These kinds of outrages are deplorable and the perpetrators should be brought to justice. |
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I think a healthy, strong society will move with dispatch to eliminate those individuals who perpetrate these kinds of outrages. |
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But since we have already started to dissect the list of nominees, we will take a peak at other outrages and oddities. |
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This little story has my mouth hanging open incredulously, the way it does whenever something shocks and outrages me. |
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The challenge that faces president and prime minister is how to defeat terrorism rather than incite it to fresh outrages. |
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Nevertheless, as long as there are political outrages, there will be poetry from her. |
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There are groups and goals, and sometimes those two combine to produce the most obscene outrages. |
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In London, the market was moving erratically as investors tried to gauge the impact of yesterday's outrages. |
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Adam tries to object to this and other outrages, but he's so flustered that all that comes out are exasperated spoonerisms. |
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He believes that the growing disparity between the rich and poor of the world is a disaster that will lead to more terrorist outrages. |
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Who could argue with taking action against the regime responsible for such outrages? |
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But the angry, defensive response to the terrorist outrages should not be mistaken for the confident patriotism of the past. |
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For me, Life Through My Eyes is about what inspires me, excites me, aggravates me, relaxes me, outrages me and helps me. |
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What is totally lacking is any vestigial sense of wishing to appease the people responsible for these outrages. |
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This event, more than any of his pop outrages, has struck a chord with the public. |
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They have inflamed the feelings of Chinese victims by seeking to deny their responsibility for outrages such as the Rape of Nanking. |
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How should one balance past outrages with the inexorable march of progress? |
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There's very little else I can say at the moment, but this activity is directly connected to the outrages on Thursday. |
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As a direct result of terrorist outrages, states will be strengthened in their role as the prime actors in the international system. |
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After previous outrages we had been irresolute and appeared unwilling to defend ourselves. |
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Similarly, terrorists lose when their outrages delegitimize their political cause. |
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Sometimes we may have taken it upon ourselves to champion against those perceived outrages. |
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Love has bloomed amid an otherwise painful period, marred by outrages large and small. |
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The author discusses some of the usual outrages of the health hysteria mongers such as claims that cell phones cause brain cancer and that Alar was a carcinogen. |
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The SNP, as it happens, is exercised about other outrages too. |
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It involves freedom of the press in Russia and further outrages are expected over the next two or three days. |
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But there is another reason why this insistent criticism of globalisation horrifies and outrages me. |
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Spain, where every kind of retribution including the crudest of tortures were the standard response, suffered many more outrages. |
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Yet, I remained, through the indignities, the outrages, and the general descent into lousiness. |
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Most of these outrages weren't even reported in the national media, let alone the occasion for a supportive visit from a government minister. |
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Diplomatic solutions must be preferred to an escalation of violence and other outrages. |
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Your Committee, Mr. Chairman, may not be the place to review specific outrages like this. |
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If the Hutu could not express their views openly, further outrages might be feared. |
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But terrorists and criminals are also making more and more use of modern communication methods to commit crimes and outrages. |
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And contemplate the risibility of the prospect of individuals with a role in these outrages ending up on a press council to sit in judgment on working journalists! |
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The criminal nature of these outrages is underscored by the fact that they occurred in a city that has been the scene of innumerable protests against imperialism and war. |
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Indeed, the magnitude of these outrages can never be overstated. |
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Despite these outrages, for decades the mob's domination of the market faced little resistance from city law enforcement, though federal prosecutors sometimes interfered. |
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Possible charges include committing an act which outrages public decency. |
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To end such outrages, the world needs a permanent international Court, able to try the perpetrators of the most heinous crimes, where domestic courts are either unable or unwilling to do so. |
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All parties, to varying degrees, have committed torture, outrages upon personal dignity and cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment against those who are not, or are no longer, participating in the conflict. |
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We also condemn other recent terrorist outrages. |
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Listen to him chatterin' about outrages to noncombatants. What are ye yourself but an outrage, you fat Proosian! |
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The following year he converted a captured French merchantman into a 40-gun warship, Queen Anne's Revenge, and soon became notorious for outrages along the Virginia and Carolina coasts and in the Caribbean Sea. |
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If you belonged to the world, it would hold you dear as something of its very own but, because you do not belong to the world, you must endure its hatred, calumnies, insults, contempt and outrages. |
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So long as there was no system capable of dissuading people from perpetrating crimes, they would go on committing their outrages with total impunity. |
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What happened to women in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda and the outrages that are routinely inflicted on women in armed conflict are crimes against humanity that cry out for justice and healing. |
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We all sympathise with the French after the terrible attacks in Paris, and are mindful that such outrages could easily happen here, but we serve no purpose by allowing our thinking to be cloyed. |
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That attitude outrages antihomeopathy activists like Barrett, who believe that druggists as health professionals have a moral obligation to their customers. |
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Naturally the Tennesseeans, conscious that they had not wronged the Indians, and had scrupulously observed the treaty, grew imbittered over, the wanton Indian outrages. |
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Measures are pursuing to prevent or mitigate the usual consequences of such outrages, and with the hope of their succeeding at least to avert general hostility. |
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