The incident was neither a confrontation between nations nor one between civilization and barbarianism, but a fight between goodness and evil. |
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If this barbarianism continues we will be compelled to defend the defenceless, and the best way of defence is to attack first. |
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But in reality, isn't civilisation to a large extent just globally organised barbarianism? |
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But, ladies and gentlemen, however terrible their barbarianism, it will not stop the march of history. |
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Closer to home, the crisis in Srebrenica has shown us that modern barbarianism is not something that is relegated to other continents. |
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Some postulate that after a nuclear war, humanity would fall into a state of barbarianism. |
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The teacher accused the bullies of barbarianism when she caught them taunting the girl in a wheelchair. |
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He then persuasively argues that Titus must also defend the family from charges of barbarianism for refusing to bury his own son. |
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With the deceased laid to rest, nation follows to grieve and condemn the blatant act of barbarianism. |
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It is a movement that combines ethnic cleansing, genocide, racism, mendacity, barbarianism and fanaticism. |
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Such values should not be confused with the barbarianism of the Taliban. |
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He reiterated his opposition to barbarianism of any kind whatsoever. |
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At The New Yorker, it is a copy editor's duty to deploy the serial comma, along with lots of other lip-smacking bits of punctuation, as a bulwark against barbarianism. |
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They are keen to put obstacles on the way towards socialism because they know that it is the only real and much necessary answer to the capitalist barbarianism. |
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The Ebre Battle is a symbol of destruction and barbarianism from the war. |
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Cahill who collects thoughts on disaster relief, indigenous people concerns, peacekeeping concerns, the return of barbarianism, protection of children, and so much more. |
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China long ago established a hierarchy of barbarianism, with Blacks occupying the lowest rung, being furthest removed from the civilized as embodied by the Chinese Han people. |
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Esaias Tegner, our nineteenth-century national bard, says that all the words in the Swedish referring to anything but barbarianism are loan words. |
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