Word: mirrored
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...future should think again. Europe is closer than the U.S. to many of the world's flashpoints and cannot afford to drop its military guard. Europe's cash-strapped governments will never be able to match U.S. spending, but they can close the capability and credibility gap without mirror-imaging U.S. forces. These in any case waste billions on costly "legacy programs" designed for the cold war at the expense of transformational new weapon systems needed for future, more complicated conflicts. Smarter procurement would enable Europe to get more bang for the defense buck. The U.S. can afford to spend...
...ever willing to run up a tab on its yet-to-be-issued credit card." "I'm sure there are those who appreciate your parental concern," conceded a Californian who took offense at our youthful emblem of vulnerability, "but there are others who don't consider this a flattering mirror and who wonder if there is not just a little more contempt than compassion for those whom it is your ambition to inform." Or as a Minnesotan put it, "Please portray the American public as it is--grown-up and thoroughly confused...
From the spiritual center of the Tibetan mirror, he moves into the physical representation of self with mirrors. Bronson’s series of earlier pre-General Idea photographs, “Body Binding” and “Mirror Sequences,” are powerful statements of the body’s indefinable role in the initial representation of self. The images present an insect-like segmentation of the body, to the point of almost being indistinguishable...
...death, rest against the wall. Zontal’s father was an Auschwitz concentration camp survivor, and Zontal believed that his gaunt, diseased ravaged body must have resembled his father’s own broken visage on liberation day. Bronson “had to act as his mirror in order that he could look ‘normal,’” as Zontal’s blindness in the later stages of disease prohibited his artistic input...
...Mirror Mirror...