Manifesto in a sentence as a noun

Yes, there's a manifesto and there's Scrum and all sorts of other things, but at the end of the day Agile is a marketing term.

Despite its title it isn't an textbook, but a manifesto, and as such Hazlitt's goal isn't to educate you, but to convert you.

It's going to take more than a manifesto to convince me that any investor is serious about the future.

He had previously written a manifesto that describes it as a moral imperative[1] to do 'A then B'.

Within just a few years, Beck's idiosyncratic personal vision had been replaced by the "agile manifesto", and then by an entire consulting industry.

* How could this level of detachment from the why of the product ever make you happy?More generally, this manifesto seems built around the idea of minimizing communication.

The manifesto includes the recommendation that "software contributions must be included in systems of scientific assessment, credit, and recognition.

To alter this manifesto to include 'dumb things' is dangerous because first, it devalues the idiocy of his claims; second, readers will be more tempted to read it for the "good parts" while ignoring the "dumb parts"--who knows what parts were added, anyway?

Manifesto definitions

noun

a public declaration of intentions (as issued by a political party or government)

See also: pronunciamento