Too often folks conflate free speech rights with their own choices and judgment.
From the economist.com
If someone's got a cold, do we conflate it with double pneumonia, or emphysema ?
From the guardian.co.uk
To conflate art and the market in which it is traded is fundamentally misguided.
From the guardian.co.uk
Media use in both Europe and the US however tends to conflate national and local.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Of course, I don't doubt that Netanyahu wanted people to conflate the two things.
From the nation.time.com
How do they manage conflate Moore's trip to Brazil with a rise in exports to Asia?
From the guardian.co.uk
Attempts to conflate opposition to Israeli policies with anti-Semitism are not new.
From the guardian.co.uk
You cannot conflate unemployment insurance with, say, a bloated government payroll.
From the economist.com
Two entirely different matters which atheists never cease trying to conflate.
From the economist.com
More examples
Blend: mix together different elements; "The colors blend well"
Conflation happens when the identities of two or more individuals, concepts, or places, sharing some characteristics of one another, seem to be a single identity, and the differences appear to become lost...
To bring things together and fuse them into a single entity
(conflation) A blowing or fusing together, as of many instruments in a concert, or of many fires in a foundry; A blend or fusion, especially a composite reading or text formed by combining the material of two or more texts into a single text
(CONFLATION) In its more restricted literary sense, a conflation is a version of a play or narrative that later editors create by combining the text from more than one substantive edition. ...
(Conflation) a text or passage that is created by fusing together two separate texts. The resulting text may contain details from both originals, such as two names for the same person.
(Conflation) the computational equivalent of stretching a map until its internal components can be rectified - see also rubber sheeting
(conflation) A set of functions and procedures that aligns the arcs of one coverage with those of another and then transfers the attributes of one to the other. Alignment precedes the transfer of attributes and is most commonly performed by rubber-sheeting operations.
(conflation) Combining entries in a message queue for better performance. When an entry update is added to the queue, if the last operation queued for that key is also an update operation, the previously enqueued update is removed, leaving only the latest update to be sent to the consumer. ...