释义 |
Definition of globalist in English: globalistnoun ˈɡləʊbəlɪstˈɡlōbəlist 1A person who advocates the interpretation or planning of economic and foreign policy in relation to events and developments throughout the world. Example sentencesExamples - The networks look transnational; they exploit the globalist modernity that they so bitterly oppose.
- We can and should debate, for example, issues of geographical scope, and listen to the excitement of the microhistorians while also talking with globalists.
- Importantly, these concerns relate to a larger context of neo-colonial, globalist, consumerist realities of our time.
- Anti-globalists champion various causes all the way from anti-sweatshops to protests against genetic engineering.
- Citizen movements recognize that corporate globalists cannot deliver on their promises because the narrow and shortsighted financial imperatives that drive their institutions are antithetical to such goals.
- It is definitely true that globalist banking policies do not help the situation, but the countries still have some degree of responsibility for agreeing to them first.
- Instead this episode will confirm the worst fears of globalists: that multinationals are becoming too powerful for governments to control.
- Yet, globalists do expect governments to play an extremely active role in implementing their political agenda.
- In modern America, liberal is progressive is globalist is socialist.
- There is no sense behind those who claim we are in a new benign post-modern globalist world where multinational corporations have uncertain loyalties.
- There is nothing conservative in policies that destroy farming families to line the pockets of globalist corporate executives.
- It's especially popular with the globalists in the West.
- For generations mariners were the globalists of the working class, now they are fighting to protect our borders from its worst excesses.
- In contrast, the emergent open world economy will (so runs the globalist promise) yield prosperity, liberty, democracy, and peace for all humanity.
- This is why political activists of nearly every stripe tend to embrace globalist institutions even if they oppose a specific aspect of globalism.
- Maybe it's time for both the globalists and anti-globalists to consider what the poorer and disenfranchised have already worked out.
- The third party is essential to create a real two-party system instead of the present fraud that we have right now where both parties are globalist, interventionist, free trade, new world order.
- The effort shows that people do matter more than corporations, and that they can build their communities despite the rampant greed of the globalists.
- 1.1 A person or organization advocating or practicing operations across national divisions.
adjective ˈɡləʊbəlɪstˈɡlōbəlist Relating to or advocating the operation or planning of economic and foreign policy on a global basis. Definition of globalist in US English: globalistnounˈɡlōbəlist 1A person who advocates the interpretation or planning of economic and foreign policy in relation to events and developments throughout the world. Example sentencesExamples - It's especially popular with the globalists in the West.
- It is definitely true that globalist banking policies do not help the situation, but the countries still have some degree of responsibility for agreeing to them first.
- Importantly, these concerns relate to a larger context of neo-colonial, globalist, consumerist realities of our time.
- The effort shows that people do matter more than corporations, and that they can build their communities despite the rampant greed of the globalists.
- In modern America, liberal is progressive is globalist is socialist.
- We can and should debate, for example, issues of geographical scope, and listen to the excitement of the microhistorians while also talking with globalists.
- Yet, globalists do expect governments to play an extremely active role in implementing their political agenda.
- There is nothing conservative in policies that destroy farming families to line the pockets of globalist corporate executives.
- Instead this episode will confirm the worst fears of globalists: that multinationals are becoming too powerful for governments to control.
- For generations mariners were the globalists of the working class, now they are fighting to protect our borders from its worst excesses.
- In contrast, the emergent open world economy will (so runs the globalist promise) yield prosperity, liberty, democracy, and peace for all humanity.
- The networks look transnational; they exploit the globalist modernity that they so bitterly oppose.
- Anti-globalists champion various causes all the way from anti-sweatshops to protests against genetic engineering.
- This is why political activists of nearly every stripe tend to embrace globalist institutions even if they oppose a specific aspect of globalism.
- Citizen movements recognize that corporate globalists cannot deliver on their promises because the narrow and shortsighted financial imperatives that drive their institutions are antithetical to such goals.
- There is no sense behind those who claim we are in a new benign post-modern globalist world where multinational corporations have uncertain loyalties.
- Maybe it's time for both the globalists and anti-globalists to consider what the poorer and disenfranchised have already worked out.
- The third party is essential to create a real two-party system instead of the present fraud that we have right now where both parties are globalist, interventionist, free trade, new world order.
- 1.1 A person or organization advocating or practicing operations across national divisions.
adjectiveˈɡlōbəlist Relating to or advocating the operation or planning of economic and foreign policy on a global basis. |