a third-party objective detachment.
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It seems to him to be a place of novelty and marvelous tackiness, of cheap manufacturing and purposelessness best viewed with ironic detachment.
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