Israel and the United states have arrogated to themselves the right to decide their fate without bothering to get them engaged in the process.
12.
The constitutional argument against Bush's decree is that by creating the tribunals he is arrogating to himself the lawmaking power of the legislative branch.
13.
It is remarkable that both the second-century poets Oppianus and Nemesianus arrogate to themselves the honour of having entered upon a path altogether untrodden.
14.
In fact, Ms . Reno is arrogating to herself legal judgments about the president's intent that should be the province of an independent outsider.
15.
If anyone shall dare act contrary to this and arrogate to himself the power belonging to the bishop, let him be expelled from the Church.
16.
I question anybody, even the secretary general, arrogating to themselves the right to talk about withdrawal when this is a sovereign issue of the Security Council,
17.
Since 1966, Suharto increasingly arrogated to himself almost all powers of government and it would not surprise anyone should some history books call him a despot.
18.
He reclaims the colonial subjects'right to narrate their stories that was arrogated to themselves by the colonial rulers and perpetuated by presenting their readings as'objective '.
19.
No executive officials can arrogate to themselves the notion that they are " the law "; they merely execute laws passed by legislatures and interpreted by courts.
20.
No one has given NATO the kind of functions that it has arrogated to itself and seems ready to proclaim as the basis of its new doctrine.